esquizofrenico wrote: ↑Sun May 20, 2018 2:43 am
brimstoneSalad wrote: ↑Sat May 19, 2018 2:15 pm
esquizofrenico wrote: ↑Sat May 19, 2018 5:32 am
I agree that for objective morality it is needed a transcendental, objective and immutable reference of goodness. Otherwise you always crash against the "is-ought" problem.
Ought a knife be sharp?
It really depends. If you think that humanity should become extinct, for example,
I'm not talking about humanity here. Just the knife.
What is a knife? Given what it is (and yes this comes down to definition), should a knife be sharp?
We can talk about the teleology of instruments-- that is, meaningfully what they should ideally be based on their purpose.
A knife is meant to cut, so it *should* have the properties that make it good at serving that purpose, like being hard, durable, sharp, having an ergonomic handle even.
Is there really an is-ought problem when it comes to knife?
It IS a knife, therefore it ought X.
This doesn't seem to be a problem.
esquizofrenico wrote: ↑Sun May 20, 2018 2:43 amI think this comes due to the assumptions we make due to the definition of a knife, which includes that its function is to cut things. But I don't think you can draw an "ought" out of that.
Why not?
esquizofrenico wrote: ↑Sun May 20, 2018 2:43 amYou just can say: Something is not a knife unless it is sharp.
No, you don't have to say that: you can just understand its function and then deduce from that and other empirical evidence the ideal properties that thing has to serve that function. It can be contextual too (as can moral oughts) it doesn't have to be absolute.
esquizofrenico wrote: ↑Sun May 20, 2018 2:43 amBut should a knife be a knife or something else completely?
Are you asking about why the definition of words are as such?
Language has teleology too.