Is objective morality imaginary?
Hi all,
I have been interested in moral philosophy for a while, and had the following thoughts.
If there is objective morality, then equal interests per life time for each sentient being should be the aim to achieve. Therefore:
1. Utilitarianism can not be objective because it ignores the distribution of well-being and separateness of persons.
2. Theories considering the separateness of persons on the other hand, can have one of the following results:
2.1 Libertarianism:
This can not be objective because it ignores the distribution of well-being.
2.2 Egalitarianism
Even if we assume that some version of it aims at providing equal interests per life time for each sentient being, it can not achieve that.
People are not going to end up having equal well-being. You can not prevent that some individuals will end up worse off than others. You can not control how each individual lives and dies.
If you think this is not an argument against separateness of persons, think about this:
If separateness of persons and equality are required for objective morality to exist, then the world is equally bad/good whether only one person or all persons but one person in the world is worse off.
If these two are required for objective morality to exist, and they do seem to be required for it, then as long as there is one human or sentient animal suffering or going to suffer, it makes no moral difference to help others.
As long as illness and natural disasters happen to humans, carnivorous animals have to eat other animals or suffer and die themselves, we can not provide equal wellbeing to each sentient being. And if we can not that, then separateness of persons and equal distribution of well-being will be both required for objective morality to exist and impossible to achieve, which only leaves us with the option that it is imaginary!
Is there a solution for this problem from moral realiists here?
I have been interested in moral philosophy for a while, and had the following thoughts.
If there is objective morality, then equal interests per life time for each sentient being should be the aim to achieve. Therefore:
1. Utilitarianism can not be objective because it ignores the distribution of well-being and separateness of persons.
2. Theories considering the separateness of persons on the other hand, can have one of the following results:
2.1 Libertarianism:
This can not be objective because it ignores the distribution of well-being.
2.2 Egalitarianism
Even if we assume that some version of it aims at providing equal interests per life time for each sentient being, it can not achieve that.
People are not going to end up having equal well-being. You can not prevent that some individuals will end up worse off than others. You can not control how each individual lives and dies.
If you think this is not an argument against separateness of persons, think about this:
If separateness of persons and equality are required for objective morality to exist, then the world is equally bad/good whether only one person or all persons but one person in the world is worse off.
If these two are required for objective morality to exist, and they do seem to be required for it, then as long as there is one human or sentient animal suffering or going to suffer, it makes no moral difference to help others.
As long as illness and natural disasters happen to humans, carnivorous animals have to eat other animals or suffer and die themselves, we can not provide equal wellbeing to each sentient being. And if we can not that, then separateness of persons and equal distribution of well-being will be both required for objective morality to exist and impossible to achieve, which only leaves us with the option that it is imaginary!
Is there a solution for this problem from moral realiists here?
Comments (43)
1. How do you define "objective morality," and why?
2. What does "equal interests per life time" mean?
I was going to ask the same thing. Sounds ominously like 'equality'.
I would define objective morality,as I suppose as something like this;
"equal consideration of equal interests of sentient beings per life time",
or to simplify discussion, feel free to say of human beings.
I think it is objectively wrong to have differrent judgements on identical cases. Of course, a moral nihilist would say he does not have different judgments, his life and suffering or pleasure is just as morally irrelevant as that of others. However, he still feels that suffering bad and pleasure good for himself regardless of what he says.
Now why per life time?
Imagine you have been asked before you came to life whether you want to be sent to live your life on earth, the advantages minus disadvantages of your whole life time should be rationally considered. The same should therefore be assumed in an objective moral theory, I assume.
The problem that I do not have an answer to is this:
If objective morality is true, and I still assume it is, how can separateness of persons and equal consideration of equal interests be both required for objective morality and impossible to achieve?
This is raising my doubt that something might be wrong about moral realism. Now I wonder if there is an answer from a moral realist to this problem.
E.g. you can not equally consider the interests of a terrorist and someone he is willing to kill.
Or you can not equally consider the interests of a lion and the animal a lion needs to eat to survive.
The is no point to meet in the middle, and suffering and pleasure will not be distributed equally.
Basically it seems that objective morality is demanding what is impossible in nature.
It seems the only possible way for objective morality to exist is through aiming at equally dealing with equal cases. So I could say:
Objective morality is equally considering equal interests of sentient beings per life time
Instead of sentient beings, you can also say humans for simplification.
"per life time" of each individual because that is what matters. Imagine you were asked before you came to life whether you want to be born. Rationally you would consider the advantages and disadvantages of all your life between birth and death.
But equally considering equal interests is so demanding that it is impossible to achieve. Still I do not find some alternative that I can call objective which is raising my doubt that objective morality is imaginary
Given that what ought to be cannot reliably be found in the world, one has to ask, if it is 'objective', where it can be reliably found? Perhaps one has to take God's word for it, or perhaps there is an innate sense of what is right and wrong, that can be developed with practice or left to atrophy. This latter seems likely, because we have just established that we can tell that what ought to be is not always what is, and so we have already told the difference, and we would need such a sense to even recognise the word of God.
Or perhaps we just happen to like some stuff and not other stuff, and being social beings like to impose our taste on everyone and everything. And being broadly similar creatures, our likes and dislikes are similar. This is the nihilist position.
Quoting Atheer
Can we call that 'justice'? I think we understand what it is, that it ought to be, and that it is not except to the extent that we realise it. Perhaps our understanding is exactly this, that my joy and suffering is no different to another's joy and suffering despite the I feel the one and not the other, just as I understand that the world goes on beyond what I sense of it in every other way. And that is what I mean by objective - that which is independent of me.
But let me suggest some other values: life, and freedom. The justice of universal annihilation, or of universal coercion do not seem to have much value. So things are more complex.
You asked "how can separateness of persons and equal consideration of equal interests be both required for objective morality and impossible to achieve?" I can think of a few (unrealistic) ways this could be done. If a society were to be created where everyone had interests which either aligned, or did not conflict with the interests of others. Such a society would essentially need to control the interests of its individuals or make conflicting interests harmless in a sense.
Examples:
1) a society with the ability to psychologically manipulate it's population's interests from birth so that interests never conflict (extreme brainwashing)
2) A society made of people who naturally don't have conflicting interests (e.g. a society of clones or perhaps a genetic variant of sentient being that can cannot have conflicting interests)
3) Some combination of the two.
4) Random chance. I suppose I can imagine an Earth that miraculously contained nobody with conflicting interests during a certain time period out of pure chance (very very small odds).
I realize some of these examples (like clones) may not qualify for your "separateness of person" criteria in objective reality. That aside, I don't think such equal consideration of interests can ever be attained outside of these examples. As you mentioned, the terrorists interests are not conducive to a layman's interests. It is this conflict of interests in today's reality that makes objective morality impossible from a practical standpoint.
A few other issues with your objective morality include the "equal life" criteria. In nature lifespans are never equal. To have truly objective reality, we would need equal lifespans so that our equal interests may span equal times. Again, solving this problem brings me back to the homogeneous society where everyone's interests and lifespans are the same; however this directly conflicts with the separateness of personas clause. It seems to me that objective morality may be a logical paradox. Perhaps you can reconsider your initial assumption that objective morality, as you define it, is true?
This seems obviously wrong on the face of it. In the first place, morality doesn't dictate what peoples' aims should be, it shapes the way they try to achieve those aims. Morality/Justice is adverbial, so to speak, one behaves morally, it's not that one is supposed to behave with some particular specified aim, with some particular specified result (and that's what's called "moral").
In the second place, what business of yours is the particular distribution of goods in society? People achieve whatever they are able and/or willing to achieve, which is both shaped and limited by their intrinsic capabilities (genetics) and their social situation (e.g. family, education, milieu) - it's up to them what they strive for (e.g. whether it's equal to others) not you.
If all you're saying is that nobody should hinder anyone else from doing whatever harmless thing they damn well please, to the best of their capabilities, then I would agree; but it seems you want a particular distributive result.
But equal distribution has no more sacred moral standing than any other random distribution (e.g. "90% for me and my cronies, the rest for the plebs").
One might also agree with some degree of compensation for those worst affected by unfortunate circumstances, etc. - that seems like a nice thing to do. But it's not particularly moral, it's not how one ought to behave in a moral sense, it's more of a charitable act that one ought to do in a looser sense, a sense that respects a generalized obligation of kindness and giving, that the more fortunate have towards the less fortunate (such that one is not immoral, but rather a churl, if one ignores it).
One might call the lumpiness of the distribution of luck a "cosmic injustice" - it is indeed "unfair" (of life, in a loose sense) that some people should be born lucky and others not, but that doesn't translate into it being a matter of human beings having done something morally wrong or actionable. It's not (usually) the lucky person's fault that the unlucky person is unlucky. And if it is, it's the result of particular, specifiable actions on the lucky one's part, not of what they are (i.e. lucky). One may say that something has to be done, but that something can't involve punishing the lucky, because that would itself be a primary injustice (punishing people who are innocent of wrongdoing).
You can call it justice or morality
To be honest, I am not really sure what is the difference between the two.
"that my joy and suffering is no different to another's joy and suffering despite the I feel the one and not the other"
That is where it seems to me that objective morality is grounded. But the question now for me is whether equal consideration is realistic/achievable considering all the conflicts?
If not, what about getting as close as possible to achieving equal consideration of interests? Still "objective"?
@Robot Brain
The ways to achieve morality according to my definition are unrealistic.
Actually my scope is the whole world and not only a society.
There are two possibilities I can think of:
Either my definition is too and unnecessarily demanding für objective morality to exist
or objective morality is probably really immaginary.
The problem is that I am not sure where I went wrong about defining objective morality, or there is no objective morality that can be real even in any other possible definition.
What could be other definitions that qualify for objective morality and still be realistic?
@Sherlock
The problem of utilitarianism ist he lack of seperatness of persons. It assumes that there is such a thing out there that is "the biggest good for the biggest number". I do not think that such a thing exists in reality. There are only interests of Individual A + interests of Individual B +…..
The sum is however, a mental construct, it seems to me.
How does the interest of many people justify the suffering of gladiators they are watching fighting each other?
It seems to be based on luck, which is arbitrary, therefore at odds with objectivism.
If your interests happenned to be aligned with that of the majority, you are well-off, otherwise, hard luck!
@gurugeorge
I am speaking about the aims people can objectively pursue. If that is not morality for you then give it another name. E.g. Utilitarianism has the aim of: “the biggest good for the biggest number”. So what you are saying is not entirely true.
You asked questions then answered yourself in a way similar to the way I would have answered them.
“What business of yours is the particular distribution of goods in society?”
Exactly luck and arbitrariness seem to me to be at odds with objectivism.
As every thing we have is obtained by luck, which is arbitrary, any objective moral theory should try at least to rectify the situation to make it, as if it were objectively distributed or probably as close as possible to that.
If x = Person, it seems there is no reason that x lives a better life than another x, unless if it benefits that worse-off x (if you accept Rawl’s difference principle).
It is not about fault of whom, it is about making the distribution of well-being (closer to being) being objective.
Is it necessary for objective morality to exist to (try to) rectify cosmic injustice as you called it?
Do you believe at all that there is such a thing as objective morality?
@Fool
Well, specifically the topic is about two questions:
1. What are the minimum requirements for a moral theory to be supporting objective morality or classified under moral realism?
2. Could objective morality be about objective distribution of good among individuals? i.e eliminating or reducing randomness in that distribution?
But it's objective only according to your preferred pretty pattern. There's no intrinsic reason, in nature, to prefer equal distribution. So what if peoples' lot is different, provided we ensure a lower "floor" below which no one need fall? Looking at it from my own point of view, it doesn't matter to me in the least that some have more than me, what matters is that I have what is due to me. That is objective justice. Suum cuique tribuere.
The problem with your position is that you take a synoptic stance that you have no right to, you pompously (so to speak) arrogate to yourself the position of judge over all humanity and its doings. That is not justice either, it's tyranny, and it's just as objectionable that you enforce your equal distribution, as it would be for some greedy pig of a tyrant to gather 90% of goods to himself and 10% to the rest of the population. It's just another imposed distribution that rides roughshod over peoples' voluntary mutual accommodation, which is really the objective thing that has to be guarded.
As an example, the ten commandments were written from the objectives POV, maximize the team. Each commandment makes it easier for the team to get along and trust each other with minimal policing resources. The commandments address pitfalls in human nature that can sabotage the unity of the team. The first commandment, there is one god and no god before him, is there to prevent religious arguments which can divide or break the team.
Morality is not designed to maximize the individual. Like in sports, all the players would love to play all the time, at any position they want. But the coach creates rules that budget the time and the job of each player, so the team is maximized. Some players will complain that this is not fair to them and is not even rational. But the goal is not to make everyone happy, but to bring the team to the championship game. If the team gets there, then everyone is a champion. The sacrifice for the team with then makes sense to all.
In modern times it is all about the individual. If you had a propensity to steal, you would think the commandment, thou shall not steal, is subjective and arbitrary. Since stealing comes natural to you, you should be allowed to do it so you are happy. However, if you are allowed to steal, this will make other people more defensive and less trusting, causing a problem for the team. The divided team is less than the sum of its parts.
This is a non-sequitur, as this is only a problem for affirmative moral realism, i.e. a morality that never intersects life.
If life is (objectively) immoral, then the contradictions inherent in any sophisticated moral system will be inevitable. Affirmative morality requires the strategic and partial application of these moral concepts, and thus will always be vulnerable to criticism. The next step taken by affirmative theorists is to then decide which criticisms are "more important" than others.
Unless it is recognized that life intersects morality, moral realism will never make sense. There will always be contradictions, exceptions, ambiguity. Hence why something like moral particularism / pluralism is a suitable choice for the intra-worldly but does not satisfy the condition of being the "absolute" morality. The absolute morality contains no contradictions, but life contradicts absolute morality and so a particular morality (which is an amalgamation of different, often competing moral concepts) is constructed ad hoc.
I think your basic problem is that 'objectivity' is too narrow a criterion for the establishment of ethical claims. Objectivity is a very useful criterion across many subjects, but ethical judgements are a different matter, as in this context, you're dealing with the wishes, rights and demands of persons, who are not 'objects' as such.
Take for example native land-rights claims. You can argue in some hypothetical case, that native land rights might impede the development of valuable natural resources that would benefit the whole community. But on the other hand, such developments might destroy a unique culture or cultural artefact. Both sides have perfectly rational claims - but how would you decide? There's no truly objective way of adjudicating such a dispute. You have to make a decision on the balance, but oftentimes, that decision is never going to suit everyone. Happens almost every day.
In a way, this is central to the whole problem of ethical philosophy in current culture. The normative standards of modern liberal democracies are mainly derived from, and generally assume, a Judeo-Christian framework, which incorporates much ethical theory from classical culture. But today's culture will often call the normative role of the Judeo-Christian ethos into question - which, as you're seeing, then opens up a rather large can of worms.
I suspect you're trying to quantify the whole question by saying that:
Quoting Atheer
Which is rather as if there is a Gross National Moral Balance - a maximal formula - which needs to be established and then acted upon, in the interests of equity. But it's an unrealistic idea, for any number of reasons.
So - I don't think there's any solution that you would consider, from a moral realist viewpoint, as, I think, you've tacitly excluded the very basis on which moral realism might be predicated. In other words, if you're going to make the calculation on purely quantitative grounds, which is what I think you're trying to do, then I don't think you can arrive at an answer at all.
In order to get an accurate answer to this question please define:
1 objectivity
2 morality
3 imaginary
If you don't people will apply their own definitions, wich may not nessesarily be the same as the ones you intended. I don't think nr.3 'imaginary' will cause much problems, but the other two might.
Quoting Atheer
There are not 100% identical cases concerning human beings. Hence there is no different judgement on identical cases. There is only different judgement on identical represented cases.
There is no objective morality. We developed science in order to aproach objectivity by banning morality from it. For human beings the world starts subjective, only by a long period of intensive education into science they can learn to approach objectivity, and even then most of them seem only able to apply the methods to objectivity consistently within their specific field of study.
Provided we ensure a lower "floor" below which no one need fall? Looking at it from my own point of view, it doesn't matter to me in the least that some have more than me, what matters is that I have what is due to me. That is objective justice.
So that is a sort or Sufficientarianism, which is a possible candidate as a crterion of morality. The problem however with it is the same of the problem i am talking about in this topic, plus another one which is where to draw the line of being sufficient if we reject equality or even Rawl's theory of justice.
The same problem continues, we will not be able to ensure any moral good for each individual. That is, there will always be individuals that we can not provide with equal or sufficient well-being. Does this not stand at odds with any moral theory claiming to be objective?
Can we claim to be objective and have moral ideals that are not possible to achieve fully and still try our best to achieve sufficient good to all individuals even though we know nature will decide something bad out of our control for some individuals?
Quoting wellwisher
I agree that morality is not "merely" about the individual, but it seems to me that maximizing the well-being of a team/group at the expense of an individual who is worse off than average is against objectivism.
And if we only allow for the interest of a group to take priority before intersts of people who are already well off, then you are considering individuals again.
Aren't contradictions against objectivity/realism?
I think this is a good point, probably morality is not objective, but let's say might get close to being objective, the question is however, what could a suitable realist or semi-realist criterion that we can use to make a balance between competing moral propositions?
I assume there might be morally identical cases even there are no identical cases concerning human beings. As long as all the relevant criterions are equally met for each individual, it might still be possible to have moraly identical cases.
[b]If (semi-)objective morality aims at providing equal or sufficient well-being for each sentient being, even though we know this can not achieved for each individual, as we can not control nature to prevent some individuals ending up worse off than others or under a sufficiency threshold, could we still have morality that is neither subjective nor relative?
That is, could morality be somewhere between objective and subjective/relative?
For instance, if we can not prevent every individual from suffering, does it still make sense to try to lessen the number of people who will suffer (and still hold to our belief in the separateness of persons)?[/b]
I think the religions try to observe the commitment to 'lessening suffering', or they ought to, although clearly in practice they often seem to fail. But, for example, the historical establishment of the public hospital system in Western culture was clearly linked with and inspired by the advent of Christianity.
But if one appeals to religious values, the problem will then be the perceived conflict between realism and faith - because in the secular perspective, faith is by definition grounded in intangibles and so not 'realist' in the scientific sense.
So, again, I think the attempt to arrive at a formula can only ever conform to some variety of utilitarianism, 'the greatest good for the greatest number'. But while that seems unexceptionable, there might be genuine moral dilemmas thrown up by those criteria. What if, for example, in an immensely resource-depleted world, large populations are threatened with starvation, which those in more fortunate economies might be able to ameliorate but only at considerable sacrifice to themselves? Would they put their hands in their pockets? We are actually seeing this begin to happen even now, with the movements of vast numbers of displaced people in SE Asia, Europe and North America.
It's notable that the Pope (for example) has an unconditional view that any such populations in distress need to be accommodated, no questions asked; whilst others (amongst them, probably even 'traditionalist' Catholics) lament that 'European civilization is being overwhelmed' by these movements. And those two perspectives sure are tough to reconcile.
What if dealing with climate change really did take considerable belt-tightening and the willingness to undergo a degree of hardship for the sake of the longer-term good? That argument sure seems to be falling on mainly deaf ears; in Australia another Prime Minister has just had his career terminated by the inability to even address the question.
There are really hard questions and I wouldn't even begin to venture an opinion about the right solutions. But they're the kinds of issues that are thrown into relief by the question your asking. But, let's not forget the Air Hostess' advice: 'In case of emergency, first, fix your own mask, then assist others'. :wink:
The main problem with Utilitarisnism is the lack of recognition of separateness of persons and therefore the tyranny of majority and allowing unproportional harm to minorities and individuals who are already worse off in society.
[b]On the other hand, if we stick to the principle of separateness of persons we seem only able to achieve it partially as things are going to go out of our control at some point due to natural causes. Do these natural causes and our inability to secure the well-being of some individuals prove the very principle of separateness of persons to be wrong?
Can moral principles be true and still achievable only partially and exclude in practice some individuals even though these principles do not allow excluding anyone, still excluding some sentient beings occur due to lack of control over opposing natural causes like disease, disasters, carnivorous animals..etc?[/b]
That assumed, we might say that morality is about making the world as good as possible by increasing the well-being of the worse-off as much as possible and increasing the well-being of everyone as long as that increase is not at the expense of the worse-off.
-separate, but dependent individuals (separated by what?)
-only one ultimate interest, with all individuals at some subjectively different distance from achieving this interest
?
On the other hand, the problem of separateness of persons is whether it makes sense practically to try to secure the rights of each individual separately, knowing we will never be able to secure the rights of every individual anyway. So the question here is:
[b]If separateness of individuals is true, is a world with only one individual suffering and all others well-off still better that a world with only one individual well-off and all others suffering?
In other worlds, does it follow logically from separateness of persons, that these two worlds are equally good/bad?
[/b]
If there's no evidence of moral stances occurring in the extramental world, then there's no reason to assume that morality can be objective. We're left with morality being a property of the dispositions, feelings, etc. of entities with minds.
In your view, apparently, the possibility for objective morality is predicated on the ability of both mental and non-mental machinations, such that both are embedded with a moral stance. Given that for mental existents, or as we know them, moral agents of a rational nature, the primary requirement, the absolutely necessary condition, for the determination of any moral stance is reason, and given that non-mental existents by definition have no such absolutely necessary condition.......how would any rational agent recognize a non-mental agent’s stance as moral? Granting that it is not required that a stance taken by one kind of entity conform to the congruent stance of another kind, it remains that the difference in the ground of each respective stance negates the possibility of equal consideration of their value. A non-mental existent may be morally inclined, but mental existents will have no means to understand it as such, hence will never know of it, which makes “objective morality” of this fashion moot.
Such is not the case if objective is meant to be that which is not subjective. If the qualifier is merely a “moral stance” in general, without regard to what volitions that stance actually exhibits, a rational agent with a determinable will is immediately presupposed, in order that there be a moral stance at all. Hence it is clear that from the perspective of each and every separate and distinct agent observing an action predicated on a determinable will, warrants the claim for objective moral stances, or, which is the same thing, objective morality.
The argument that by objective morality it is meant that any and all moral stances absolutely require precisely equitable volitions for a particular event, is absurd, at least under the common conditions of regular human life. Still, it is conceivable that relatively small groups of rational agents in a common culture may invoke equitable volitions in response to an administrative code affecting them all, but we might just call that ethics, not morality.
Yes? No? Maybe?
The cancer cell is not separate from the body that carries it, nor are individuals separate from the whole. The cancer cell is not equal to the whole body, nor is the individual equal to the whole. In both examples what is important is the health of the whole. Our moral objective needs to be the health of the whole. It makes a moral difference that we consider the whole and think of poverty like a cancerous cell that needs to be eliminated.
Education is perhaps the best way to eliminate poverty but this is not education for technology preparing the young to be products for industry. A liberal education is for free people who carry the responsibility of governing themselves, the whole. Free radicals that lead to cancer need to be eliminated.
I haven't the faintest friggin idea what you're saying in just about any sentence there. It would take some work to convince me that you have any idea what you're saying as well.
First, I don't know why it would appear to you that I'd be saying that objective morality would be predicated on anything about mental machinations.
Second, I'm not sure "the possibility for" adds anything to the sentence semantically.
Third, "X is predicated on the ability of y" seems to be missing a clause to the effect of "to such and such." In other words, what ability?
Fourth, "embedded with a moral stance," seems ontologically to suggest that you're thinking of moral stances as being something independent of both the mental and non-mental states in question.
Every sentence in your post has multiple issues like that.
We're carnivores biologically and have predator instincts. Unfortunately or fortunately we also have evolved a moral compass. We have empathy and can reason. We see gentle deer and bunny rabbits torn to pieces and feel something is wrong. At least some of us if not everyone.
To bring it closer to home the vast majority of us are non-vegetarians. You see. We haven't, as yet, grown out of our predatory heritage biologically but our minds are centuries ahead of us.
In a sense we're like Buddha trapped in a tiger's body. We want to be good but hey, we have fangs, claws and a taste for blood.
As for objective morality we haven't found common ground. There are things that are bad everywhere and at all times Are these cases of objective morality or are we confounding mere consensus for objectivity?
That’s not how it appeared to me, that you said objective morality would be predicated on anything about mental machinations. It appeared to me you said objective morality must be predicated on both mental and non-mental machinations, to whit: on the one hand the machinations we know about (the use of reason) and the machinations we don’t know about (the use of “....fields or whatever...”).
“Second, I’m not sure “the possibility for” adds anything to the sentence semantically”.
You brought up the possibility for objective reality by expounding the conditions under which it would be evident.
“Third: “.......what ability....?”
In general, it doesn’t matter what ability. The proposition “X is predicated on the ability of y” presupposes y has some ability from which X would follow. In this particular case, X (the possibility of objective morality), the abilities are predicated on (y) the properties of fields or whatever.
Fourth: “....."embedded with a moral stance," seems ontologically to suggest that you're thinking of moral stances as being something independent of both the mental and non-mental states in question...”
I have nothing whatsoever to say about non-mental states with respect to a moral stance as you said with “...the world apart from minds must somehow have moral stances embedded in it...”. Nevertheless, in the state of affairs with which I do have an opinion, that being the condition of rational agents with a determinable will, a moral stance is given necessarily and can not be independent of the mental state from which it arises.
How do I edit a comment after it’s posted? Hey.......I gotta ask somebody, right?
Well, not objective as of yet, but I say we strive for a certain code of ethics. You don't want to live your life mistaken. Eating your dead father is ok in some cultures but I'd say they are pretty mistaken.
Even in science the Law of Gravity is tentative, until something better comes a long. So morals are definitely human relations, so they can be tentative. It's really hard to call it objective when there are exceptions to the rules, but that doesn't mean the rules are useless.
Like the moral of the boy who cried wolf... you lie a lot people wont believe you when you really need it. Whether you call that objective is kind of hard, but in general it is true. I strive not to lie because I'll need people in my most time of need.
But for them to be relative is kind of an anything goes so it doesn't matter and "I'm the judge of me." and it doesn't allow you to improve your morals. We are just perfect the way we are belief which is sill because we have laws too. Moral relativism becomes absolute anyway... so would that be objective then too? It's really a play on words.
What in the world?
If it appears to you that I said that O is predicated on m and n, then it appears to you that I'm saying that O is predicated on something about m.
Fill in those variables for a couple other examples:
If it appears to you that I said that working automobiles are predicated on carburetors and pistons, then it appears to you that I'm saying that working automobiles are predicated on something about carburetors.
If it appears to you that I said that toast is predicated on bread and toasters, then it appears to you that I'm saying that toast is predicated on something about bread.
At any rate, I am not saying that objective morality has anything whatsoever to do with mind/mental machinations.
I don't think so. Either a statement states an objective fact or it doesn't. Facts are facts; they don't have gradations.
I don't think so. Many people, myself included, regard morality as being essentially about the way we behave towards beings with a mental life (which probably means humans and other animals); it would follow from this that objective morality only appears in the universe once beings with a mental life evolve. Thus objective morality, if it exists, is not a feature of the extra-mental, but is a by-product of the evolution of mind.
I am still a moral skeptic and I am not sure if morality exists.
Okay, but I'm telling you something about the way I use the terms.
You'd have to explain to me better how you're using the terms for your distinction to make sense to me.