.com.unity Forums
  The Official e-Store of Shrapnel Games

This Month's Specials

Air Assault Task Force- Save $8.00
Bronze- Save $10.00

   







Go Back   .com.unity Forums > Shrapnel Community > Space Empires: IV & V

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old December 14th, 2004, 02:48 AM
Jack Simth's Avatar

Jack Simth Jack Simth is offline
Major General
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 2,174
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Jack Simth is on a distinguished road
Default Re: OT: Objective moral truth

Quote:
deccan said:
An excellent post on the problems with the foundational theory of epistemic justification, Jack Simth!

But your argument seems to apply to everything and so appears to deny that there is any objective truth to anything whatsoever, leaving the door open to things like Holocaust deniers, the Moon landings never occured theorists, Masonite conspirators who are so skilled at manipulating world events that the lack of evidence of a conspiracy and itself evidence of such a conspiracy etc.

I think that in order to maintain that objective truth is still possible (albeit in a weakened, post-Kantian form of the term), while still denying that "objective morality" is possible, requires more elaboration on the whole Hume / G.E. Moore thesis that it is impossible to derive an "ought" from an "is".
There's a catch when using the above on logic, applied science (but not purely theoretical science or history), and math: you can test and demonstrate those to a reasonable degree, to see if they are "right". You can't do that with ethics. Take, for example, the case of the innocent fat man (for those of you unfamiliar with what I am talking about, it's a scenerio for philosophers of ethics: a fat man goes into some sea caves to rescue some lost tourists. He finds them, and leads them out. Unfortunately, he gets exceptionally stuck, with his head above the high tide mark, at the exit, with the tourists stuck inside the cave. The tourists find they have a stick of dynamite and a match. If they do nothing, they will drown, but the innocent fat man will survive. They can also blow up the innocent fat man, killing him, to unstopper the exit, so they can survive. The innocent fat man wants to survive, even knowing it would cost the tourists their lives (they wouldn't have a chance at survival anyway, were it not for him, after all). However, he can't act, and his actions are not the focus of the exercise. The actions of the tourists are. Do they blow him up, or not?). Even assuming someone was evil enough to arrange the situation as a test, all that would reveal is what those tourists would do, not what they should do.
Math is concerned with the rules of the game; what "ought to be" is immaterial compared to what the rules of the game say.
Logic is concerned with "given set A of starting conditions, and set B of operators, is it possible to prove set C of conclusions?" ... but you have to have a set A of starting conditions and set B of operators, and have them be beyond question for the discussion; lacking such, logic gets you exactly nowhere; but that's okay - Having the A and the B to get the C is what logic is all about; it's where logic lives. If A and/or B is false, the conclusions C are untrustworthy. That's implied from the start of the game. Logic is about what's true given some specified set of circumstances. If those circumstances are false, that particular logical proof simply doesn't apply.
In the applied sciences, it's all about concrete, measureable results: how much horsepower does this particular engine design produce? Build it and find out! Sure, theory is used to model and predict, but where the rubber meets the road, it's all about actually trying it, and seeing if you get the expected result. If you are caught in The Matrix, well, then you are predicting things based on that universe; it's still usefull in that context.

You can't do that with ethics. At best, emperically, you could observe that a society following a particular set of ethics is happier / sadder / wealthier / poorer / more populous / less populous (or whatever other criteria you could choose) than a society following a different set. But before you can pick one set over the other, you must first assume some criteria to pick by; beyond personal preference, you can't really defend such a criteria for long. Is a society where a lot of people die young, but the remainder are quite happy and care free "better than" or "worse than" one where most people live to a ripe old age, but are constantly sad and worried? Which is more important: the rights of the few or the wants of the many? Why? On what basis can you claim that? On what basis can you claim that basis? Why should that particular point matter?

Wait, where was I going with this? Oh well, I got lost. No biggie.
__________________
Of course, by the time I finish this post, it will already be obsolete. C'est la vie.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old December 14th, 2004, 08:29 AM

deccan deccan is offline
Major
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Solomon Islands
Posts: 1,180
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
deccan is on a distinguished road
Default Re: OT: Objective moral truth

Quote:
Jack Simth said:
Wait, where was I going with this? Oh well, I got lost. No biggie.
Here's a simple way to organize all that.

In order to have an "objective morality", you must have an objective standard. With science, the standard is reality itself. If moral laws had the same sort of existence as laws of physics, then there would be no need to oblige people to obey moral laws. After all, one has no choice about obeying the laws of physics.

This is why any form of proposed "objective morality" seems to have really strange properties. They are not an ingrained part of the universe, like physical laws, yet they somehow "matter", are capable of bestowing moral obligation, must be accessible to moral beings and provide feedback to them on what is good and evil and have transcendental properties of timelessness and externality.
__________________
calltoreason.org
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old December 14th, 2004, 12:37 PM

Glyn Glyn is offline
Corporal
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Huntsville, AL.
Posts: 175
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Glyn is on a distinguished road
Default Re: OT: Objective moral truth

Just my opinion.

Morals are a set of uncodified rules that a group adopts in order to interact with some expectation of predictable behavior. Different Groups can and do have different moral codes. If you are a member of a group with a common moral code then you should be able to predict what actions causes what reactions in others of the same moral group. You would be less capable of predicting reactions of members of a group that have adopted a moral code you are not familiar with, and therefore less successful in engaging in productive interactions.

There are probably sets of morals that have a reinforcing synergy so they usually found together. There are probably some morals which have a very high value to all Groups, so they are usually universally adopted.

I would find it likely that some morals could become an instinctual behavior over time, and would feel like a universal truth or law of nature.


Good morals are ones that promote the prosperity of the group over time, and therefore benefiting most of the individuals.

Bad morals are ones that negatively impact the group over time, usually benefiting the individual over the group.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:41 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©1999 - 2025, Shrapnel Games, Inc. - All Rights Reserved.