Mini-Me
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- Joined
- Jan 9, 2008
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- 6,514
The Earth seemed flat to everyone living on it, so from their PERSPECTIVE, they believed it was flat. The truth is that the Earth is round, proven by a variety of scientific instruments and mathematics. Perception is related to this argument, HOWEVER (big however), even if we perceive the truth, we can still disagree on moral values. E.g, I can believe that killing anybody is immoral - however you can bring up self-defense as an argument. The fact that we have a disagreement proves Morality is subjective.
If you ever find a Mathematical proof against/for any moral value, that will be noteworthy achievement (maybe a nobel prize?). AceNZ disagreed that Morality is subjective, so I proved him wrong multiple times now.
We can also have a discussion about what is Math - but one thing I would like to say, if you go in this direction, Math has truly been universal tool across all societies and cultures of humanity. Sure, the way we represent Math can vary, such as language and characters, however the Logical nature of Math cannot be denounced.
Morality is indeed harder to prove objectively, maybe impossible, and I do not blame you for believing it unprovable. However, even something that is unprovable and unknowable is not necessarily subjective: You put your faith in math, and I agree this is wise, but are you aware that math rests upon unprovable axioms that we take for granted as self-evident? Are you aware that the exact formulation of these axioms has changed throughout history? Are you further aware of Gödel's Incompleteness Theorems, which essentially state that any self-consistent set of axioms will be inherently unable to prove certain true statements, and only inconsistent sets of axioms would be able to prove them? (They're among the most revolutionary discoveries of the 20th century.) There are plenty of things in this universe that are true but unprovable...maybe even true but unknowable. I do not blame you for believing morality is subjective on the basis of people being unable to strictly prove any moral standard, but I also think you should take a step back from assuming it must necessarily be subjective.
Are you also aware that science is unable to constructively prove anything, only offer evidence that is consistent with - or which rejects - certain viewpoints? Nothing is strictly provable, which is the entire basis of the philosophy of skepticism. Check out René Descartes for starters, and check out the Münchhausen Trilemma. I tend to side with Popperian "fallibilism" as a tentative solution, but we can still never REALLY know for sure. We can only prove anything if we first take a few unprovable axioms for granted, and we still cannot prove everything that is true (Gödel again). Proving any particular moral standard almost certainly requires us to take a few more unprovable things for granted than we need for other subjects or day-to-day life...but the point is that the difference between provable and unprovable subjects lies more on a spectrum of certainty rather than a black and white contrast between binary categories.
Now, you say that we can only argue against moral arguments with other moral arguments (as I think you did before one of your edits), but this is also not strictly true. You may not be able to constructively prove any one moral standard, but you can still narrow things down by process of elimination, if you can manage to reject others as absurd. I don't find Hoppe's "argumentation ethics" to be conclusive at all, but he makes some pretty interesting logical points, and some of them I do find compelling. There are also plenty of moral arguments which fall woefully astray of Occam's Razor, for instance. Occam's Razor is no proof of anything, but it's a heuristic that indicates that, all other things being equal, the simpler answer is more likely to be true. The relative simplicity of universal laws tends to support this principle, among other things. There is no guarantee that ANY standard of morality is necessarily "true" or "correct," but assuming one may be, it is most likely to be simple and elegant.
With Occam's Razor in mind, consider the ideas of self-ownership vs. arbitrary statism: Self-ownership and negative rights consistently argue that each and every person owns himself (or herself) to the exclusion of others, whereas arbitrary statism and positive rights essentially assert one of infinite different configurations of some people owning parts of themselves and parts of others, where some people may own not only themselves but others as well. The sheer arbitrariness is astounding and limitless, so you can be certain that IF any moral standard is objectively correct, it's almost certainly not going to be one of those configurations, and it's much more likely to be self-ownership. The parsimony of self-ownership makes it a much more natural default position, whereas asserting that Mr. Dictator owns both himself and your family requires a whole lot more justification...which just isn't there. There are still other issues that lie on a spectrum and probably require subjective value judgments or utilitarian arguments to navigate, like the exact formulation of property, homesteading, and abandonment, but for all we know, there might be a "right answer" for all of those too.
I'm not trying to forcefully argue that morality is necessarily objective here. I'm arguing that it MIGHT be, and we just don't know. I think it's unfair to demand that everyone should agree with you on its subjectivity, or that any arbitrary standard is just as valid as a well-formulated one. (For instance, I believe that the Nazis were more than just "different;" they were inconsistent and arbitrary, and the evil of their "morality" followed from that.) Your worldview is typical of postmodern thought, which brought along with it the popularization of moral relativism and situational ethics. Iconoclasm is great, but I find it painfully ironic that casual adherents of this generally skeptical (cynical?) and relativistic worldview aren't also critical of this very skepticism and relativism: It's now unpopular to believe a certain perspective is inherently better than another, except for the perspective that no perspective is better than another. That particular perspective is the new dogma, to be defended to the death.


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