carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 am
brimstoneSalad wrote: ↑Wed May 09, 2018 1:59 am
If it is said that humans have moral value because of "reason™", and "reason™" is defined as an arbitrary standard of specifically human thought process, all you're really doing is begging the question.
There is nothing arbitrary about defining reasoning in relation to the way humans solve abstract problems.
What do you think "solve" means?
If you just think it means that the person is subjectively satisfied with the answer and is no longer compelled to think about it then that wouldn't be relevant to objective morality/moral realism.
carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 amBut I imagine many people that believe the moral premise you're citing would have a more platonic view of "reason"
Yes.
carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 am but I don't think that would be essential.
As I explained above, it is quite essential.
If you regard "the Bible tells us everything we need to know" as a solution to all existential and moral problems, does that make it a valid solution?
It hinges on your notion of what a solution is. If it's something objective, then this notion you've presented of emotionally loaded human reason is very much arbitrary.
carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 amAs a tool where? A platonic form?
You can call it that if you want. Much like mathematical notions, like pi.
Notions of platonic ideals for things like "dogs" are incoherent, but that doesn't mean there isn't any concept with an ideal.
carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 amIf we are talking about how humans think, that is, how the brain works....then there is no way to detach emotion from our thinking. There is no way to turn-off the emotional centers of the brain while you think in some rational ideal.
Of course there is: convert it to symbols and do it on paper instead to get it away from those emotional biases that corrupt your reasoning.
carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 amAlso emotion is critical for decision making not just motivation.
I have no idea how you have come to the conclusion that those are different things.
Are decisions unmotivated?
We weigh decisions based on our motivations.
Reason is used to know what's what, not necessarily to compel action on its own. Questions of binding force of morality are interesting, but not necessary to answer. A student of mathematics doesn't need to be compelled to always answer "4" to the question of "what is 2+2?" in order for 4 to remain the correct answer.
carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 amIn contrast when thinking about the real world in real time we deal with concepts that are themselves very fuzzy and poorly conceived and reason from them.
That's fine if you're doing that provisionally for survival in situations your intuitive induction adapted you to; making lucky guesses is important. The problem is assuming this messy process is equivalent to actual truth or Reason with a capital R.
carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 amNow you can uphold some formal theory, for example a natural deduction calculus for classical logic, as what reasoning should be.....what we should be trying to do.
Which is what I said.
carnap wrote: ↑Fri May 11, 2018 3:26 amBut the selection would be arbitrary unless you can explain why the chosen system has some sort of metaphysical significance over the others.
And I did.
But even if you don't, starting with the premise of classical logic isn't a hard sell. It's also a forum rule, because we don't want to have to endlessly justify the validity of logic in every thread. So, if nothing else: it's because that's what we do here.
brimstoneSalad wrote: ↑Wed May 09, 2018 1:59 am
The meaning of the terms in natural language are irrelevant, we are talking about mathematics and the notion needs to be rigorously defined mathematically.
I think I gave a pretty rigorous definition. If validity = 1 and invalidity = 0, then the OR operator in computer logic gates is a pretty self explanatory way of bridging multiple systems.
If you're confused about what I said, I'll try to clarify but you'll have to explain what you didn't understand in a way that isn't suffering from the same problems of the ambiguity you accuse me of.