Angra Mainyu
Veteran Member
Pretty good points - I agree of course it would be immoral for him to buy the gun, and that he would deserve to be punished for it if he offered to buy the gun.Bomb#20 said:Somewhere out there, there's a paroled felon -- we'll call him Andy -- who's used a gun in his past crimes. But Andy currently finds himself without one. He's planning more crimes so he wants to acquire a gun. He's been approached by an undercover police officer -- we'll call him Bill -- posing as a criminal who sells guns illegally. Bill offered to sell Andy a gun. I sincerely think it would be immoral for Andy to offer to buy the gun. And I sincerely do not want Andy not to offer to buy the gun.
Based on what I've read from different philosophers (and my interpretation of their work; they're not always crystal clear), a claim that sincere moral claims involve emotional commitments of the the "you-want-it" type is probably too strong common among philosophers, but there are weaker claims that seem to enjoy much wider support among anti-realists (whether error theorists or success-theorists to give them a name), and among realists of some pretty weird (though not necessarily infrequent) varieties, and which are sometimes used in support of their views (even if they don't always make the claims explicit, they seem implicit at least).
This is tentative, but my guess is that a wearker claim in the vicinity (at least, the philosophical vicinity given what sort of work the claim is frequently meant to do) would be something like:
WC1: Necessarily, if person A sincerely reckons that B has a moral obligation to X, then B's failing to X would be valued intrinsically negatively by A, regardless of whether A overall valued B's failing to X positively or neutrally given other factors (i.e., as a means to some further end).
WC2: Necessarily, if person A sincerely reckons that it would be immoral for B to fail to X, then the assessment that the act is immoral would contribute negatively to A's valuation of B's failure to X, regardless of whether A overall valued B's failing to X positively or neutrally given other factors (i.e., as a means to some further end).
Personally, I think that it's at least questionable whether such claims (or even the "you-want-it" type) would do the work they're meant to, but that aside, I think these claims seem to go too far because they include a "necessarily" condition without a corresponding condition about the normal functioning of the brain of the person making the assertion, and so they seem at least unwarranted to me (and I would even say improbable).
Good example.Bomb#20 said:Well, suppose somebody said "I've been deaf from birth, but I know a falling tree makes a noise." Most of us would wonder if this person was using the word 'noise' in the same way as most of us do. He sort of isn't -- he can be using it to mean "the air vibrations that normal human ears can detect that people label 'noise'", of course, but that would probably leave us all suspecting there's an aspect of noise that he doesn't grok. But this shouldn't delude us into thinking noise depends on ears. If a tree falls in the forest and nobody is there to hear it, yes, it makes a noise. If a person says he doesn't care about rape but knows it's morally wrong, he's presumably got brain damage, but is willing to take other people's word for it that it's wrong.
I think even if he doesn't fully understand the words, he's being sincere in his claim - why wouldn't he be? I don't need to fully understand the word "black hole" to sincerely say there is one at the center of the Milky Way. But in any case, here's a modified example:
1. Let's say that someone said "I've been deaf since the car accident last year, but I know a falling tree makes a noise.".
We wouldn't think she's not using "noise" in the same way as most of us do, or that she's being insincere. She lost her sense of hearing, but not her linguistic competence or her common sense, or her ability to be sincere. It's clear that properly understanding noise statements don't require any sort of current noise perception on a person's part, and sincere noise statements do not require it, either.
Now let's suppose a guy says "I used to care about rape, because I cared about the suffering of the victims, until the car accident last year. But now part of my brain is damaged, and I don't care less about rape, provided that I'm not the victim". I don't see a good reason to suppose that he would not be sincere, or that he would fail to fully understand the meaning of the claim about suffering. He just does not care anymore.
But let's say that the claim is now about morality, like: "I used to care about rape, because I cared about the suffering of the victims, and also because I wanted the perpetrators to be punished because they deserve it, until the car accident last year. But now part of my brain is damaged, and I couldn't care less about rape, provided that I'm not the victim. I don't care that the victims suffer, and I don't care if the perpetrators do not get punished. I know they deserve to be punished, but I don't care if people get what they deserve."
As before, I don't see a good reason to suppose that he would not be sincere, or that he would fail to fully understand the meaning of the claims involved. He just does not care anymore.
He might even add, sincerely: "That's a part of my brain I'm glad is damaged. It was holding me back. But I value being the way I am now".
That would all be pretty odd, but I don't see why it would be impossible.
:devil-smiley-029:
