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Is there an objective morality?

  • Yes

  • No


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Kylie

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? An interrogative does not declare anything. i merely asked you to clarify the "okay" which can mean agreement.

Nah. You immediately assumed that I was just agreeing that rape was objectively immoral, despite the fact I have repeatedly said that I believe that morality is entirely subjective.

You think I'm just going to change my mind because you keep pushing a certain point of view? You think me getting tired of having to repeatedly explain the same things over and over means I'm changing my mind?

Oh dear. I suspect yet another deflection on your part. The thread asks, "Is there Objective Morality?" I have answered the question and given arguments in support. Now show where the arguments are illogical and stop deflecting. It's been 312 posts and I have no answer yet.

Rubbish.

If morality is objective, then there must be a way to measure it. If you can't show that morality can be objectively measured, then objective morality doesn't exist.

Stop trying to keep me on the defensive. I'm not playing your manipulative games.
 
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o_mlly

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Nah. You immediately assumed that I was just agreeing that rape was objectively immoral, despite the fact I have repeatedly said that I believe that morality is entirely subjective.

You think I'm just going to change my mind because you keep pushing a certain point of view? You think me getting tired of having to repeatedly explain the same things over and over means I'm changing my mind?
Another mind-reader telling me what I think? We know how you feel; we're trying to find out what you think. But you won't tell us. I cannot argue with how you feel. Do you have an argument to support the way you feel?

I've not asked you to repeat yourself. To the contrary, I have repeatedly asked you to respond to my arguments. But so far all I get is crickets or deflections. I suspect you've got nothing.
Rubbish.

If morality is objective, then there must be a way to measure it. If you can't show that morality can be objectively measured, then objective morality doesn't exist.

Stop trying to keep me on the defensive. I'm not playing your manipulative games.
Claiming victim status?

Here's some real rubbish: If morality is objective, then there must be a way to measure it.

Ask @essentialsaltes if a fact is objective iff it can be measured:
While we can objectively determine whether an object is white or black under standard lighting conditions ...
White is the presence of all colors; black is the absence. Back to you.
 
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partinobodycular

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Do you have citations to support? As I'm sure you know, legal does not mean moral.
Google is a very useful tool, you should try it!

Tribal Council Orders 'Revenge Rape' In Pakistan

Now you may argue that this is simply a legal ruling and not a moral one, so we'll go on to another example.

https://peacenews.info/node/4475/tribal-council-orders-gang-rape

Here too you might argue that it's merely a legal ruling. But I would point out that the fact that the crowd laughed and cheered while the sentence was being carried out indicates that they found no moral inconsistencies with it.

You may find solace in the fact that it doesn't specifically address the morality of the sentence, but sentences in any jurisdiction rarely do. However, it should be quite clear that in this case and many like it people find no moral inconsistencies with rape.

You might find it to be immoral, but that's just your opinion.
 
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Kylie

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Another mind-reader telling me what I think? We know how you feel; we're trying to find out what you think. But you won't tell us. I cannot argue with how you feel. Do you have an argument to support the way you feel?

I have provided my arguments many times throughout this thread.

I've not asked you to repeat yourself. To the contrary, I have repeatedly asked you to respond to my arguments. But so far all I get is crickets or deflections. I suspect you've got nothing.

When I decided that I wasn't going to jump through your hoops anymore, you immediately assumed that I had completely abandoned the position that I had stated throughout this entire thread.

Claiming victim status?

Stop trying to make me look bad. It shows your immaturity.

Here's some real rubbish: If morality is objective, then there must be a way to measure it.

Ask @essentialsaltes if a fact is objective iff it can be measured:
White is the presence of all colors; black is the absence. Back to you.

Yes, we can measure the wavelength of light that is being reflected off a surface.

Do you think you have some kind of point here? If so, it escapes me. Perhaps you'd care to show us something that is objectively true but CAN'T be measured?
 
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Bradskii

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It appears a basic logic lesson is in order.

B: All swans are white.
O: Here is a black swan.
B: But I want all swans to be white so I won't look at your black swan.
O: G'day.

I'll take that as an agreement that it's context specific. So the husband and sleeping wife (the black swan) are not as bad as the other examples (the white ones). What's the argument that supports that? Bearing in mind that the argument has to apply to both.
 
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Bradskii

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Yes

Yes so long as in each case an objectively right things is determined beyond human subjective views and that’s all objective morality is (finding the best objective moral action to take which is not subject to human personal views in each circumstance.

So from your examples you mentioned it would be objectively right to lie to save someone from being killed. A person lying to the Nazi's as to the whereabouts of the Jews they are hiding is a common example.

So if lying to the Nazis was objectively the correct moral act then it wouldn't be absolutely wrong. That is, lying isn't wrong in itself - we need to consider the context.

Now there are an infinite number of lies one could tell. And it is now your position that each and every one is either objectively good or bad. The question then becomes: How do you know? And the obvious answer to that is that you don't. But you are saying that on that line joining a little white lie (yes dear, Santa is coming tonight) to a self serving one (I didn't have sex with that woman) you can differentiate one from the other. And pick a point where one the morally acceptable ones become morally unacceptable.

Needless to say I find that nonsensical in the extreme. And by the way, what might be interesting is you and o_mlly discussing why lying is/is not absolutely wrong.
 
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Bradskii

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So do you get the context now. In otherwords just because people ignore objective morals doesn't mean there are no objective morals. So I don't think it was what you were thinking.

If you turn the telescope around and look down the other end you might see that it's a moral law because of the practical implications (as I've been explaining re reciprocal altruism). Which leads to punishment and feelings of guilt. It's not a moral law and there are practical implications as well as.

I thought that might have been the light-bulb moment for you when you realised that you can't separate the two. If you could, then moral acts wouldn't be context dependent. And you earlier agreed that they were.
 
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partinobodycular

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And by the way, what might be interesting is you and o_mlly discussing why lying is/is not absolutely wrong.
My thoughts exactly. Objective morality versus absolute morality, that would be interesting.
 
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Bradskii

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Google is a very useful tool, you should try it!

Tribal Council Orders 'Revenge Rape' In Pakistan

Now you may argue that this is simply a legal ruling and not a moral one, so we'll go on to another example.

https://peacenews.info/node/4475/tribal-council-orders-gang-rape

Here too you might argue that it's merely a legal ruling. But I would point out that the fact that the crowd laughed and cheered while the sentence was being carried out indicates that they found no moral inconsistencies with it.

You may find solace in the fact that it doesn't specifically address the morality of the sentence, but sentences in any jurisdiction rarely do. However, it should be quite clear that in this case and many like it people find no moral inconsistencies with rape.

You might find it to be immoral, but that's just your opinion.

An eye for an eye is a common moral principle. I'm sure there'd be more than a few who would declare it objectively correct.
 
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Bradskii

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My thoughts exactly. Objective morality versus absolute morality, that would be interesting.

As the morality of acts are context dependent then absolute morality doesn't exist. If it did, then objective morality must. But the reverse is not necessarily true.

But...if objective morality is true then one must be able to determine every single moral act within the infinite variety of contextual situations in which that act occurs as being morally acceptable or not.

It's like saying that if a couple have sex at 12:05am on the morning of her 16th birthday then that's fine. But 10 minutes earlier and it's statutory rape.
 
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partinobodycular

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As the morality of acts are context dependent then absolute morality doesn't exist.
True, and stevevw would likely agree, o_mlly on the other hand...probably wouldn't. Hence it would make for an interesting discussion.
 
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essentialsaltes

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Apparently you cannot invalidate the two arguments either.

If your premise is not an objective fact, then your conclusion isn't either.
Some of your premises are not objective facts.*
Therefore your conclusion isn't.


*They certainly don't appear to be, and you've offered no argument that they are.

Here's some real rubbish: If morality is objective, then there must be a way to measure it.

I did not claim that. Measurement is certainly one way to establish a fact objectively, without regard to human opinion or preference. We're still waiting on you to show us some other way to establish that a moral fact is objective. I mean, you can use measurement if you like. I won't deprive you of that method.
 
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o_mlly

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I have provided my arguments many times throughout this thread.
Kindly reference the post numbers for those arguments.
Yes, we can measure the wavelength of light that is being reflected off a surface.

Do you think you have some kind of point here? If so, it escapes me. Perhaps you'd care to show us something that is objectively true but CAN'T be measured?
I already have: "black" and "white". You're incorrect on referring to wavelengths as measurable properties of black or white. The correspondence of a color to a specific wavelength is called spectral color. White and black are excluded from this definition because they do not have specific wavelengths. White is not defined as a color because it is the sum of all possible colors. Black is not defined as a color because it is the absence of light, and therefore color.

It is the very nature of "black" and "white" (not in any measurable property) that make the existence of either an objective fact. So its is with the morality of rape as defined.
 
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o_mlly

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Google is a very useful tool, you should try it!

Tribal Council Orders 'Revenge Rape' In Pakistan

Now you may argue that this is simply a legal ruling and not a moral one, so we'll go on to another example.

https://peacenews.info/node/4475/tribal-council-orders-gang-rape

Here too you might argue that it's merely a legal ruling. But I would point out that the fact that the crowd laughed and cheered while the sentence was being carried out indicates that they found no moral inconsistencies with it.

You may find solace in the fact that it doesn't specifically address the morality of the sentence, but sentences in any jurisdiction rarely do. However, it should be quite clear that in this case and many like it people find no moral inconsistencies with rape.

You might find it to be immoral, but that's just your opinion.
It's a good idea to read what you find on Google. In both cases the rapists were arrested.
"After the mother reported the revenge rape, police arrested 20 men and were searching for others ..."
"Police have now made a number of arrests in connection with both attacks. ..."

Are you not the same poster who would have acquitted the Nazis at Nuremberg?
 
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o_mlly

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I'll take that as an agreement that it's context specific. So the husband and sleeping wife (the black swan) are not as bad as the other examples (the white ones). What's the argument that supports that? Bearing in mind that the argument has to apply to both.
My claim that the objective immorality of rape as defined is easily refuted by simply giving us the "context" in which rape can be judged by rational persons as a good act. Got anything for us to examine?
 
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o_mlly

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If your premise is not an objective fact, then your conclusion isn't either.
Some of your premises are not objective facts.*
Therefore your conclusion isn't.


*They certainly don't appear to be, and you've offered no argument that they are.
Which premise in which argument are you referring to?
I did not claim that.
? I did not write that you did.
 
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stevevw

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First, let me say that I love when an argument is both logical and well presented, and yours certainly is as far as I'm concerned. I just happen to have a few disagreements with some of the stickier points.
Wel thankyou by all means and likewise I enjoy that you challenge me with good arguements that get me thinking.
I wouldn't really call it an illusion, but you're right, I have a problem with calling it objective.
For instance, in your example of having a coherent debate objectivity is dependent upon all parties having the same intended outcome. Absent that agreement there's no way to determine the best possible course of action.
Actually it’s not about whether people can determine the outcome of the debate but whether people can go ahead with the debate in the first place. Either you accept that (truth & Honesty) are necessary independent morals (objective) for that debate or their not. If they are not due to some subjective view then the debate cannot possibly go ahead end of story.

Now to me this too makes "morality" illusory. Because it's dependent upon the viewpoint of the participants. If they agree about the preferred outcome, then the means by which to achieve that outcome are objective. If they don't, then it's not.

So if were were to say they are subjective and not really needed if someone subjectively said so then all human engagemnet would cease.

It's that dependence upon the viewpoint of the participants that makes it subjective.
Actually objective morality doesn't do away with people’s right to subjective views about morality. It just doesn't account for why that subjective moral position is truly right or wrong. So a person with a subjective position of morality certainly has the right to choose not to support the idea of 'Truth' and 'Honesty' being objective in debates seeking honesty. They just won't be able to have a coherent and meaningful debate.

That therefore makes 'Truth' and 'Honesty' independent from people’s views about their moral status because they are necessary morals to have a coherent debate seeking the truth of a matter. So if a person wants to have a coherent debate seeking the truth then they have to treat 'Truth' and 'Honesty' as objective.

That is the evidence for why these morals are objective because their status is independent of the subjects moral views and that’s all objectiveness requires. There is no way to make 'Truth' and 'Honesty' subjective in these types of debates.

Which is why I throw evolution into the mix, because it's independent of the participants. What they think doesn't matter.
But your sort of making evolution another entity that can determine morality and it cannot do that as morality is only a sentient thing and really only something humans can engage in. There are moral duties and obligations which only humans can do or be owed. This is something people do nowadays; they give evolution (natural selection) some creative ability when it’s just a natural process as Dawkins says it’s just a cold, pitiless and purposeless process.
Now some people would choose to throw God into the discussion at this point, but to me, evolution works just as well, but without all the accompanying histrionics.
The difference with God or a god or transcendent being is that this is exactly what is needed to ground morality because the grounding has to be outside humans yet be human like (rational, necessary and perfectly good by nature).
Correct. There are certain behaviors that are evolutionarily beneficial. And these behaviors can change over time. The societies that best incorporate those behaviors are the most likely to survive, and from their own viewpoint at least, are also the most moral. Now they may attribute this survival to the grace of God, but it's simply evolution at work, and they're understandably conflating survivability with morality.
The problem is survivability doesn't = morality. For one group survivability may have been to share things to survive whereas for another group it is to take things from others to survive. So how can you equate opposite behaviours as being morally good. The issue is survivability is still a subjective thing and evolution is not a moral agent like humans but rather a natural process.

Again...correct. However...even though one may well argue from that extreme, that doesn't mean that that extreme could ever actually occur. Evolutionarily it may simply not be feasible. But if it did occur, then "morality" would simply change to reflect it, and society would embrace the new norm.
So therefore when you say morality will change to reflect that extreme you can obviously see why I say that evolution change doesn’t reflect morality because that new so called moral norm is quite immoral. Any system that can make something like rape a new moral norm can make anything even less extreme ideas a new moral norm and therefore it has no measure of morality at all because well "there is no measure regarding morality but rather survivability".
That's exactly how evolution works. What's moral now is determined by what was most beneficial in the past. But if it's not beneficial now, then it won't be moral tomorrow. History is replete with changing morality. "Evolutionarliy beneficial" is a constantly changing standard, although on human timescales it may not look that way.
As far as I understand evolution is about adaptability to changing environments (survival of the fittest) and that adaptability is not chosen or compared to the past but is simply selected for because it randomly provides an adaptive benefit. The benefit is not because of any moral reasoning just for survivability as evolution cannot reason about morality. That behaviour just happened to be the one that provided a benefit for survival by natural selection.

But moral change is different. Its reasoned based on what is morally good which may not be best for survivability. As Dawkins quotes evolution doesn’t care about justice, truth, honesty, kindness, just what genes make it to the next generation?

This may be true. We may indeed be headed to extinction. But it's much more likely that Mr. Lynch is simply using the wrong metrics by which to determine survivability. Evolution doesn't really care what Michael Lynch thinks.
The only determinant Lynch is using is evolution, how populations evolve through natural selection and survive or not. Nevertheless it is a side-track. The point was evolution is just about natural selection, adaptability and survivability and not morality. So bacterial (prokaryotes) have proven to survive and adapt far better than humans and they don't have morality.

Ah, that's part of the elegance of the human mind, it sees the mystical in the mundane, and perhaps it's better to leave it that way. Maybe it's best that we just continue to believe in the supernatural. Because that may be the only thing that'll prove Michael Lynch wrong. Time will tell I suppose. Meanwhile evolution will continue to do what it's always done, and we'll continue to argue about God, and truth, and morality. It's worked so far.
Fair enough

Yes, some humans do act as if morality comes from outside themselves, and I can't say that we're the lesser for it. In fact it's probably true. I simply question whether it comes from God, or just natural selection. But to me, logic suggests that it's the latter.
Logically it cannot be the latter because morality requires human reasoning and moral duties are owed to humans and as far as I understand it natural selection (nature) like rocks or trees or the weather cannot reason or owe moral duties. Natural selection is just a natural process and nature is not intelligent or moral. It cannot do or create anything. It just happens along without rhyme or reason.
 
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Ken-1122

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My claim that the objective immorality of rape as defined is easily refuted by simply giving us the "context" in which rape can be judged by rational persons as a good act. Got anything for us to examine?
The inability to judge rape good does not make it objectively wrong, to be objectively wrong you have to be able to demonstrate why it is objectively wrong. Can you do that?
 
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Ken-1122

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Actually objective morality doesn't do away with people’s right to subjective views about morality. It just doesn't account for why that subjective moral position is truly right or wrong. So a person with a subjective position of morality certainly has the right to choose not to support the idea of 'Truth' and 'Honesty' being objective in debates seeking honesty. They just won't be able to have a coherent and meaningful debate.
This is untrue, and has been proven untrue countless times. I know of examples where people have exaggerated or even lied concerning personal experiences in order to make a point in a debate. This is dishonest yet the debate continued to be coherent and meaningful. Complete honesty and truthfulness is not necessary in a debate in order for it to be meaningful
 
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Bradskii

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My claim that the objective immorality of rape as defined is easily refuted by simply giving us the "context" in which rape can be judged by rational persons as a good act.

You can decide if the example of the sleeping wife is or isn't as bad as the abducted girl. Or lying about Santa is or isn't as bad as cheating on your wife. There are an infinity of situations with regard to moral acts. They are all context specific.

We appear to have reached agreement on this. Well, except for you, I guess.
 
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