Moderator: Only_Humean

Uccisore wrote:...If all objective truth is determined by consensus, then of course there is no problem.
Uccisore wrote:I
If that thing is only a tree because we all agree it is, then I suppose that tree might as well be evil because we all agree it is.
thinkdr wrote:Well, I'm glad we agree. Yes, even the circumference of the Earth, or similar facts of nature, is a matter of agreement among scientists in that specific relevant field.

Flannel Jesus wrote:...3) the moral should. "You shouldn't murder someone. That's wrong." In this case, the should is often at least slightly divorced from practical considerations, though usually not completely.
2 and 3 are easily mistakable. A lot of peoples' conceptions of what's moral is at least partially based on practical considerations. However, I think there is a major distinction between the two. You can imagine someone using the second meaning to say "You should murder your husband for the life insurance," but it's a bit harder to imagine someone suggesting the same action with the third meaning. "You should murder your husband, that would be the moral thing to do."
When people say "You can't get an ought from an is," they're talking about the moral ought. It's quite easy to get a practical ought from an is, as your post shows. But notice all the examples in your posts aren't moral considerations. What watch to buy, cleaning your room, whether someone should relax, playing the drums. You haven't refuted Hume, you've just used a different meaning of ought.
Flannel Jesus wrote:you said the moral life is the practical route, but that doesn't necessarily mean all practical things are moral, and that's really the crux of it. whether being moral is practical or not is beside the point, my point was the examples you gave were NOT moral issues, which tells me that your should is not a moral should. even if all moral shoulds are practical shoulds, not all practical shoulds are moral shoulds. you're still not dealing in morality.
anon wrote:Any ought has its origins in what is. But at some point you have to step up and take responsibility for the moral choices you make. In other words, there is a difference between a child and an adult. ... A person murders another person. The murderer has a history. He came from a "bad family", his father was abusive, etc. The history goes way back. We evolved from chimpanzees. We are animals. ... we all have different strategies for getting what we want. ... we all want satisfaction. So if we're smart it's necessary to ask, does cooperation from others provide the satisfaction I'm looking for? Does not going hungry provide the satisfaction I'm looking for? Does cooperation without dinner make me happy? Does dinner without cooperation make me happy? Or maybe it's that everything always centers around my own personal happiness that, frustratingly, keeps satisfaction at bay? Maybe there's a fundamental error involved.....
thinkdr wrote:anon wrote:Any ought has its origins in what is. But at some point you have to step up and take responsibility for the moral choices you make. In other words, there is a difference between a child and an adult. ... A person murders another person. The murderer has a history. He came from a "bad family", his father was abusive, etc. The history goes way back. We evolved from chimpanzees. We are animals. ... we all have different strategies for getting what we want. ... we all want satisfaction. So if we're smart it's necessary to ask, does cooperation from others provide the satisfaction I'm looking for? Does not going hungry provide the satisfaction I'm looking for? Does cooperation without dinner make me happy? Does dinner without cooperation make me happy? Or maybe it's that everything always centers around my own personal happiness that, frustratingly, keeps satisfaction at bay? Maybe there's a fundamental error involved.....
Hi, Anon
You are very wise. You show great ethical insight. I appreciate highly your contribution to the discussion.
There is, one could detect, a conflation between "satisfaction" and "Happiness." They are two distinct concepts. I would define satisfaction as: systemic emotion. On a scale, I would rank it low. Here is how the spectrum of positive emotions (displaying the degree of value entailed) would look:
S: Satisfaction. E: Pleasure. I: Joy.
A person with a high degree of morality would aim for joy and serenity in life. S/he would ask those questions you list and imply, in other words, would give serious consideration to avoiding any conduct that might be offensive and hurtful to others, or to herself. Yes, I'm all in favor of considered judgments, yet the individual of good character has formed habits that enable him or her to act intuitively and manage to do the right thing. We are not all scheming all the time as to how to get our own way. Some have finally learned that life is more about giving than receiving - and taking.
I believe you have hit upon it. I'd like to hear more about how you would help build a sound, coherent, useful theory of ethics, some of the hypotheses of which could be carefully tested, and the results confidently reported.
Pandora, just now in another thread wrote:The noble, yet very fragile ideals of "goodness" and "morality" are high-maintenance endeavors (which have several weak spots which can be exploited), and require constant supervision and upkeep.
Often, as well, the introduction of a new paradigm is accompanied by "future shock" on the part of many. [Was it Schopenhauer who said that profound new ideas go through three stages? First they're ridiculed; then they gradually become the conventional wisdom; and then everyone claims that they thought of it first.] I predict this will be the course of history for Hartman's definition of "good."



Uccisore wrote:You agreed with me twice that truth is a matter of consensus, then disagreed with me when I showed that it doesn't work as an axiom. ...
Anyway, positions that revolve around taking everything a single philosopher said as gospel ... Good luck with your proselytization.
ZenKitty wrote:...this axiology is also a value, defining it as you value or want it. Not defining it based on some fact, besides the fact that you prefer that definition or value.
... Hume held to a sort of emotionalism....passions... make the choices among these many options that reason points out.
Flannel Jesus wrote:I've always kept in mind, when talking about "ought" and "should" which are pretty much perfect synonyms that there are 3 meanings for them.
1) the probability should. "If you go to the store at 5 pm tomorrow, you should be able to find George there, that's usually when he works." The should there is basically saying that it's probably going to be the case.
2) the practical should. "Oh, you like comedy movies? You should see Pineapple Express." "You should find out what time it starts, you don't wanna be late." Etc. The should here is saying it's practical, either for your enjoyment or for other practical reasons, to do the thing in question.
3) the moral should. "You shouldn't murder someone. That's wrong." In this case, the should is often at least slightly divorced from practical considerations, though usually not completely.
the test for logical necessity was not sustained nor absolutely negated by the now famous formula "are synthetic -apriori propositions possible? , since validity of logical certainty itself has variable value. Strict tautologies such as "a rose is a rose is a rose". Shows meaning of factual propositions are intentionally dissected for variability of value. Consequently, If we say, "God exists" and then say therefore "priests should be celibate" we can detect variability in the cohesive use of pro logically necessary progression between "God exists" and "priests should be celibate" Why? Because by focusing all energies on God, then the Cupola of value requires it. Changes in usage, context, and perception enable a new look at the way how logical connections evolve .The horizon between the perceptual field, understanding, and intentionality is critical whether a proposition has sufficient validation to be logically consistent. Tests for validity that fail, usually end up in an infinite regression, as in Russell's connection between sense, sense and sense data.thinkdr wrote:“I'm skeptical about the initial Humean claim because I'm skeptical about how much of our assertoric discourse is really "purely descriptive." Hume and others are perfectly correct to say that one cannot validly derive something in a conclusion that wasn't in the premises, but there is a lot of covert value-judgment intertwined in our ordinary "factual" claims about the world, so much so that the logicians' ideal of totally distilling denotation from connotation frequently won't work, because by the time we've removed all axiological connotations from an assertion, we've changed its meaning.” ------------ Andrew Jeffery
In conventional Philosophy courses we are taught that one cannot get from “ought” to “is” or vice versa. Why? Well, because Hume said so. If he said it, it must be so. We have all heard “We can't derive normative statements from descriptive statements.”
Even though it is “impossible,” Robert S. Hartman - following in the footsteps of Plato and of G. E. Moore - did it. It may well be that what we learn in old textbooks is not always the last word on a subject; it gets dated over time.
Since "ought" is a value copula, it is appropriate to invoke some value- theory, as preliminary to arriving at a sound and reasonable definition of the term "ought."
At this point it would be appropriate to review the material in Chapters 2 and 4 (of the document from which this post is excerpted, namely, from my paper):
http://wadeharvey.myqol.com/wadeharvey/Ethics_A_College_Course.pdf
so as to recall the axiom of value and be very clear about what fulfillment of an intension really means. Comparisons of two values must be comparisons of two entities which fall under the same concept. If the concept shifts, one is in danger of comparing oranges to toy elephants. [This can be done legitimately if the concept is “things” or maybe “commodities.” Then one may say, perhaps, “the former is better than the latter (as a commodity.”] The name sets the norm. One wristwatch is better than another if it has more wristwatch features than the other, all else being equal (and if the concept doesn’t shift.)
That is how we employ the term “better” in formal axiology. In the same way, the relation “better for” can be carefully defined .
The "ought" now based on the "is"
Better means: more valuable. To say '"x" is better for y than z is' means: x more fulfills the meaning of y than z does.
For example, Heifetz more fulfills the meaning "violinist" than Henny YoungmanTherefore, Heifetz is a better violinist than Youngman. And it follows that a Jascha Heifetz violin concert is better for an audience of music lovers than a Henny Youngman violin concert is. We shall now employ the definition of "better for" as we examine the "ought"- judgment.
Saying: "x ought to R y" -- a paradigm for ought-judgments -- is, by Hartman's definition, an abbreviated way of judging that:
"it is better for x to R y than to S y or to R z (at time T)."
In this way, each definition is built upon a previous one -- a rigorous procedure. Given what x, y, z, R, and S are, an ought-judgment may be true, false or indeterminate.
An empirical inquiry is called for with respect to each such judgment. Thus the ought is in effect reduced to a series of is judgments.
If, as an illustration, I judge: Heifetz ought to play the drums all day," Heifetz here is x, drums is y, and play all day is R. Now this would be a false judgment which when expanded would perhaps read: It is better for Heifetz to play the drums all day than either for him to listen to drums being played or to play the violin all day.
Or, to say it yet another way: "It is the case that the meaning of playing the drums all day overlaps more with the meaning of Heifetz's life than listening to drums does or than playing violin all day does. . ." possibly a false is-judgment (most of the time.)
Heifetz himself decided on the meaning of his life, to be a concert violinist. We all ought to decide our own meaning.
If you thought the term “ought” functions as an imperative, as in : “You ought to go clean your room, kid!” you might reasonably ask at this point, How do you get from an indicative to an imperative, or vice versa? [Here is one way this can be done]:
“You ought to go clean your room!” =df. = “(Given who you are, and given what cleaning your room means) It is better for you to clean your room than not to -- or than to play some other game right now. And that is a fact.” And here are the reasons why it is better for you: 1) it would please your mother; 2)you will continue to get an allowance 3)you will enjoy more -- once you get used to it -- I predict, living in a clean, neat atmosphere 4) etc., 5) etc. [The latter points are illustrative and not part of the definition. Substitute reasons appropriate to the facts of the situation and the circumstances rather than taking these points literally.]
The former phrase [before the equals-by-definition sign] is shorthand for the longer phrase.
The former is in imperative form -- the latter is a set of descriptions of what is. Of course, the ought-judgment may be false; the facts have to be investigated to determine this.
In this example, the x is 'you'; the R is 'go clean' and the y is 'your room.' (The example was merely an illustration, not a comment on the nature of the universe.)
Sometimes the y is the null class.
In "Brian ought to relax" the X is Brian; the R is 'to relax.' That means: It is better that Brian relaxes than if he doesn't (or that he do something else), Whether that is more valuable, all around, is for a consensus of impartial observers to decide -- just as any other objective matter.
Public confirmation is the criterion.....remembering what Bertrand Russell said in a moment of sarcastic humor: "Objectivity is a delusion shared by several lunatics at once."
The above explication is only one of several possible ways to base the "ought" on the "is." If I say "Brian ought to relax" it is like an Euler (or Venn) diagram: I am saying there is an overlap between who Brian is, and what relaxing is. It may be that only Brian -- or those who "know him better than he knows himself" -- can tell us if this proposition is true. Sound value judgments are based upon a knowledge of the facts. in the Algebra of Value, the ought was represented by a minus sign, indicating a gap between two states, the supposed ideal and the actual.
Comments? Questions? Discussion? Your views are most welcome.
----------Lastly---in the example just, the logical certainty of the premise "if God exists----then celibacy is a consequence----because----devotion to God and marriage are mutually exclusive: the logical certainty of the proposition "God exists" has been "proven by St.Anselmback in the middle ages. It's tautological logic has been pointed out, subsequently, and wittgenstein would later explain that we mistake was in using "God" and "existence" equivocal,since we already knew, that existence was an attribute of "God".The point is then, that denotative and connotative words are used interchangeably, since existence in this instance, connotes and attribute of the denotation of God. God is a denotation because God is God. Anything is said about "god" describes him. "God" is a closed hermenautically complete "anything said about "Him" whether "He" is a fact" or a "Self evidence" is a description. The intentionality behind the concept is to enclose all ideas within it, so as to remain logically self defined. There are no categories under "He" can be subsumed,because "He is what He is" he is a break from paganism in that, paganism entailed. Kinds of gods with natural definable attributes logical reducing of "ought" from "is" leads to Russels'' infinite regress, hence comes the enlightenment and Nietzche and then Wittgenstein. The non definable of "God" does not eliminate he question, in certain propositions, ho does the need to close hermenautically the logical structure of meaning? is are there certainties underlying the physical universe? Like the reducibility of all matter into energy? (Where all matter reduces into energy? I think ,this is what early metaphysicians grappled with, with the earliest problem of the one and the many, and the atomists were a very early attempt to describe it.0belafekete0 wrote:the test for logical necessity was not sustained nor absolutely negated by the now famous formula "are synthetic -apriori propositions possible? , since validity of logical certainty itself has variable value. Strict tautology such as "a rose is a rose is a rose". Shows meaning of factual propositions are intentionally dissected for variability of value. Consequently, If we say, "God exists" and then say therefore "priests should be celibate" we can detect variability in the cohesive use of pro logically necessary progression between "God exists" and "priests should be celibate" Why? Because by focusing all energies on God, then the Cupola of value requires it. Changes in usage, context, and perception enable a new look at the way how logical connections evolve .The horizon between the perceptual field, understanding, and intentionality is critical whether a proposition has sufficient validation to be logically consistent. Tests for validity that fail, usually end up in an infinite regression, as in Russell's connection between sense, sense and sense data.thinkdr wrote:“I'm skeptical about the initial Humean claim because I'm skeptical about how much of our assertoric discourse is really "purely descriptive." Hume and others are perfectly correct to say that one cannot validly derive something in a conclusion that wasn't in the premises, but there is a lot of covert value-judgment intertwined in our ordinary "factual" claims about the world, so much so that the logicians' ideal of totally distilling denotation from connotation frequently won't work, because by the time we've removed all axiological connotations from an assertion, we've changed its meaning.” ------------ Andrew Jeffery
In conventional Philosophy courses we are taught that one cannot get from “ought” to “is” or vice versa. Why? Well, because Hume said so. If he said it, it must be so. We have all heard “We can't derive normative statements from descriptive statements.”
Even though it is “impossible,” Robert S. Hartman - following in the footsteps of Plato and of G. E. Moore - did it. It may well be that what we learn in old textbooks is not always the last word on a subject; it gets dated over time.
Since "ought" is a value copula, it is appropriate to invoke some value- theory, as preliminary to arriving at a sound and reasonable definition of the term "ought."
At this point it would be appropriate to review the material in Chapters 2 and 4 (of the document from which this post is excerpted, namely, from my paper):
http://wadeharvey.myqol.com/wadeharvey/Ethics_A_College_Course.pdf
so as to recall the axiom of value and be very clear about what fulfillment of an intension really means. Comparisons of two values must be comparisons of two entities which fall under the same concept. If the concept shifts, one is in danger of comparing oranges to toy elephants. [This can be done legitimately if the concept is “things” or maybe “commodities.” Then one may say, perhaps, “the former is better than the latter (as a commodity.”] The name sets the norm. One wristwatch is better than another if it has more wristwatch features than the other, all else being equal (and if the concept doesn’t shift.)
That is how we employ the term “better” in formal axiology. In the same way, the relation “better for” can be carefully defined .
The "ought" now based on the "is"
Better means: more valuable. To say '"x" is better for y than z is' means: x more fulfills the meaning of y than z does.
For example, Heifetz more fulfills the meaning "violinist" than Henny YoungmanTherefore, Heifetz is a better violinist than Youngman. And it follows that a Jascha Heifetz violin concert is better for an audience of music lovers than a Henny Youngman violin concert is. We shall now employ the definition of "better for" as we examine the "ought"- judgment.
Saying: "x ought to R y" -- a paradigm for ought-judgments -- is, by Hartman's definition, an abbreviated way of judging that:
"it is better for x to R y than to S y or to R z (at time T)."
In this way, each definition is built upon a previous one -- a rigorous procedure. Given what x, y, z, R, and S are, an ought-judgment may be true, false or indeterminate.
An empirical inquiry is called for with respect to each such judgment. Thus the ought is in effect reduced to a series of is judgments.
If, as an illustration, I judge: Heifetz ought to play the drums all day," Heifetz here is x, drums is y, and play all day is R. Now this would be a false judgment which when expanded would perhaps read: It is better for Heifetz to play the drums all day than either for him to listen to drums being played or to play the violin all day.
Or, to say it yet another way: "It is the case that the meaning of playing the drums all day overlaps more with the meaning of Heifetz's life than listening to drums does or than playing violin all day does. . ." possibly a false is-judgment (most of the time.)
Heifetz himself decided on the meaning of his life, to be a concert violinist. We all ought to decide our own meaning.
If you thought the term “ought” functions as an imperative, as in : “You ought to go clean your room, kid!” you might reasonably ask at this point, How do you get from an indicative to an imperative, or vice versa? [Here is one way this can be done]:
“You ought to go clean your room!” =df. = “(Given who you are, and given what cleaning your room means) It is better for you to clean your room than not to -- or than to play some other game right now. And that is a fact.” And here are the reasons why it is better for you: 1) it would please your mother; 2)you will continue to get an allowance 3)you will enjoy more -- once you get used to it -- I predict, living in a clean, neat atmosphere 4) etc., 5) etc. [The latter points are illustrative and not part of the definition. Substitute reasons appropriate to the facts of the situation and the circumstances rather than taking these points literally.]
The former phrase [before the equals-by-definition sign] is shorthand for the longer phrase.
The former is in imperative form -- the latter is a set of descriptions of what is. Of course, the ought-judgment may be false; the facts have to be investigated to determine this.
In this example, the x is 'you'; the R is 'go clean' and the y is 'your room.' (The example was merely an illustration, not a comment on the nature of the universe.)
Sometimes the y is the null class.
In "Brian ought to relax" the X is Brian; the R is 'to relax.' That means: It is better that Brian relaxes than if he doesn't (or that he do something else), Whether that is more valuable, all around, is for a consensus of impartial observers to decide -- just as any other objective matter.
Public confirmation is the criterion.....remembering what Bertrand Russell said in a moment of sarcastic humor: "Objectivity is a delusion shared by several lunatics at once."
The above explication is only one of several possible ways to base the "ought" on the "is." If I say "Brian ought to relax" it is like an Euler (or Venn) diagram: I am saying there is an overlap between who Brian is, and what relaxing is. It may be that only Brian -- or those who "know him better than he knows himself" -- can tell us if this proposition is true. Sound value judgments are based upon a knowledge of the facts. in the Algebra of Value, the ought was represented by a minus sign, indicating a gap between two states, the supposed ideal and the actual.
Comments? Questions? Discussion? Your views are most welcome.
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