baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
I believe morals do not exist outside the mind and are entirely subjective phenomena derived from biologically determined values/desires (what you call “desires-as-ends") which are in turn, determined by the creature’s genetic makeup and experiential influences, or phenotype if you will.
This is where we disagree. I think it makes no sense to say the only exist in the mind since these lead to material actions that affect interactions with others. How can morality be disconnected from the behaviour that results? This looks incoherent to me. Please explain how this is possible?
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
Those behaviours we say are morally “right” are supposed to maximize our chances of achieving our “desires-as-ends” while those behaviours we designate as being morally “wrong” minimize those chances.
Now you immediately switch and so contradict yourself to looking at “moral" behaviours. However here, in addition, I also disagree that what you have stated here is moral at all, rather it is pre-moral (not even proto-moral).
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
Of course, we may be mistaken about which behaviours are “right” and which are “wrong” and this is why society develops laws to uphold the moral beliefs of those agents who hold societal authority.
And society itself can be mistaken - how can you deny that given your reasoning here?
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
When I say that morals are “relative” I mean that they have no inherent truth value and are only logically meaningful in the mind of the agent or once the “desires-as-ends” have been defined.
Desires have no inherent truth value. I am an advocate of neo-Humean motivational non-cognitivism. So we cannot reason to ends but we can still reason about ends. That is no amount of beliefs can change our desires alone but we can reason over ends by looking at them as means within a larger picture - that is an individual’s ends can be evaluated as a means over its affect on other’s ends.
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
I am attempting to salvage and improve the argument put forth by traditional relativism by being more precise about what I mean when I say “right” and “wrong.”
Well right and wrong refer to acts. In DF right and wrong are derivative of good and bad desires. An act is right if is or could be the result of a good desire, ditto for wrong. I still am unclear what you mean by right and wrong or do you just mean it is dependent on that culture’s value?
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
If this is equivocating then I apologize.
This equivocation over relative seems to be more baffledking’s forte than yours. I do not think you have done it much - as far as I can recall.
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
Perhaps you might suggest a better way of defining relative, or another word I might use in place of “relative.” Given my definitions of the terms “relative”, “right”, “wrong” and your term “desires-as-ends” I do not see how this view is incoherent.
Well my suggestion would be argued for the basis of one’s moral approach. For example one could have a rights-based morality or contract-based morality although no-one here is arguing for them. In this sense both you and baffledking appeared to be arguing for culture-based morality, although baffeldking and you to some degree are leaning more towards gene-based morality now. I am arguing for desire fulfillment-based morality. We all reject absolutism, we all acknowledge subjective and relative aspects to this process where we differ is that this does not prevent, in my view, an epistemically objective analysis of all biological and cultural factors and this is what I am arguing for, which is against normative relativism.
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
From what we know about evolutionary biology and sociology, “culture” is an inadequate and misleading term to use when talking about the origin of values and beliefs. Instead of “cultural” relativism, I’ll substitute the term “genetic” relativism or “naturalistic” relativism or even “phenotypical” relativism if we want to be really precise. But moral relativism’s rejection of the moral objectivist’s belief in absolute moral statements is a rejection that I wish to maintain.
And here again I am not sure what you mean by “absolute moral statements” . I think I have made clear what a moral fact is and that is not absolute but provisional even if most of the time the support for it is overwhelming. And what is your argument for this position because, as far as I can see a phenotype based morality weakens any argument, if one exists, for normative relativism, which is what I think you are trying to defend. Are you holding that position on a purely emotive basis or can you give an argument for this? What you say below does not seem to be an argument. I have come to the view that the default position is everything is morally permissible - that is unless circumstance shows otherwise - and this is quite different to normative relativism as a default which needs to be argued for.
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
We may judge and criticize other people, societies, cultures and even ourselves but only without invoking a “higher” morality since such a term is meaningless.
I have always thought this too.
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
For criticism to have any meaning, it must be made with reference to the efficacy of the behaviour-in-question’s ability to achieve one’s stated “desire”.
And this is exactly what DF offers as an empirical analysis whher the desire is stated or not and whether the agent has the desire or not.
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
For example, if Culture A has the “desire” to foster a populace that will maintain a competitive advantage in the world market, and decides that the best way to achieve this is to require all workers to work a 12hr day, I might see this as a bad decision and criticize Culture A for its lack of foresight. I might suggest that a “better” way to achieve their stated goal would be to reward hard-work and innovation with higher pay and public recognition or some such thing. Such a criticism is devoid of any moral reference and criticism in any case can be made from the very same place, devoid of any reference to morality or a cosmic kind of absolute “right and wrong”.
Yes this is economics not morality.
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
I might criticize Culture B for its practice of slavery but instead of invoking morality I can simply show them that slavery is not a good means of achieving their stated end/desire.
Yes well such an economic argument might fail… Slavery involves desire thwarting of the slaves and the encouragement of direct desire thwarting desires of the slave owners and other beneficiaries. Generally a slave based economy today would be morally wrong although this is no an absolute statement as there are economic arguments such as that sweat shop labor - as a temporary phase - can lead to later benefits locally to all. But every question is context dependent of course.
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
At times, when the rationality of a behaviour is in question, we may be forced to appeal to our emotional response to the behaviour-in-question, for example, torture or animal experimentation make me feel bad and therefore, regardless of their possible rational implications, I choose not to partake in such behaviour or endorse it. This emotional appeal is a big part of what makes us human, in my opinion and a big part of what makes psychopaths distinctly “inhuman.”
Yes but this is unreliable and culture dependent. What do you think of the (in)famous Vietnamese cook book “50 ways to wok your dog”?
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
I agree there is more to be researched and contemplated with regards to “gene-based morality” but I disagree about your conclusion regarding the first horn of the Euthypro dilemma. All human behaviour (and animal behaviour) is adapted to best ensure the survival of the organism in the given environment. There are no morals anywhere in the equation. Morality is really a malapropism for “genetically-derived-behavioural instructions”, to say it clumsily.
You appear to be both agreeing and disagreeing with me! You seem to agree that morals is nothing to do with genes alone but then you go on to make a moral nihilistic claim and at the same time contradicting yourself by denying normative relativism -since one can now make, albeit non-moral (because in this sense morals don’t exist) judgments of other cultures. In fact whether you think there is such a thing as gene-based morality or that genes are all there is to it but there is no such thing as morality as in your “genetically-derived-behavioural instructions” both these positions deny normative relativism! When are you going to make arguments for normative relativism you seem to be doing the opposite?
baffledking - 10 May 2008 12:24 PM
So, a child born into poverty whose dream to become successful and wealthy slowly disappears as he grows up and realizes the improbability of this dream has not had his desire thwarted by society but merely “dissolved”? Doesn’t this still cause him to suffer internally? Isn’t this close to what happens to Winston in 1984 when he is finally “conditioned” to love Big Brother?
Actually this is another of my arguments against Preference Utilitarianism which seeks to maximize preferences satisfied yet there is a socio-economic differential over preferences held as you point out here (my main other one is over demographics). Everyone is capable of having practically as well as theoretically unfulfillable desires. One needs to be realistic about the situation one is in, but that is really a prudential concern. Now you are talking about distributive justice which is I would argue a second tier moral issue with political and economic implications. For now I am focused on first tier moral issues - individual actions and inactions in specific situations and it is these that are to do with moral facts.
Please stop making so many good (and bad
) points. I want to keep these posts short but now have to spill this into a second reply