I never said that murder was objectively wrong.
My position has always been that nearly everyone holds the subjective position that murder is wrong.
It seems you have not been paying attention to my posts.
OK so if it’s not objectively wrong then we have no basis or right to tell people it’s wrong to murder. But yet we do tell them its objectively wrong to murder.
If someone said to you "it’s ok to murder" I think lie most people you will say "no its not" regardless of your subjective views. That applies “you cannot murder" beyond your subjective view and into the world onto others. That’s talking an objective position.
Actually, the burden of proof lays on the one who makes the positive claim. If you claim that morality is positive, then you must your position, just as you would have to do if you claimed that aliens were living among us disguised as Humans.
Yes so I would only have to show you once that an alien is living here and not have to show you every alien. It’s the same for objective morality. If I show there are objective morals for one situation I have then proved objective morality. Showing you additional situations is only repeating the same thing.
You say it doesn't follow, but I've never seen any adequate reason WHY it does not follow.
Its self-evident that’s what logic is. So if you make a logical fallacy that doesn’t follow then its self-evident because its faulty thinking ie you say having common morals is because of social conditioning and that discounts objective morality being a possible cause.
But you are only assuming this and have not provided evidence that this is really the case. You need to show and argue the evidence that shows social conditioning is the only reason we have common morals. You haven’t done that. So therefore your argument is refuted because it has no support only an assumption that this is the case.
But all the people that you are talking about live in a society, don't they? Funny, that, all those people who live in society agreeing on ideas that help people live in societies...
I don’t think you understand what the objection is saying. It’s saying people still have the same core morals even when they live in different societies/cultures. Different cultures should condition different moral values. But research has found there are common moral values everyone uses. That doesn’t fit the social conditioning argument.
That’s unless you want to say a giant coincident happened and everyone regardless of culture just happened to be conditioned the same. A simpler and more logical answer would be they all have a common knowledge of morals that’s been there from birth and culture or social conditioning only adds different ways to live out these truths. This also fits the evidence that babies have the same moral knowledge regardless of culture.
Your examples dealt with toddlers, who would almost certainly have picked up on moral viewpoints from their parents and others. Kids that age soak up things like a sponge, they pick up languages far better than we can as adults, for example. It's completely plausible that by the time they are toddlers they've developed moral viewpoints of their own that they've picked up from being a part of society.
Except the research shows that even 6 month olds have this moral knowledge and that the moral knowledge was the same regardless of the culture and beliefs of the parents or society they lived on. So we would expect the baby of atheist parents to not have these beliefs but that is not the case. We are born with the beliefs.
Psychologists say babies know right from wrong even at six months
“some sense of good and evil seems to be bred in the bone.”
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2010-05-psychologists-babies-wrong-months.html
At birth, babies are endowed with compassion, with empathy, with the beginnings of a sense of fairness. It is from these beginnings, he argues in his new book Just Babies, that adults develop their sense of right and wrong.
But we have found that even 3-month-olds respond differently to a character who helps another than to a character who hinders another person.
The Moral Life of Babies
Also, your sources were contradictory. I responded to it in
THIS post, which you have apparently forgotten about.
Actually I did reply to that post soon after here
#1995. I address your objections. The one done 2 years later was a different study so it wasn’t contradicting anything. But this is just a distraction from the point I was supporting for which the evidence shows.
I fail to see how that shows that my position is wrong.
Actually I just spotted a mistake I made. It should have said "doesn't explain" instead of "does explain".
4) Social conditioning does'nt explain moral disagreement and moral progress.
It shows your position is wrong because if people are socially conditions to live by common morals then anyone who disputes those common morals such as moral reformist are disputing and disrupting those agreed moral values.
Yet moral disagreement and progress requires disputing the existing agreed morals. That can only happen if there is an objective moral basis that we can use to measure moral progress moving from something bad to something better or good.
So social conditioning cannot explain moral progress and disagreement.
Because we all suffer when those morals are broken.
Then you have just used an objective basis for morality "Suffering". By relying on "Suffering" you are appealing to some measure. Yet again because suffering is subjective another group of people like in China may see suffering as good to keep people in line. Under relative morality we cannot say they are wrong because that’s how China sees things.
So now we have this divided system where different cultures have different and opposing morals relative to their situation and nobody is wrong or cannot be wrong. Yet western nations live like morality is absolute when they condemn other countries like China and Africa for being morally wrong. Thats a contradiction and shows the system doesn’t work.
Back when humans lived in small groups, a mass murderer would have been extremely harmful to whatever group they were in. Even today we have
reports of chimps killing members who are extremely violent.
But chimps aren’t moral creatures otherwise we should arrest and jail the chimps who are murdering other chimps" But we don't because we know that animals cannot know they have done something wrong morally and take responsibility for that. They kill as instinct, such as to be the dominate male, to kill an infant to gain a mate etc.
This fits in to the view of morality that I've been proposing. The group acts for the good of the society. As a group, they decided that killing the tyrant chimp was the right thing to do.
Humm you seem to be slipping morality into animal thinking. Even so once again you make a logical fallacy that because chimps act a certain way then it proves subjective morality.
You objected to me using this argument with objective morality. Evolution only describes how we come to know morality. It doesn’t account for why something is right or wrong.
How can morality ever change if it's objective? That's like saying the speed of light can change, or that the definition of a circle (a line where all points on the line are equidistant from a separate point) can change. If there is ever any change in moral views, then it proves that morality is subjective! Remember, people once viewed women as inferior, black people as a lesser species of Human, slavery as acceptable and being left handed as wrong. That wasn't that long ago, either. In a few hundred years, future humanity's view of morality could be just as different compared to ours as ours is to the morality of the people of the middle ages.
But when you talk about slavery changing for the better that cannot happen under subjective morality because nothing is better or worse morally. Just like preferences for ice cream no preference or view is right or wrong. So first subjective morality doesn’t fit how morals work. You seem to find this concept hard to accept.
It is only under objective morality that we can make changes for the better. William Wilberforce protested against slavery saying all men are equal. Dr King did the same for civil rights. But they were objecting to the current consensus and you can't do this under subjective morality because the current consensus that slavery was OK wasn’t right or wrong but just a subjective view.
Objective morality is about moral truths and they can accommodate change when the facts of the matter are understood. Wilberforce proclaimed the moral truth that all humans are equal as a moral truth which did not allow for subjective views. So as we come to understand the facts morla truths become more clear.
Because we are working towards some standard or truth that can only happen if there is an objective basis. For slavery it is human "Life" is valuable and with that all people have a right to a valuable "Life".