But there is such a thing as math, and moving rocks around as I described, proves 1+1=2.
Moving rocks around only reflects math, it is not Math in just moving rocks around. If there was no such thing as 1+1=2 then laying out 3 rocks would not mean anything. It only means something because there is such a thing as Math. But Math is a mind concept and has no direct link to anything physical. It only gives meaning to the physical which we can then say is something real because it can be applied to our lives.
Actually it does; because if you get rid of the brain, you get rid of consciousness as well; this happens 100% of the time. Consciousness has never existed without a functioning brain.
Getting rid of the brain doesn't get rid of consciousness anymore than getting rid of a radio box gets rid of radio waves. So the analogy is wrong. It may be that consciousness is something that exists in the universe and beyond. If Mind is behind the universe as with Math then perhaps Mind/consciousness is fundamental to all things and existed before all things. This seems to be a common idea that has been around for millennia from Plato, Aristotle to modern day ideas like the Wheelers Anthropic Participatory Principle
(
John Wheeler's Participatory Universe),
The mental Universe,
Quantum Bayesianism and
Panpsychism.
So why are conventional bombs okay, but nuclear bombs are not? If 1 nuclear bomb has the destruction of 2000 conventional bombs, why is it immoral to drop 1 nuclear bomb on a city like Nagasaki, but perfectly acceptable to drop 2000 conventional bombs on a city like Tokyo, even though far more people were killed by conventional bombs in Tokyo than was killed in Nagasaki?
Dropping bombs on people is not morally OK full stop. If you notice when we argue about when is it ok or not to drop bombs on people it comes down to reasoning whether its ethical. That considers all the circumstances and we then try to determine a truth about how we should act. That in itself points to some objective measure.
If it was just about 'how we feel' or 'what we prefer' to happen then it would not matter what the reasoning was. Therefore whoever makes the best case wins. But the best case could be any self proclaimed truth like in the case of the Iraqi war on terror, payback for the world trade center bombing or to get hands on resources or land.
But when we find the truth comes out later that these so called convincing arguments were based on a distortion of the truth we are outraged that the very people who proclaimed to represent peace and justice were themselves corrupt. All that would not happen if there was no way to determine what is moral or not.
They don’t know exactly how much is caused by humans, all they have are estimations; and these estimations are not agreed upon.
So does that means that we can never find out whether the estimations can be correct in the future. Even estimations are acknowledging the truth that humans have contributed to climate change. If we estimate that human % of contribution is somewhere between 5% and 10% then we still have evidence that humans contribute to climate change regardless of what degree.
The issue is 'do humans contribute to climate change'. Contributing somewhere between 5 and 10% is humans contributing to climate change. But what this also tells us is that perhaps our knowledge is yet to be updated about this issue. That we can measure if that % increases or decreases in the future. It also tells us that we need an objective basis to do that. That would be the human caused activities that pollute the world. We can measure that today and see if it increases. Then its a case that we model what those increases may do to the planet. Thats all science.
Years ago I used to work at McDonalds restaurant. My personal view was that Burger King had better food than McDonalds. Had I took it upon myself to express my personal views to all the customers while working, I would have been fired and rightly so. McDonalds did not force me to say their food was better, they only prevented me from saying theirs was worse; I had to keep my opinions to myself. Had McDonalds took a position on SSM, they could not force me to promote such a position, they could only prevent me from speaking out against it while at work. Do you consider this unfair of them?
Well yes because MacDonald's has nothing to do with SSM and peoples personal views on it. Its a retail food company. In fact according to Human Rights you have a right to express your views against SSM say in the lunch room or even the board room if it comes to it. So getting sacked for expressing your personal views on an issue that has nothing to do with the companies operations is unfair.
I don’t think anybody should be allowed to express sensitive political or religious views at work because it often leads to a hostile work environment.
That is not the fault of anyone who holds those views and may want to express them. That's the politically correct system the company operates in. It creates division and hostility towards difference. I can sit at a table with like minded people and be transparent and open about things. I can accept that the person next to me who may hold different views can express those and its not going to impact on our working relations and ability to meet the companies work.
We already know this about each other. But the current political system creates a divisive system where we now have to button our lips because its not about what
Again; what characteristics must something have in order not to be considered matter?
Its not that it has to be considered 'matter' but that there are such phenomenal facts or truth like laws in the world that are not made up of 'matter' yet can have an influence and effect on reality as we know it. Not like matter itself as a substance but in principle like 'matter' as a measuring stick for what is real or unreal.
I think you alluded to this when you said that consciousness and transcendent phenomena like justice and truth were different from scientifically measured quantities.
This question is not about proving objective morals, I’m asking you to give an example; (assuming morality is objective) of a moral issue that does not objectively align with your personal moral beliefs. Care to try again?
Its a wrong type of question to ask. Objective morals is about finding the moral truth about which way we should behave in a given moral situation. How can we know if there are objective morals that we disagree with when its not about what I think is morally right or wrong but what the truth of the matter is.
Like I said we all know these moral truths. Its just a case of finding them through intuition and reason. The fact that objective morals are the truth means its impossible for there to be objective morals outside the truth. So how can someone hold an objective moral outside the truth when it is the truth we are looking for.
Murder is a legal term. Just because an act is called “murder” does not mean it is an unjustified killing. Never confuse what is legal with what is right.
That is the common dictionary meaning, unlawful killing.
1: to kill (a human being) unlawfully and with premeditated malice
2: to slaughter wantonly : SLAY
the crime of unlawfully and unjustifiably killing a person; specifically, law : such a crime committed under circumstances defined by statute; something very difficult or dangerous; something outrageous or blameworthy… See the full definition
www.merriam-webster.com
As opposed to 'manslaughter' meaning
the unlawful killing of a human being without express or implied malice
Manslaughter lacks malice which is an important difference between the 2 acts and implies an objective measure to tell that difference.
You could even add 'killing in self defense' for another difference between murder and manslaughter. Which only adds more support that there is an objective basis to tell these difference and its not based on personal opinion.
You do realize laws like murder are based on morality. Legal laws are not just about 'stopping people from behaving in certain ways. If that was the case we could have banned singing or dancing in public. Its about what is regarded as moral behavior as well. But even so even if we wanted to say that 'murder' is only about laws then we have an objective basis to not murder. Murder can be objectively wrong besides morality. But nevertheless objectively wrong.