- #1
WarrenPlatts
- 134
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The problem with the term ‘absolutism’ are the connotations of totalitarianism and non-revisability. Moral realism on the other hand, is the realism of scientific realism.
What is real is what science says is real. Granted, what was once considered real no longer is, and what is considered real now may not be in the future. Nevertheless, scientific method, however amorphous or fallible, remains the best way to make sense of experience, because of the systematic link between theory and observation.
Moral theory, according to moral realism, is as revisable as scientific theory. Moral absolutism would seem to imply that a committed absolutist would be at the end of ethics and morality—his morality would be complete and not in need of revision. Hence, the short slip into totalitarianism.
Given that the world is as science says it is, whence morality and ethics? The solution, according to moral realism, is to model the moral predicates of right and wrong after the scientific predicates of true and false. We write ‘It is true that p’ or ‘It is false that p’, (where p is a description) and thus entirely sidestep the ontological problem of what the attributes of Truth, as a Platonic entity-in-itself actually are. Similarly, we write ‘It is right that p’ or ‘It is wrong that p’. If you ever listen to Tony Blair’s speeches, this is exactly the locution that he uses.
Combining the truth and moral predicates, we have ‘It is true that it is right that p’ and ‘It is false that it is right that p’ and ‘It is true that it is wrong that p’ and ‘It is false that it is wrong that p’. In this manner, one can entirely avoid the ontological problem of just what exactly the Platonic, eternal Morals actually are--that you all have been talking in circles about for two months now.:zzz:
What is real is what science says is real. Granted, what was once considered real no longer is, and what is considered real now may not be in the future. Nevertheless, scientific method, however amorphous or fallible, remains the best way to make sense of experience, because of the systematic link between theory and observation.
Moral theory, according to moral realism, is as revisable as scientific theory. Moral absolutism would seem to imply that a committed absolutist would be at the end of ethics and morality—his morality would be complete and not in need of revision. Hence, the short slip into totalitarianism.
Given that the world is as science says it is, whence morality and ethics? The solution, according to moral realism, is to model the moral predicates of right and wrong after the scientific predicates of true and false. We write ‘It is true that p’ or ‘It is false that p’, (where p is a description) and thus entirely sidestep the ontological problem of what the attributes of Truth, as a Platonic entity-in-itself actually are. Similarly, we write ‘It is right that p’ or ‘It is wrong that p’. If you ever listen to Tony Blair’s speeches, this is exactly the locution that he uses.
Combining the truth and moral predicates, we have ‘It is true that it is right that p’ and ‘It is false that it is right that p’ and ‘It is true that it is wrong that p’ and ‘It is false that it is wrong that p’. In this manner, one can entirely avoid the ontological problem of just what exactly the Platonic, eternal Morals actually are--that you all have been talking in circles about for two months now.:zzz:
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