Evaluating Moral Realism Part 0

I’ve been doing a lot of reading on moral realism of late, for obvious reasons, and I’m still not remotely convinced that it holds any water. Therefore, I wanted to grab something from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and at least start to talk about the article in passing. It just doesn’t demonstrate anything objectively real.

This time, we’ll just go over the introduction, otherwise this is going to be a very, very long post. I’ll come back and look at the rest as time allows, working one section at a time.

We’ll start off with a definition, from the aforementioned Encyclopedia, of what moral realism is. “Moral realists have here been characterized as those who hold that moral claims purport to report facts, that they are evaluable as true or false in light of whether the facts are as the claims purport, and that at least some such claims are actually true.” That’s just a bunch of words strung together and it doesn’t describe an actually useful position, so let’s try somewhere else. Wikipedia describes it as “the position that ethical sentences express propositions that refer to objective features of the world (that is, features independent of subjective opinion), some of which may be true to the extent that they report those features accurately.” In other words, moral realists believe that there is a morality that exists beyond the mind of humans to invent it.

Except that’s absolutely not defensible in any way. So we’ll get back to the article at hand. It starts off with “Taken at face value, the claim that Nigel has a moral obligation to keep his promise, like the claim that Nyx is a black cat, purports to report a fact and is true if things are as the claim purports.” Except Nyx being a cat or having a cat is a completely demonstrable claim. You just have to produce the cat. If they can’t produce the cat, I am under no obligation whatsoever to accept it as true. I might, since having a cat is a very mundane claim and I know that lots of people have cats of all colors. I have a black cat myself. However, if they said they had a dragon, I would reject said claim unless it could be objectively validated by trotting the dragon out.

However, in the case of Nigel, there is no objective moral obligation to do anything. It’s certainly a useful trait within human societies, we want to be able to believe that people will do what they commit to doing, but beyond the human mind and the collective human desire, there doesn’t seem to be anything that obligates anyone to perform that specific act.

This is why it’s so important to define your terms and the one sticking point that I see so often is what is meant by “objective”. So here you go, from my perspective: “(of a person or their judgment) not influenced by personal feelings or opinions in considering and representing facts.” In other words, it’s something that exists entirely beyond the ability of the human mind to invent or alter. Gravity exists no matter what humans think about it. Gravity is objectively real. Morals and ethics, they don’t seem to do the same, which is why I’m a moral anti-realist. I go where the evidence leads, full stop and there doesn’t seem to be any evidence that would lead me to conclude that moral realism is a coherent idea.

The article goes on to say that some moral claims are true. How do you know that? I’d say that first, you’d have to define “true” in some meaningful way and then demonstrate that the claim is accurate. Which moral claims can be made that can be objectively demonstrated to accurately represent reality? I don’t think you can come up with any. “You shouldn’t murder” or “you shouldn’t steal” aren’t demonstrable. At best, it leads to consequentialism, the idea that because we can subjectively choose to see the results in a positive way, they have to be true, but that’s not objective, is it? It doesn’t show that any of this is actually real, beyond our desire for it to be so, which takes it immediately out of the realm of the objective.

Then it  goes on to argue that moral non-realists only fall into two categories: “As a result, those who reject moral realism are usefully divided into (i) those who think moral claims do not purport to report facts in light of which they are true or false (noncognitivists) and (ii) those who think that moral claims do carry this purport but deny that any moral claims are actually true (error theorists).” Yet I’m not making either of those claims. My position is much more evidentialist. I have yet to see a single example of any moral claim which can be justified entirely beyond the human mindset. There is nothing in the moral landscape that can be demonstrated to be true, that once humans are removed entirely from the picture, can still be demonstrated to be true. We think it’s true, only because we’re the ones thinking that it’s true. Contrast that to the speed of light, which remains constant whether we’re there to study it or not. There is nothing that we can do to alter the speed of light in a vacuum but we can alter morality and we do all the time.

“The debate between moral realists and anti-realists assumes, though, that there is a shared object of inquiry—in this case, a range of claims all involved are willing to recognize as moral claims—about which two questions can be raised and answered.” We’ll get to those two questions in a second. If we can’t even agree what a moral claim is, then how in the world are we going to find parity in the discussion? Therefore, I simply ask what kind of questions they’re talking about and they usually can’t come up with any definitive answers. So let’s get to the two questions in question: “Do these claims purport to report facts in light of which they are true or false? Are some of them true? Moral realists answer ‘yes’ to both, non-cognitivists answer ‘no’ to the first (and, by default, ‘no’ to the second) while error theorists answer ‘yes’ to the first and ‘no’ to the second.” I don’t find the questions even coherent though. Do moral realists claim that they accurately represent reality? Sure. Can they prove it? No. Without that proof, their claims are irrelevant. Are some of them true? Certainly not objectively and certainly not demonstrably. Subjectively, maybe, depending on the criteria that we subjectively determine. That’s not what we’re supposedly talking about though.

This is why you need to be able to define your terms in some comprehensible way and stick to them. You can’t just throw out word salad and pretend it means something and that’s largely what a lot of philosophers do. Look at some of the quotes that I’ve presented so far. This is not clear, concise language, intended to facilitate open discussion, it’s gobbledegook. It’s people trying to pretend they’re smart without actually demonstrating it.

“By all accounts, moral realism can fairly claim to have common sense and initial appearances on its side.” There’s a reason that the appeal to common sense is a fallacy. What it has on its side is wishful thinking, nothing more. It appeals to people with an emotional desire for morality to be more than something we made up. That doesn’t mean that it is. This is usually where I lose people in a debate because the second they realize I’m not going to take their heartfelt desires seriously, I’m going to expect them to do some actual work and produce some demonstrable evidence, they just run away. It’s the same thing with the religious. Once faith is off the table, they have nothing else to say.

Next, however, there are five sections that I will get through over time. It might not be immediate but I promise that I will get there. My position is very simple. Put up or shut up. You can’t just play word games declaring up is down, left is right and subjective is objective. I’ve defined my terms. Go ahead and define yours. Then we can have a conversation and see where it gets us.

Usually, it doesn’t go anywhere worthwhile.

10 thoughts on “Evaluating Moral Realism Part 0”

  1. Yo I was busy, but I can go through some of this instead of replying to the other stuff.

    I don’t understand why you don’t think that definition is useful? When we go through the taxonomy, we usually pit anti-realism against realism or cognitivism against non-cogntivism. It seems that if you start with moral realism, it makes sense to give a broad but simple definition.

    I would be wary about wikipedia here, too. “Beyond the mind” doesn’t seem useful. Some constructivists are plausibly moral realists, because they think that moral propositions can be true. But they still think morality is constructed. Similarly, some moral subjectivists are plausibly moral realists because they think moral facts exist.

    You’ve done something really dangerous, and something that I think is awful practice, in that you’ve engaged with a position as though it was fully developed after reading three sentences. The point about the cat, and the moral obligation, is that moral realists think that the way we talk about moral obligations in everyday conversation is broadly correct. That’s it – it’s not giving a naturalist or non-naturalist account. It’s just trying to give you a rough idea of what the position is.

    You do this a few times, and it’s not really worth pointing out many more – but saying things like “can realists prove this? no” defeats the purpose of going through the article. You want to critically address the arguments as they come up. You shouldn’t want to go in thinking you’re right and thinking the introduction isn’t any good because it doesn’t provide an argument. That’s not the point of an introduction!

    1. Yet I’ve gone through the entire article and found that no, they actually can’t defend anything. What’s dangerous is starting with a position that can’t be demonstrated and then only addressing the arguments against yours (and badly at that) without ever making an attempt to defend your side at all. You can’t “start with moral realism”, any more than you can “start with Christianity”. You have to get there first and not once, in this entire article, nor in any article I’ve read, has any moral realist ever made an attempt to do so.

      Instead, it seems to be a completely faith-based position.

      1. There are arguments about who has the burden of proof, but it’s unclear either the realist or anti-realist has more work to do. Both are positive positions and it seems right that both need justification.

        You say the argument is poor, but you seem to agree that moral disagreement doesn’t work. Do you have an alternative reason to think moral disagreement arguments don’t work? What about them looks so poor? In your post, you’ve complained that they’re talking about disagreement full stop. It doesn’t seem like you’ve got issue with how they discuss it, but instead that they discuss it!

        It’s a very short article designed to give the lay of the land. Again, I’ve linked or cited more substantial texts. But even then, this article introduces many views that have plausible defeaters of popular counterarguments. If you want a more robust account of say, moral naturalism, you need to read more than a paragraph on moral naturalism!

        1. It’s anyone making the positive claim. I can back up mine. Can you back up yours? Again, nowhere in this article (or any other that I’ve seen) have I seen any positive presentation of evidence in support of moral realism. It’s just an assumption made by people who are emotionally attached to the idea. What we are really seeing here is the false dichotomy fallacy, the same one that theists use when it comes to evolution. Even if they could absolutely disprove evolution, something they are nowhere close to doing, that doesn’t prove that creationism is true. Even if moral realists could prove moral anti-realism was false, again, something they haven’t remotely been successful at doing, that doesn’t prove moral realism is true. There are other options besides the two. You’d think that these people could figure that out, wouldn’t you?

          The problem is that it doesn’t give the lay of anything. It assumes, a priori, that it’s true without ever demonstrating that it’s true. I could, and have, made a solid case for moral anti-realism in a paragraph. They had an entire article and they didn’t even try to prove their point. That’s not remotely impressive.

          1. Usually. They are just like the religious. The second they realize that they can’t just assert their “faith”, that I expect them to do more than flap their lips and make unsupported claims, they head for the hills.

            Sad, isn’t it? They can’t answer what ought to be simple questions because I don’t know that they understand it themselves. They were just told that it’s true and that’s as far as they can go.

            Amazing how this looks exactly like religion.

  2. We’ve talked before, and I don’t appreciate being dismissed as “like the religious” and “sad” when, as far as I can tell, all I’m doing is seriously engaging with you for free, on your forum, and in my own time.

    I’ve written a little on positive claims before. I think the realist and the anti-realist are both making positive claims.

    You keep saying things like “they cannot produce arguments” when I’ve already given you two arguments. One of which is directly a result of evolution!

    1. So what? Nobody is holding a gun to your head. If you want to have a conversation, have a conversation. You just vanished out of the blue with no explanation, something that certainly happens all the time with the religious. If you don’r want people to assume that’s what you’re doing, a simple note that says “I’m going to be busy for a while but I’ll be back” suffices. That’s common courtesy.

      You can think anything that you like, but as I’ve already said, I can back up my views on moral anti-realism. Can you do the same for moral realism or, as I think I already mentioned, are you dodging your burden of proof by saying “you do too” and then not presenting your side. The religious pull that one all the time too.

  3. Bro, you literally said some weird anti-zoomer stuff about them always being on their phone all the time and that you’d be happy to reply whenever.

    If you think it is appropriate to shit talk people, then I’m going to take it upon myself to share this with other people and just say mean things. Does that sound good to you?

    1. If you’re going to engage in an ongoing conversation, at least have respect for the other person and don’t vanish for extended periods of time without any warning. Stop making excuses. Act better.

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