I have been asked if I wish to participate in a debate on
morality at the blog “Truth Interrupted”.
I am deciding whether or not to participate in the debate.
However, following a chain of links brought me to a post where the challenger
attempted to defend the proposition that there are objective moral values and
duties.
He defined “objective moral values and duties” as “moral
values and duties that are valid and binding independent of human opinion.”
I believe that many of these debates are fruitless because
of the ambiguity of terms such as “objective values”.
I deny the existence of objective, intrinsic prescriptivity –
a moral value built into the very fabric of certain actions, character traits,
or states of affairs. However, I assert that there are (or can be) objectively
true moral claims that are substantially independent of the beliefs and desires
of any given agent. I assert that values (including moral values, but also
other types of values) exist as relationships between states of affairs and
desires. Some people call this a subjectivist theory because “desires” are
essential to value. However, these relationships exist as matters of fact in
the real world, and are substantially independent of anybody’s belief in or
about those relationships. They are as much a part of the real world as planets
and atoms.
Valid
What would it mean to say that moral values and duties are “valid”?
I am being pedantic here. In logic, the terms “valid” and “invalid” apply to
arguments. An argument is valid when, if the premises are true, then the
conclusion must be true. A valid argument can still have a false conclusion,
but only if one of its premises are false as well.
I hold that at least some moral propositions – propositions of
the form, “It is wrong to respond to mere words or communicative acts with
violence or threats of violence” – are, or can be, objectively true. I would
not speak about a moral value being “valid”. The proposition either points to
something that is true in the world, or it does not.
Binding
Moral values are “binding”?
I hear this phrase a lot in discussion. I do not know what
this means. I don’t even have a good guess.
I think it has something to do with the relationship between
moral facts and motivation. Therefore, let me explain what I think to be true
about the relationship between moral facts and motivation, and let others
decide what this implies about moral values being “binding”.
I hold that “It is wrong to respond to mere words or communicative
acts with violence or threats of violence.”
I do not mean by this that everybody has a reason not to
respond to mere words or communicative acts with violence or threats of
violence. In fact, some people may have no reason to refrain.
However, I hold that people generally have many and strong
reasons to give people generally an aversion to responding to mere words or
communicative acts with violence or threats of violence. They might not have
such an aversion, but they “ought to have” such an aversion, meaning that
people generally have many and strong reasons to cause them to have such an
aversion. The way that people generally can cause others to have such an
aversion is by rewarding (praising) those who display such an aversion and
punishing (condemning) those who appear to lack such an aversion. So, people
generally have reason to reward/praise those who refrain from responding to
words and communicative actions with violence or threats of violence, and to
punish/condemn those who respond with violence or threats of violence.
What does this imply about a moral value being “binding”?
Somebody is going to have to tell me.
Human Opinion
This term “opinion” is ambiguous.
In a strict sense, the term refers only to beliefs. If
Bernadette believes that Carlos’ car is red, then Bernadette is of the opinion
that Carlos’ car is red.
Using this definition, the truth of a moral proposition is
independent of human opinion because it has nothing to do with beliefs. Moral claims
are claims about the relationships between malleable desires and other desires.
These relationships exist as a matter of fact – regardless of any person’s
beliefs about those relationships.
Now, let’s take a statement of the form, “Jim prefers
chocolate over butterscotch”. According to our first definition of “opinion”,
this is independent of opinion. It is as much a fact of the world that Jim
prefers chocolate over butterscotch as Jim’s age, height, weight, and any
number of other perfectly objective facts. That is to say, if somebody else
were to report, “Jim prefers butterscotch over chocolate”, that person would
be wrong as a matter of fact. It is simply not true. If Jim himself were to say
that he prefers butterscotch over chocolate he would be guilty of lying.
Yet, we sometimes call preferences “opinions”. So, here we
have a set of things that are both referred to as “opinion” and, at the same
time, reports a fact about the world.
I think this is where a lot of the discussion on the
objectivity of moral values gets confused. People treat “opinion” as a clear
and unambiguous term distinct from “fact”. However, this is not the case. We
sometimes use the term “opinion” to refer to things that are, at the same time,
“facts”. Relationships between states of affairs and desires – the type of
facts reported in value claims including moral claims – are precisely the set
of facts that are also, at the same time, called “opinions”.
Anyway, moral values are independent of human opinion in the
narrow sense because relationships between states of affairs and desires are
independent of beliefs. Moral values are not independent of desires since they
actually describe relationships between objects of evaluation and desires. Yet,
these relationships exist as a matter of fact. Whole societies can believe that
a particular relationship exists between an object of evaluation and desires
and be wrong. They would determine the truth or falsity of these propositions
the same way they would investigate any objective, scientific claim about the
world.
Conclusion
So, I would say: Moral claims sometimes report facts that
are independent of beliefs and are independent of whether the speaker or people
generally want the claim to be true. They are not independent of all desires
because, when they are true, they report relationships between malleable
desires and other desires. However, these relationships exist and are as
objectively real as anything that any scientist may wish to study.
1 comment:
Hi, Alonzo. I think it would be immoral for you not to participate in the debate, for the following reasons:
- people who do not subscribe to desirism hold views on morality that are sometimes right by chance, but more often wrong;
- a wrong philosophy of morality can and does do a lot of damage;
- if you can change someone's mind concerning morality by showing them how to construct true moral statements then you should;
- if you don't want to participate, give your desires an overhaul.
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