Is morality objective?

 
Sandtrap
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Lot of good that objective fact did you, didn't it?
So? Facts aren't defined by utility of action. You could say religion is a fantastic way of reaching social cohesion, and you could be right but it would have precisely zero bearing on the truth of religious propositions.

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Likely, nothing.
That doesn't mean I'm ignoring the fact, however; it's possible my perception on the issue is poor, but my perception doesn't define the objectivity of that fact. As far as I'm concerned, the utility of me smoking is higher than the disutility of me smoking. If information asymmetries exist, and I'm indeed wrong about my own preference that still doesn't negate the existence of the fact.

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So I seriously question, what is the actual point and value of an objective fact when it can actively be ignored, stepped over, bent and broken, and discarded in favor of somebody's own personal stupidity/preferences?
Objective facts have value to us as agents because we seek it; the fact that we have perceptional biases that prevent us from reaching true objectivity--and always will--doesn't negate the journey of seeking it. Even the most incorrect, psychotic nutjobs incorrigibly believe they are objectively correct.

Makes sense well enough for me I guess.

Although I can't say I'm satisfied that we live in a world where most objective truths get shit on and ignored in favor of shortsighted-ness.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Although I can't say I'm satisfied that we live in a world where most objective truths get shit on and ignored in favor of shortsighted-ness.
Nobody is. It's just that all of us--at least in one area--are usually incapable of realising when and where we lack a proper approach to obtaining objectivity.


Anonymous (User Deleted) | Legendary Invincible!
 
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Good health would still exist even if there were no such thing as bad health.
Of course it wouldn't; we wouldn't have developed a concept of health at all because it would be totally irrelevant. "Good health" and "bad health" are entirely relative to one another; in the future, it could be considered a crippling disability to not live to 250, or to not be able to run a marathon every weekend. The world could be configured such a way, in the future, so as to make our current conceptions of health starkly unhealthy in every respect; yet inequities would still exist. If we literally managed to abolish poor health, there would be no point in the concept whatsoever other than some kind of historical artefact.
If there were no such thing as disease, for example, there would be no need for the biological processes that take care of disease. Good health does not require bad health in order to exist.

No, it isn't. Physics reaches 'provable' (or, more accurately, high-probability) conclusions on the assumed bases of things like physicalism, naturalism and empiricism; which we assume entirely because they are rational to assume.
It's a fact that if you were to jump right now, the Earth's gravity would pull you back to the ground, assuming there are no other unmentioned factors at play, such as you using a jetpack.

You can't objectively prove right from wrong. What's 'wrong' to you is always going to be 'right' to someone else.

Not at all:
YouTube


Try and ignore the religious context of the video and focus on the epistemological considerations.
The very purpose of the truth is that it is not subjective, but objective, given the overwhelming evidence, logic, and most importantly, facts that support it. I have trouble figuring out how all three of those requirements fit into morality, because there is no such thing as a provable moral fact.

And that's the biggest problem with objective morality, at least from my atheistic perspective--it cannot be proven in the absence of a divine creator.

I suppose I should ask--do you believe in a higher power?
Last Edit: September 09, 2015, 12:59:23 PM by Kupo


 
Sandtrap
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Although I can't say I'm satisfied that we live in a world where most objective truths get shit on and ignored in favor of shortsighted-ness.
Nobody is. It's just that all of us--at least in one area--are usually incapable of realising when and where we lack a proper approach to obtaining objectivity.

Can't forget willpower either. Some people may realise stuff. But do nothing about it anyway.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Good health does not require bad health in order to exist.
The entire concept of health requires inequities in health to exist in the first place. There would be absolutely no relevance to such a concept otherwise.

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It's a fact that if you were to jump right now, the Earth's gravity would pull you back to the ground, assuming there are no other unmentioned factors at play, such as you using a jetpack.
Okay? That doesn't contradict a single thing I said.

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The very purpose of the truth is that it is not subjective, but objective, given the overwhelming evidence, logic, and most importantly, facts that support it.
Did you watch the video? You can't apply evidence or logic to reach facts until you presuppose the values of those very things. You have to define your epistemology before you can even begin drawing conclusions.

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I have trouble figuring out how all three of those requirements fit into morality
Because, like epistemology, you have to define your morality before you can begin drawing conclusions.

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I suppose I should ask--do you believe in a higher power?
As in some kind of supernatural entity? No.
Last Edit: September 09, 2015, 12:57:42 PM by Executioner Sigma


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The entire concept of health requires inequities in health to exist in the first place. There would be absolutely no relevance to such a concept otherwise.
I'm not talking about concepts, I'm talking about the fact that good health would still exist even without bad health.

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Okay? That doesn't contradict a single thing I said.
It's a fact that you would return to Earth. You just said physics isn't based in facts... which would defeat the purpose of physics in the first place.

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Did you watch the video? You can't apply evidence or logic to reach facts until you presuppose the values of those very things. You have to define your epistemology before you can even begin drawing conclusions.
Sorry, I didn't yet, actually. I need lunch first.

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Because, like epistemology, you have to define your morality before you can begin drawing conclusions.
But if I can simply define my morality, how is that in any way objective? This philosophical diversion is avoiding the problem that there is no way to factually and objectively prove morality.


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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
I'm not talking about concepts, I'm talking about the fact that good health would still exist even without bad health.
Uh, how? The whole idea of "good" is based on inequity; that's what qualitative propositions are in their entirety.

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You just said physics isn't based in facts...
Physics is not based on facts; it's based on a defined epistemology. Physics identifies what we might call facts. This is a naive notion of what truth is which doesn't account for the perceptional and linguistic barriers which stop us from ever being totally, epistemologically objective due to the fact we can't actually know if the reality we perceive is actual. It's called the 'correspondence theory of truth' and it basically says that we know something is true if it corresponds to reality, but it falls down in that "truth" simply cannot be an intrinsic property of sentences.

Truth is not a property--or some abstract object--of propositions; it's a measurement for how well propositions perform within a certain epistemology. If Alvin Platinga, for instance, defines his epistemology on the basis of presuppositionalism and literal Biblicalism he could say "The proposition that Gensis is true, is itself true" and he wouldn't be wrong within the context of his epistemology.

The point, however, is to overcome this relativistic barrier and actually identify the best bases on which we can build our epistemology: physics being the best example.

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But if I can simply define my morality, how is that in any way objective?
You could say exactly the same about epistemology; the point is that there are not incorrect and correct ways to define either morality or epistemology, but better and worse ways of defining both of these. An epistemology based on a schizophrenic is not actually wrong in that it can be described as factually incorrect, because an epistemology is the very thing we filter propositions through; it can be described as bad, however. It's a philosophically poor basis for your epistemology.
Last Edit: September 09, 2015, 01:19:12 PM by Executioner Sigma


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No morality is not objective. Morality is derived from human emotion and is subject to different standards in different cultures, thus making it inherently subjective.
"Near Death Experiences are derived wholly from human experience, and are subject to different characteristics in different cultures, thus making it impossible for us to talk about NDEs objectively."

You're confusing ontology and epistemology; we can talk objectively about the ontologically subjective.
I don't see the relevance of ontology on this subject though. Whether something is objective or not can be defined by epistemological concepts and are usually absolute. Ontology can probably be valid in discussing the observable, but when discussing conceptual things like morality I don't see why it needs to be addressed. Although if you can correct me please do.
But the fact that we can debate mortality inherently means it can't be objective, since something that's objective retains this state independent of any bias.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
But the fact that we can debate mortality inherently means it can't be objective
"I'm a Christian Chemist, and I don't think water is made of two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen because God made water before stars, and it would be Biblically inelegant."

Of course this is a silly example, but it's nevertheless valid. Of course you can engage in debates about the objective; to use an example in which one party is not so obviously empirically incorrect, just think of the current debates in theoretical physics surrounding string theory, loop quantum gravity, et cetera. The fact that physicists are debating these issues and trying to reach the truth doesn't negate the fact that objective truth exists.

Indeed, you and I could begin debating something already well-established now. Because objectivity is not contingent on our perception of it.

I might do a post on epistemology and truth actually, since a lot of people find it really confusing.
Last Edit: September 09, 2015, 02:20:19 PM by Executioner Sigma


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I'm not talking about concepts, I'm talking about the fact that good health would still exist even without bad health.
Uh, how? The whole idea of "good" is based on inequity; that's what qualitative propositions are in their entirety.

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You just said physics isn't based in facts...
Physics is not based on facts; it's based on a defined epistemology. Physics identifies what we might call facts. This is a naive notion of what truth is which doesn't account for the perceptional and linguistic barriers which stop us from ever being totally, epistemologically objective due to the fact we can't actually know if the reality we perceive is actual. It's called the 'correspondence theory of truth' and it basically says that we know something is true if it corresponds to reality, but it falls down in that "truth" simply cannot be an intrinsic property of sentences.

Truth is not a property--or some abstract object--of propositions; it's a measurement for how well propositions perform within a certain epistemology. If Alvin Platinga, for instance, defines his epistemology on the basis of presuppositionalism and literal Biblicalism he could say "The proposition that Gensis is true, is itself true" and he wouldn't be wrong within the context of his epistemology.

The point, however, is to overcome this relativistic barrier and actually identify the best bases on which we can build our epistemology: physics being the best example.

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But if I can simply define my morality, how is that in any way objective?
You could say exactly the same about epistemology; the point is that there are not incorrect and correct ways to define either morality or epistemology, but better and worse ways of defining both of these. An epistemology based on a schizophrenic is not actually wrong in that it can be described as factually incorrect, because an epistemology is the very thing we filter propositions through; it can be described as bad, however. It's a philosophically poor basis for your epistemology.
Uh... most of that went over my head. Or I'm just being impatient. I'll give it a read (and watch the video) after I think about it for a bit. Off to class for now. (Yeah, yeah, I know I said after lunch, but I've been busy today.)

What I'm stuck on here is the sense that, however we define epistemology and the semantics of truth... well, objectivity implies truth, which requires facts. There are no facts that support the concept of morality being anything more than subjective.
Last Edit: September 09, 2015, 03:49:44 PM by Kupo


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
There are no facts that support the concept of morality being anything more than subjective.
The point is that there are if you can identify the best definition of morality.


 
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There are no facts that support the concept of morality being anything more than subjective.
The point is that there are if you can identify the best definition of morality.
...I feel like we're going in circles here. Sorry, just needed to get this in. I didn't think you'd reply so fast >.>

From my atheistic (and, well, nihilistic) perspective, there's no intrinsic purpose to life without a higher power defining one for us. The existence of morals depends on life having a purpose, because morals are based around said purpose.

Wouldn't my definition of morality be subjective itself? Because if it was objective, there would only be one definition, the 'true' definition. But even if it wasn't subjective, what 'facts' would there be, anyway?


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
because morals are based around said purpose.
I don't see why you would define morality as to necessitate some kind of transcendent, intrinsic purpose. Do you see? You are defining morality so as to essentially pre-assume a morally nihilistic (or subjectivist) perspective. This is what I mean: the definition leads to the facts. If you do indeed define morality that way, then it is true there are no objective moral facts--because 'truth' is an epistemic label we apply after running propositions through our epistemology, it isn't an intrinstic or Platonic property. The actual question is whether or not you have the best definition for morality.

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Wouldn't my definition of morality be subjective itself? Because if it was objective, there would only be one definition, the 'true' definition. But even if it wasn't subjective, what 'facts' would there be, anyway?
I suppose you could say it allows for a minor degree of relativism. But, let's apply that thought to epistemology: if epistemologies are wholly relative, is an epistemology based on evidence and logic precisely equal to an epistemology based on faith and dogma? I'd argue no, there is indeed a superior--are more useful--epistemological stance in the first option.

Or, let's apply it to physics: what if people defined physics in such a way as to include the study of the supernatural and the transcendent? I think we would all agree this would be a poor definition with very, very little utility.

Think of it this way: all human activity--the study of everything--has to begin from the basis of an assumed "perspective". Not all perspectives, however, are created equal; there are better and worse perspective for conducting physics, chemistry, economics and--this is the point--I would argue morality too.
Last Edit: September 09, 2015, 04:19:07 PM by Executioner Sigma


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Why does this still not make sense to me.

This is one of those conceptual situations in my head where all that needs to happen is for one "Click" of a connection to happen, and the entirety of this argument will be completely understood by me. But that click isn't happening, and it's pissing me off. It's like not getting a mathematical idea until you've been presented it just the right way for it to be perfectly sensible.

Fucking hell.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Why does this still not make sense to me.
Think of it this way:

We get facts from physics, not because we actually study reality (which you realise when looking at the philosophy), but because we have defined physics in such a way as to yield useful results about the world we find ourselves in. We acquire knowledge by defining the terms of our study and then drawing conclusions.

Think of it like a filter that you put sentences into, then apply an algorithm which then yields a binary result of either "True" or "False".

We argue it's the same as morality. We simply have to identify the best definition of morality, and thus the facts will follow.

I plan on doing a post on epistemology and truth, however, just to elucidate on how definitions fit into the whole scheme of things.


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Why does this still not make sense to me.
Think of it this way:

We get facts from physics, not because we actually study reality (which you realise when looking at the philosophy), but because we have defined physics in such a way as to yield useful results about the world we find ourselves in. We acquire knowledge by defining the terms of our study and then drawing conclusions.

Think of it like a filter that you put sentences into, then apply an algorithm which then yields a binary result of either "True" or "False".

We argue it's the same as morality. We simply have to identify the best definition of morality, and thus the facts will follow.

I plan on doing a post on epistemology and truth, however, just to elucidate on how definitions fit into the whole scheme of things.
I believe you drawing parallels to studying the not-so-real "realities" of physics was the closest I've come to completely understanding this. I think I might have a grasp, at least mostly, but the way I'm thinking still sees there to be a division between "truths" found through mathematics and physics, and those found in something like moral codes. Can you expand on that?


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But the fact that we can debate mortality inherently means it can't be objective
"I'm a Christian Chemist, and I don't think water is made of two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen because God made water before stars, and it would be Biblically inelegant."

Of course this is a silly example, but it's nevertheless valid. Of course you can engage in debates about the objective; to use an example in which one party is not so obviously empirically incorrect, just think of the current debates in theoretical physics surrounding string theory, loop quantum gravity, et cetera. The fact that physicists are debating these issues and trying to reach the truth doesn't negate the fact that objective truth exists.

Indeed, you and I could begin debating something already well-established now. Because objectivity is not contingent on our perception of it.

I might do a post on epistemology and truth actually, since a lot of people find it really confusing.
You have a very good point. Well, this discussion might be out of my league as I have no knowledge or background in advance philosophy. You should make that post on epistemology. It'll open a lot of eyes.


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because morals are based around said purpose.
I don't see why you would define morality as to necessitate some kind of transcendent, intrinsic purpose. Do you see? You are defining morality so as to essentially pre-assume a morally nihilistic (or subjectivist) perspective. This is what I mean: the definition leads to the facts. If you do indeed define morality that way, then it is true there are no objective moral facts--because 'truth' is an epistemic label we apply after running propositions through our epistemology, it isn't an intrinstic or Platonic property. The actual question is whether or not you have the best definition for morality.

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Wouldn't my definition of morality be subjective itself? Because if it was objective, there would only be one definition, the 'true' definition. But even if it wasn't subjective, what 'facts' would there be, anyway?
I suppose you could say it allows for a minor degree of relativism. But, let's apply that thought to epistemology: if epistemologies are wholly relative, is an epistemology based on evidence and logic precisely equal to an epistemology based on faith and dogma? I'd argue no, there is indeed a superior--are more useful--epistemological stance in the first option.

Or, let's apply it to physics: what if people defined physics in such a way as to include the study of the supernatural and the transcendent? I think we would all agree this would be a poor definition with very, very little utility.

Think of it this way: all human activity--the study of everything--has to begin from the basis of an assumed "perspective". Not all perspectives, however, are created equal; there are better and worse perspective for conducting physics, chemistry, economics and--this is the point--I would argue morality too.
Uh, I'm not sure I follow. Yes, if taken to an extreme, I suppose we really can't truly know anything. I'd think that if there were a truth to morality, it could just be stated without having to figure it out for oneself.

What I also can't wrap my head around is how objective, factual morality can exist without a higher authority dictating it, be it nature or God or whomever.

All I've really grasped is that:
1) science is not based in fact and is subjective
2) morality somehow is based in fact and is objective

Which, to me at least, just sounds like mental gymnastics.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
1) science is not based in fact and is subjective
No, science reaches objective facts on the basis of a defined epistemology.


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If there is no God...

God is an entity, so basing morality on a single entity's opinion makes it subjective.


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If there is no God...

God is an entity, so basing morality on a single entity's opinion makes it subjective.
God has access to all information. He would be fully capable of being objectively moral. And if you have the ability to derive absolute purpose like a God would, well heh I don't see any reason not to work towards that end.


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If there is no God...

God is an entity, so basing morality on a single entity's opinion makes it subjective.
God has access to all information. He would be fully capable of being objectively moral. And if you have the ability to derive absolute purpose like a God would, well heh I don't see any reason not to work towards that end.
If god merely has access to the information, then that means the information exists outside of god.


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1) science is not based in fact and is subjective
No, science reaches objective facts on the basis of a defined epistemology.
This is confusing.

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Physics is based on provable facts
No, it isn't. Physics reaches 'provable' (or, more accurately, high-probability) conclusions on the assumed bases of things like physicalism, naturalism and empiricism; which we assume entirely because they are rational to assume.
Science reaches objective facts, but physics only reaches conclusions based on assumptions? Physics falls under the umbrella of science, thus would logically inherit all of science's properties.


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If there is no God...

God is an entity, so basing morality on a single entity's opinion makes it subjective.
God has access to all information. He would be fully capable of being objectively moral. And if you have the ability to derive absolute purpose like a God would, well heh I don't see any reason not to work towards that end.
If god merely has access to the information, then that means the information exists outside of god.
semantics