Kylie
Defeater of Illogic
- Nov 23, 2013
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But only subjective to the person.
That's right. And it's the person who holds the morality. Thus explaining why it's all subjective, not objective.
because just saying that our sense of objective experience is not real is not enough. You need to show how it is not real. The same as you would have to show that our sense of the physical world is not real.
Why should I when you have already agreed to it? In post 1260, you said, "...our perception of our experiences is subjective..." If you agree that our perception of our experiences is subjective, then that's all that's needed to show that you and I both agree that our perception of the world and what happens is subjective and not objective.
I never said anything about subjective experiences leading to objective morals. I said our moral experience (the reactions we have to situations and with other people) indicate that we know certain things are objectively wrong. It has nothing to do with perception but rather a physical reaction in a certain way that we can't help but do despite our subjective view and claims.
So our moral experience indicates that some things are objectively wrong.
But since you said in post 1260 that our perception of our experiences is subjective, then you are indeed claiming that the subjective perception of our experiences is leading to an objective morality.
But it is not an input. It is output. A reaction that is objective. So its an action and not a thought or perception of an action or experience. It just happens and we can't help but react that way.
The input is our perception of our experiences. You said in post 1260 that it's subjective. Thus all the input is subjective, since it is based on our perception of what we experience. It can't be an objective reaction, because we are reacting to our subjective experience of it. So all the input we get about the world is subjective. The fact that we can't really control it doesn't make it objective.
But your using qualities or good and bad, right and wrong. What ultimate measure are you using to determine these things are good in the first place. Why is it so important to have empathy and not hurt people if there is no ultimate right and wrong. If you are just socially programmed to do that from an evolutionary process.
I do not have an ultimate measure. I go with how I think I'd react in that situation. I know that other people may have different views on certain moral issues. That's why it's all subjective.
So how can you appeal to objective morals of good or bad to figure out what is good and bad when there is no true good or bad. It is just an illusionary game people are playing with themselves and each other under subjective morality.
Of, for crying out loud... How many times do I have to spell it out for you? I'm not appealing to objective morality at all.
But that is no different from sharing likes and dislikes for food and means nothing about right and wrong morally.
And that's because both are subjective!
No these are relevant aspects of the moral argument. The examples I have give come from articles on the subject. I didn't just make that up. This is something I have studied supported by moral philosophy.
Okay, then someone else made it up.
Like I said some situations may need more thinking. That is another relative situation. So there are safe places with markings on the road and signs that tell the person when they can overtake. But the objective truth that driving on the wrong side of the road still upholds because of the fact that there are precautions that tell you that you can only do it in the designated places because you risk having an accident and killing someone.
That tells us that the system still recognizes that driving on the wrong side of the road is dangerous and wrong. Otherwise, try and imagine a person with a subjective view that driving on the wrong side of the road is OK. People would say it is not OK. Then the person would have to qualify that only where there are signs to safely take over. So they have contradicted their own subjective views. Then the other people would say so it is not OK to just drive on the wrong side of the road then.
You're still saying that it's objectively wrong except in the cases where it isn't. And that seems just like subjective to me.
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