RE: Any Moral Relativists in the House?
May 24, 2021 at 5:22 pm
(This post was last modified: May 24, 2021 at 5:31 pm by vulcanlogician.)
(May 23, 2021 at 1:28 pm)Anomalocaris Wrote: So what’s your problem?
My problem is this:
It is oft quoted that error theory (a brand of moral nihilism) is to morality what atheism is to a god or gods. Disbelief. To me, this position makes sense. What it wouldn't make sense to say is that belief in a god is true relevant to your culture. Either a god is real or it isn't. (I don't know is also a valid answer.)
So if you want to say morality is a fairy tale, fine. Maybe a "useful fiction" if you're feeling charitable. But that doesn't making it true relative to anything. That's why I think relativism is incoherent. That's what it does.
Maybe some never made that assumption about relativism (there are different articulations of it; I only offered one version of it... one I find incoherent). Or maybe they thought that cultural standards were a good metric by which to judge moral standards. That's what I'd like to discuss. I think if you're using cultural standards as a baseline, you're using something that contains as much fact as fiction.
I tried to say I appreciate this mode of thinking in an enterprise that is simply trying to find out "what some culture's beliefs are, fact and fiction alike." But when you want to discuss the claim of whether moral facts actually exist or not, such standards have no bearing on the matter.
(May 23, 2021 at 11:57 am)Angrboda Wrote: I'm reminded of discussions I've had surrounding the coherence theory of truth, that truth with a capital T consists in the internal consistency of a set of propositions. One common argument against this is that you could have two systems that are equally coherent, but that disagree on some particular proposition. That seems to be a contradiction. The problem is that there is no "outside the systems" from which to compare the two -- you're simply creating a third combined system that isn't fully coherent. That's not an allowed operation as there is no "outside the system." Truth, in coherence theory, is a property that systems and propositions within systems have. There is no outside perspective. Suggesting an outside perspective is failing to grant the full set of premises of coherence theory and amounts to a bit of question begging.
Your complaint about the seeming anti-realism of relativism seems similar in that you're not granting the full tenets of relativism and instead are importing a concept of "real morals" which is foreign to relativism and can't meaningfully be compared. Morals in relativism are a construct of society and within that society they have a real existence.
I can't help but be reminded of your suggestions about morals being real if they provide fruitful explanations in Neo's thread. I have to wonder if you're willing to apply that to moral realism but not to moral relativism.
Anyway, just some initial thoughts.
Wow. That's a pretty damn good response.
Let me give it some thought.