I am pretty sure that there is objective truth, I just don't believe that subjects - us, anyone - can grasp objective truth. I strongly disagree with the fact that things have to be the way they are. They are just the way they are in the eye of the beholder, and vary sometimes greatly depending on the subject, as well as the space and time location (something might appear different in different circumstances).
So, a proposition of the form "If X, then X=X" is not necessarily true? There are lots of objective truths humans can grasp. Alas, most of them are quite uninteresting analytic truths. (Like the truth that all quadrats have four sides. I know this with absolute certainty. There's nothing subjective about it.)
That the universe is purely amoral is a steep claim, as well as the one that morality is a human creation.[...]
Show me rocks condemning a sinner, or the rain caring whether it falls on the just or the unjust.
Just because rocks and rain aren't the type of things able to give moral judgemants doesn't mean that the universe is purely amoral. Neither rocks nor rain know whether they consist of atoms,nor do they care: But they still do.
Also, yes: there's a lot more to life than rocks and precipitation.
Well, dogs care not whether you are good or evil, just that you feed him the dog biscuits. And tigers think monks and dictators are equally delicious.
Quite frankly, I am under the belief that morality has always been defined by man, not nature. Nature shits on saints and sinners with equal measure. What is right or wrong is defined by us.
I guess that depends on whether you believe nature defines humanity, which seems a bit simplistic. It doesn't matter that chimpanzees will often gather a troop together, wander into the next territory over, and attack their neighbors. If I went into the next neighborhood over with all my friends, killed and ate everyone there, and stole their houses, I don't think there would be a philosophical debate on whether I was an evil, murderous bastard just because I didn't know any better.
Then again, chimpanzees don't know about heavy industry, organized agriculture, or the nature of electromagnetism. They're no less natural, they just don't and can't understand. So they'll never understand that it's probably wrong to invade and cannibalize your neighbors because they can't understand what it would be like to be invaded and eaten until it happens.
We, on the other hand, are capable of understanding when we're doing something wrong and, conversely, we can look at other situations and say that they shouldn't happen. It isn't really that humanity defines morality, it's that we're the only ones yet that, as far as we know, can think about the long-reaching consequences of our actions to understand. Rain doesn't care about the precipitation cycle, either, we essentially defined it, but that doesn't mean it doesn't objectively exist.
I just don't think anyone on this board is refraining from murdering the people that annoy them solely because they think they'll get caught. We, as far as we know alone in the universe, know that killing someone sets up a train of consequences that hurts people who have nothing to do with us, and it's unacceptable.
Here's the thing, our sense of rightness and wrongness is more of a product of society, education and indoctrination. If you leave a child in the wild that child is going to pick up the values of whatever animal that decided to adopt him or her. We think and believe in what is right and wrong because we are taught, and what we are taught is a product of society, refined throughout the generations. Society creates this because it's what allows societies to work. Without rules and morality, we wouldn't be able to form a cohesive group and, being social animals, dependent on social structures and the strength of our peers, wouldn't have survived to the modern age.
Moreover, what we collectively think is right or wrong evolves over time, as what allows society to work also changes over time. Until we reached the industrial age, we had always been at the mercy of the elements. Without rules and morality, we can't define when taking too many grains is taking too many grains, and as a result, we wouldn't be sitting here arguing about morality today.
Morality is a human creation. A necessary creation to maintain the cohesion of the group. Without group cohesion, there won't be a group, and without a group, we wouldn't survive.
Lets get fast through this: "Morality is a human creation. A necessary creation to maintain the cohesion of the group. Without group cohesion, there won't be a group, and without a group, we wouldn't survive."
This is a very utilitarian view or lets say "utilitarian-ish", because I never knew that my collecting of berries is MORAL (my hunter-gatherer thingy).
Now back to the topic. If you dont mind I put numbers on your points: "Morality is a human creation (1). A necessary creation to maintain the cohesion of the group (2). Without group cohesion, there won't be a group, and without a group, we wouldn't survive (3)."
Means you see first morality is done by human.... and if I add ... humans havent done it out of selfishness, but rather to
maximizes utility. In your case survival. Are you okay that I reword your stuff? If yes. Great. If no, I explain why I have done it. I have done it because, you had put survival and moral together... Which means a person could argue that: A surviving group is a moral group. Or lets say:
The more/more likely a group survives,
the more are they moral and visa versa. Which means a positive correlation between moral and survival. Something I dont want to do. So are you okay if I reword your stuff this way: "Morality is a human creation, which
says: "
Moral is to maximizes utility for any given individual" (1).
The more this creation can maximizes utility (for any given subject),
the more or stronger is the group cohesion (2). The higher the accumulated utility of a group, the higher the change to survive (3)." That way you havent moral and survival direct together. Me personally Im way to far away from utilitarianism.
I dont know if this is bad or good thing.
Off topic.... Would you people agree that there are laws out there. Truths if you like. Even if they are tautological like x=x or a square has four sides, even this tautological things give us information... or lets say a true information... because x=x. Those it give us alot of information? No. Nothing behind the tautological statement, but it gives us a true. Of course there can be more. Is there a chance for falsifiable truths, or laws if you like? Yes of course. Most people would argue that is the point of science, to find those laws/truths. From economic laws (gossen's laws, etc..), over the laws in physics, to laws in social science.... There are laws/truths everywhere around us. So yes I believe there is also a moral law. A formula if you like, and yes it will not be something like most people imagine, or learned in school or in the church. BUT THOSE THIS MEAN THERE ISNT THIS TRUE, THIS LAW OUT THERE? The law of moral if you like. Of course not. It will be just not as you and me desire/wish it is. And this law is most likely not as global/macro-macro as we wish (and a more individual and case by case thingy). For examples:
- Is it right for a individual to kill someone, another individual, in self defense? You threaten my life, can I take yours to protect me?
- Those for this special question matter if there is moral, or lets use our words "this human creation call morals"? No. I could answer this question today, as well as 3000 years ago. Or lets say: This scenario could take place in the state of nature (without morals) or in the state of order (with morals). As the answer YES isnt around the question of moral but rather survival. And we dont need even the creation of moral/groups/societies to answer this question. So yes I think, there are laws of morals out there.
- Are humans born with natural rights or divine rights? Or are they given over a social contract (a person in a social contract has right, person outside dont)? If the latter is true it would mean that natural rights are human creation (A human creation as you said morals are).
- This special question on the other hand deals with more then SURVIVAL. Which makes an answer harder. P.S. I could give know a longer answer why I think we are born with natural rights, but I also dont want to show what a amoral person Im
. Long story short, most likely we will find micro-level/
individual laws long before we will find a global law of moral... But just my 50 cents....
I think trying to imply right or wrong, good or evil is inherent to the natural world is a bit silly. The natural world remains independent of subjective perception unless you're solipsist. If morality is part of the natural world then by all means provide the formal axioms to describe it, in which case then humans would always behave according to those formal axioms.
But we don't, and never will, because humans don't obey the principles of formal axioms or hell, even rational decisions most times. That's beside the point that the universe appears to be built upon uncertainty, doubt, and frames of reference which seems at odds with a concept of absolute good or evil.
I think you mix up a little..... I would agree on "trying to imply right or wrong, good or evil is inherent to the natural world is a bit silly." But full heartily disagree with your statement that we as humans are not govern/lead or choose by laws. We are subjects to laws, if you like it or not. Even if you think "don't obey the principles of formal axioms" you do it still. Example: You dont beleive in gravity, doesnt change there is gravity. You dont believe in economics and rational behavior, and want do always exceptions. Even for that are theories and models out there (from asian disease, over loss aversion to RREEMM-Models any other stuff in decision theory... It just means I have to be less lazy, and work less with a pure homo oeconomicus
)
Well, ...
But I should stop debating metaethics on the internets. I'll just go back to enjoying The Alignment System Game!
True. I will better also stop.