I never said that. We were talking about how gravity or Math is experienced in real life as a comparision for how morality is experienced in real life.
The laws of the universe are real even if we don't experience them.
You can only have shades of grey or wrongness if there is an objective to measure the shades of grey.
Rubbish.
Battlefield Earth is a terrible movie, in my opinion. The Abyss is an amazing movie in my opinion. Starship Troopers is a decent movie in my opinion.
My opinions about the quality of these movies is obviously my subjective point of view. By your logic, since I have no OBVJECTIVE measure to determine the quality, I should not be able to say that Starship Troopers is better than Battlefield Earth, but not as good as The Abyss.
Clearly your argument is incorrect.
Thats what morality is, its either right or wrong. You cannot be 1/2 wrong. Thats why morality is normative (how we should act as opposed to how we should not act morally. So how does the fact that people experience harm differently equat to rape causing no harm at all. Rape is also not just about harm but power and control over another which is also wrong when it is not consented.
Then by your logic, since stealing a candy bar is morally wrong and murder is morally wrong, stealing a candy bar is just as bad as murder. You said it yourself! It's either right or wrong!
What does this even mean. Whats an objective component of rape.
I was quite clear. The fact that it causes harm to the victim.
There is only one objective determination and that is the end result, it harms in one way or another. But having different measures of harm doesn't mean that there is no harm at all. Rape harms every victim in some way and thats a fact. To say that someone is only slightly harmed or may handle things better does not equate to rape not being harmful.
The harm caused is not the measure of morality. Even if it was, how do you objectively determine the harm caused? What units do you measure it in? How do you determine if one rape victim was harmed more than another?
It doesn't matter as harm is harm. To say that someone only got slightly harmed and therefore it doesn't matter is silly. The fact that someone forces someone else to do something they don't want is a violation regardless of the harm done.
So again, this leads to the conclusion that stealing candy is as bad as murder.
Stealing is wrong, murder is wrong. By your own argument, it's either right or wrong, and both are wrong. You said, "You cannot be 1/2 wrong." So you do not look at the degree of wrongness, since according to you there are no degrees. It's either right or wrong.
And now you are making the same argument regarding harm! Your arguments are leading to ludicrous results.
No it cannot be explained by subjective agreement for 2 reasons.
* First as I said agreement alone doesn't lead to something being morally right. Agreement could also lead to something being morally wrong because there is no independent measure.
And that's why we have laws about the age of consent. We decided to agree that it is morally wrong for a person under a particular age to have sex. That came about precisely because of the agreement you decry here. And yes, it's subjective, because there is no objective answer to hold old someone needs to be before they are mature enough to have sex. It's literally different for each person. We used a SUBJECTIVE OPINION to decide on an age which works well for most cases.
* Second there is not way to improve morality under a relative/subjective system. So stopping slavery can only be seen as a different view rather than an improved moral. Just like the view that Star Trek is better than Star Wars is not an improvement but rather just a different view.
What are you talking, improving something that is objective? That's like improving the objective fact that addition always results in a result that is higher than either of the two numbers being added together.
Well its a fact and even science recognises this. If there are no observers of reality then we cannot say anything about reality as there is no one to report back whats happening.
Rubbish.
No one has observed the surface of any exoplanets, yet it is an objective fact that the surfaces of those planets actually exist.
I think you are purposely ignoring things to bolster your position. I have said many times that agreement alone is not enough and that we must also rationalize things against an objective measure. Thats is why we come to an agreement because we are using an independent measure that everyone recognises is right ie ("Life" is valuable and we should respect and protect human life).
Then show me this objective measure that you use for morality!
But your objection applies more to you as you have been claiming that morality is determined by agreement alone. So therefore if something is subjectively wrong its because its subjectively wrong. You offer no independent measure of morality so your arguement relies on only agreement.
Yes, that's how subjective things work.
Once again, your insistence on having objective morality leads to your confusion. You conclude that subjective morality can't work because it's not objective.
Why science starts with an assumption. When have I said that the assumption by itself is enough. I have said that we begin with an assumption based on our intuition of how morality is experienced in real life. We see a person getting mugged and we know something is wrong even without knowing the details.
We can then test our assumption by how it pans out in real life. See enough muggings and we have a good basis that mugging people is wrong. We won't see people getting mugged and everyone saying "well thats just our subjective morality works so muggings is ok to do". No we see that its always wrong and there is no room for subjetcive views. We are born with the intuition of right and wrong. We build on that.
Ah, so if you caught the guy who just robbed the little old lady of her rent money, you wouldn't forcibly take it back from him? For someone who wasn't aware of the situation, they'd say you were mugging him, wouldn't they?
Then if you really believe that rape always causes harm of some sort then we can say that it is objectively true that rape causes harm full stop.
Sure.
But "causes harm" is not the same thing as "morally bad" is it?
Then why are you making such an issue out of varying levels of harm caused by rape.
Because the perceived morality of something depends a great deal on how much harm was done.
Action A causes very little harm, and the person who received the action was able to live their life practically unaffected.
Action B left the person with severe emotional trauma, and they had recurring mental helth problems for many years afterwards.
Sure you would say Action B was, morally speaking, worse than Action A, right?
And thats irrelevant as to whether something is right or wrong. Even if its wrong by 1 unit its wrong. But to say that wrongness has units of varying levels means there must be some objective basis to measure those units against. Your own arguement is lending support for my arguement.
Oh, stop with this ridiculous line of reasoning. I've already pointed out that it leads to the conclusion that theft of candy is just as bad as murder.
This is a good example of how in reality morality is objective. When 2 people are arguing about whether something is right or wrong they will always eventually appeal to some objective measure. Thats what argueing means, presenting independent evdience for your position. To pretend that we can have arguements about something and disagree about something means there is something to disagree about.
There are epistemic values and facts about how people should argue and hold proper justified beliefs about their moral claims ie don't believe anything without reasoning and independent support, maximize your efforts to find all the facts independently ect). So not using some objective basis is poor arguing and that in itself is wrong epistemically.
They can only do that if they are arguing about something that is objective. If they are arguing about something that is subjective, they can't rely on an outside measure because there is none.
So as you claimed that "you never said that rape causes no harm", then you have acknowledged it causes harm period. Otherwise you need to argue why a little bit of harm negates rape causing harm objectively.
What in the world are you talking about? Where did I say that a little bit of harm means rape doesn't cause harm?
Just stop with the strawman arguments, would you?
So how does a little bit of harm equate to rape not causing harm objectively. Thats why I keep thinking you are trying to equate a small harm as no harm. A small harm is still harm and doesn't negate that rape harms objectively.
Where in the world did you get the crazy, ridiculous notion that I ever said a small amount of harm means it's no harm?








Whats that got to do with the fact that there is either gravity or there isn't gravity. You keep forgetting morality is normative unlike how we measure scientifc objectiuves.
Good luck then, trying to use the same value for gravity on the moon that you use on Earth. Your results are going to be way off.
Gravity is not an on/off thing. It has different strengths. Seriously, this is basic science. If you don't grasp this, then an actual debate might not be the best place for you.
So we have scientific measures like with physical and psychologucal harm.
And what units do we use to measure harm?
You say that there is slight harm which somehow means rape does not cause harm objectively.
I never said that, and your repeated claims that I did are lies and are beginning to really tick me off. If you are going to continue to lie to me about what I said, then I will report you.
But slight harm is still harm. Its measured scientifically. We can aslo measure greater harm on that scale but its still harm. Whether its slight or great its still harm objectively.
Again, what units is harm measured in?
So here we have varying degrees of harm that is objectively determined by science. Theres your plug in variables and they all show that rape causes harm objectively to a greater or lesser degree. A slight harm is still objectively determined and a slight harm still makes harm an objective fact caused by rape.
Once again: What units is harm measured in?
So if its just about points of view and points of view do not say anything about whether rape is really wrong outside those points of view then the fact the vast majority view rape as wrong means nothing. Its still an opinion and there is no independnet evidence. Therefore the person with the point of view that thinks rape is OK is no more wrong than the majority who think its wrong.
A person thinking that rape is okay does NOT mean I have to agree with them, and it does NOT mean that I have to sit by and do nothing if I catch them in the act of raping someone. I honestly don't understand why you think that this is only possible with things that are objective.
This is a straw man as I have said that assumption alone is not enough. We need to test that assumption in real life. So your arguement already fails without going any further.
And yet your arguments are consistent with that assumption being made.
I don't follow what you say here. I am saying that because relative/subjective moral systems have no way of determining what is right and wrong morally that anyone with a view that rape is OK cannot be held to be wrong because there is no way to determine they are wrong.
They can be held accountable if they are forcing someone to participate against their will. And I have already said that I agree that rape causes harm. So I conclude that the rapist is morally wrong because it involves someone against their will and it causes harm.
I reach this conclusion based on my subjective opinion of:
- How much the victim doesn't want to be involved
- How much harm the victim experiences