Greta wrote: ↑March 16th, 2020, 9:51 pm
GE Morton wrote: ↑March 16th, 2020, 9:32 pm
Greta, the title and question of this thread is, "What could make morality objective?" Before you can usefully present examples of objective moral principles or rules, you need to answer the above question, and to do that you need to clarify what "morality" is, what is its aim, and what "objectivity" is. Otherwise, any examples presented could be dismissed as "subjective," due to divergent understandings of those terms.
The question of the thread is a meta-ethical one. Specific moralities can only be evaluated after those meta-ethical issues are resolved.
It's not meta-ethical, it's waffling balderdash that has managed to achieve nothing over many pages.
What makes anything objective? Concrete evidence - 99.9999% in some areas of science. Testing, observation, questioning, re-testing. That's as good as we can manage.
Well, you've just confirmed my statement above, concerning divergent understandings of those terms. No --- testing, re-testing, etc., is not what makes a proposition objective, though it may make it more certain. What makes it objective is that is
testable, i.e., it has public truth conditions. Objectivity does not mean certainty.
Even then, whether we are dealing with objective reality or just an evolutionarily useful filtering of it, cannot be definitively ascertained.
"Objective reality" is whatever is asserted by a true, objective proposition.
But you have already said that the ontic approach is too meta for this thread.
Greta, I never said any such thing. What I said was that ontology is mostly nonsense. Stop putting words in my mouth, please.
In the real world, the vagaries and relativities of morality mean that nothing whatever can render morality objective, and most so-called moralities blithely trample over other species without consideration or empathy.
The vagaries and relativities of vernacular moralities have no bearing on the question of whether an objective morality is possible.
Morality is not supposed to be objective.
"Not supposed to be?" Again, you confirm my claim above. Apparently you equate morality with folkways. Most moral philosophers have seen it as a subject amenable to rational analysis and elucidation of universal truths.