Peter Holmes wrote: ↑February 21st, 2020, 7:15 am
I'm sorry, but I find this explanation unconvincing. We make value-judgements about different things, for sure. But they remain value-judgements, and are therefore subjective - matters of opinion or belief. And because of this, there's no substantial difference between a moral value-judgement and, say, an aesthetic one; 'this action is morally good' and 'this painting is beautiful' are equally subjective, and they equally lack truth-value, because moral goodness and aesthetic beauty aren't objective properties of features of reality. Rather, we use these signs to express opinions about things.
You may be surprised, but I agree with every word of that. Moral value judgments are indeed as subjective as any other value judgments. But rational moral judgments
are not value judgments. No valuation enters into them. They are strictly empirical. If I say, "What Alfie did was wrong," I'm not saying that I dislike what Alfie did, that I disagree with what he did, or that what he did was good or bad. I'm saying that his act violated some rule or principle or standard, which is an empirical claim. It makes no difference whether the act in question was hitting his little sister, running a red light, putting the wrong-sized breaker on an electrical circuit, or marking the wrong answer on a geography quiz. I may have some value-based opinions as to what he did --- I may think his act good or bad --- but that is not what I'm saying when I pronounce his act wrong.
To be sure, people often do pronounce acts morally wrong purely on the basis of their dislike or disapproval of the act, i.e., on their "values" --- i.e., on subjective, emotional grounds. They are not engaging in rational moral philosophy. Rational morality does not reduce to, "Do things that make me feel good, and don't do things that make me feel bad."
Perhaps a word about values is in order. A value is a pseudo-property applied to things by agents to indicate their desire for or approval of the thing. Things an agent seeks to acquire or retain are "goods;" things an agent seeks to avoid or be rid of are "evils." Values are not defined except by reference to an agent. Values, both positive (goods) and negative (evils) are quantifiable; different things have different values to a given agent; the measure of the value of a thing to an agent is given by what he is willing to give up --- time, effort, some other good --- to secure (or avoid) that thing.
One more thing. Both you and TP seem to think that opinions and judgments are
per se subjective. That is not the case. Both can express factual states of affairs. When they do they are not subjective. They are sound judgments, valid opinions.