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[Serious] An Argument Against Hedonistic Moral Realism
#18
RE: An Argument Against Hedonistic Moral Realism
(June 15, 2019 at 8:11 am)Gae Bolga Wrote: The mind independence that ethical theorists are discussing literally -is- what you're calling independence of opinion.  Mind independence, of this sort, is the central contention of realism.  Your premise two is "the only way realism can be true, is if moral realism is true".

To riff off of Boru, while it may not be immediately obvious that moral realism is true, that moral x's are mind independent, it is immediately obvious, at least, that for moral realism to be true, moral realism must be true.  

Both realists and subjectivists, people who think that moral x's are mind independent, and mind dependent..respectively, accept that pleasure and pain come from our minds.

-enjoy
Quote:Second, it is not clear that maintaining the “mind-independence” clause as a defining feature of the realism/anti-realism division really does make psychological realism a “non-starter.” Perhaps all that is needed is a more careful understanding of the type of independence relation in question. Certainly there is a trivial sense in which the truth or falsity of a psychological claim like “Mary believes that p” depends on a mental fact: whether Mary does believe that p. On the other hand, there is also a sense in which whether Mary has this belief is a mind-independent affair: The fact of Mary's believing that p is not constituted or determined by any of our practices of judging that she does so believe. We could all judge that Mary believes that p and be mistaken. Most people would accept that even Mary might be mistaken about this—erroneously judging herself to believe that p. In the same way, although the moral claim “Mary's action was morally wrong” may be true only in virtue of the pain that Mary's action caused (or because of Mary's wicked intentions), this may not be the right kind of mind-dependence to satisfy the non-objectivist clause.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/moral-anti-realism/

b-mine

The "more careful understanding" of it is not something you've provided by saying that hedonists can avoid the problem by talking about causes because those causes are out there externally in the world. If you think that the fact that causes are out there externally in the world avoids the problem then you're still using the ordinary definition of mind-independence and not a more nuanced one. It's important in philosophy to be clear ... so why use a term that leads people like yourself to equivocate rather than using another term that is far clearer?

(June 15, 2019 at 6:05 pm)Abaddon_ire Wrote:
(June 14, 2019 at 9:14 am)SenseMaker007 Wrote: Here's an argument against Hedonistic Moral Realism:

Premise 1: For hedonistic moral realism to be true moral realism as a whole has to be capable of being true.

Premise 2: Moral realism as a whole is only true if the foundation of moral values is something mind-independent.

Premise 4: According to hedonistic moral realism the foundation of moral values is pain and/or pleasure.

Premise 5: Neither pain nor pleasure is something mind-independent.

Conclusion: Hedonistic Moral Realism is false.

Thoughts on this argument?

It does not bode well when premise 3 is entirely missing.


Lol nicely spotted. I think that happened because there was originally going to be 5 but I realized I didn't need one of them.

(June 15, 2019 at 7:03 pm)vulcanlogician Wrote: I take issue with premise 2. Moral realism must be true regardless of our opinions, but nothing prevents a moral theory from being concerned with a mental state.

Yep!

And would you agree with me that because mind-indepdendence really refers to independence of opinion rather than literal mind-independence then it makes no sense to accept that while also saying that hedonists can avoid the problem because the causes are mind-independent? (1) Because you can't use an argument of literal mind-independence to support a position when you've already said that literal mind-independence is not the sort of mind-independence in question. And (2) Because the causes of pain and pleasure are not the foundation of hedonism because the only reason the causes of pain and pleasure matter, under hedonism, is because pain and pleasure matter.

Quote:Hedonism makes a lot of sense as a moral theory. In fact, hedonism is one of the reasons I'm a pluralist. What good moral theory permits  acts that create large amounts of suffering? What moral assessment denies the importance of happiness as an end?

Yes, and you can't knock back this argument by saying that the hedonist can consider the causes of pain and pleasure to be the foundation when those causes are external. Because causes of pain and pleasure are literally only meaningful to the hedonist because pain and pleasure themselves are. Pain and pleasure are the foundation and not their causes. It only matters that X causes Y if Y is pain or pleasure, to the hedonist. If Y is not pain or pleasure then they do not care about X cause.

Quote:The hedonist considers pleasure/happiness good and pain/suffering bad. This is perfectly in line with our intuitions. When we experience pain we think "bad." And pleasure makes sense as an intrinsic good.

Yep. Although I would say that pleasure is far more morally neutral than pain is. Why? Because if someone is in pain, or suffering a great deal, it makes sense to help that person. That person needs help. There's a moral obligation to help somebody a great deal, in that case. Now take somebody who isn't in pain at all and is quite okay. Is there really the same obligation to help a person that is totally fine just because that person is not, say, having a party? Pleasure is only really lacking when its absence causes distress, frustration, or dissatisfaction. If people are totally fine and not at all frustrated without pleasure ... then pleasure is merely absent. A lack of pleasure is usually bad because it is a symptom of depression. In itself there's nothing bad about a mere absence of pleasure and while it may be a good thing to have ... I don't see that it implies any sort of moral obligation. This is why I'm a prioritarian.

(June 15, 2019 at 8:11 am)Gae Bolga Wrote: The mind independence that ethical theorists are discussing literally -is- what you're calling independence of opinion.

I know, which is why ethical theorists use the terms "independent of mind" and "independent of opinion" interchangeably. But, as I've said, it makes no sense for you to use the argument that hedonists can still be moral realists because the causes of pain and pleasure are external/mind-independent even if pain and pleasure themselves are not. The problem with the term mind-independence is that it clearly leads people to equivocate. You point out that all it means is independence of opinion, anyway, but then you go ahead and make an argument as if it doesn't mean that. If there's a sense in which mind-independence does mean independence of opinion and a sense that it doesn't ... then it is much clearer to simply directly talk of independence of opinion as that is the less ambiguous term and less likely to lead people such as yourself into making logical errors.

(June 14, 2019 at 1:38 pm)Gae Bolga Wrote: Can we reasonably believe each other when one of us claims to have a toothache?  If we suspected that the other person was lying (to get out of duty, for example)..is there some way to verify beyond their insistence that they have that toothache that they likely or probably or very certainly would be in pain?

If there wasn't a way to verify it externally ... it would still be objective.

Even if all of pain is an illusion and the external evidence of it turned out to be a mass hallucination ... that wouldn't change the fact that it's objectively the case that pain still hurts.
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Messages In This Thread
RE: An Argument Against Hedonistic Moral Realism - by SenseMaker007 - June 16, 2019 at 3:56 am

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