(June 16, 2015 at 5:47 pm)Anima Wrote:(June 16, 2015 at 5:35 pm)Rhythm Wrote: Unfortunately, you are as wrong this time...as you have been in all previous iterations of the same claim - and for the same reason in each and every case. You can either adjust your claim to the position you wish to ascribe it to..or pitch straw. The choice is yours.
Pardon. Perhaps you are focusing on a typo. Let me correct:
3. A person engages in the act believed to be subjectively best/correct/right.
4. Under subjective determination all acts engaged in are right; under objective determination all acts engaged in are not right.
(June 16, 2015 at 6:11 pm)Rhythm Wrote: Still wrong, still for the same reason. You know why, and you also know that you can't modify your statement and still get the conclusion you're angling for (which is, itself, equally useless but holds some fascination -for you-). Sell it elsewhere?
I am afraid you are going to need to tell me why. If a person engages in acts they subjectively believe to be best/correct/right and the determination of the quality of the act is based on the Subject at the time of action; then it directly follows that any action the Subject engages in is best/correct/right.
Otherwise we must say the Subject engages in actions they subjectively believe to not be best/correct/right.