If you seriously think there is an objectively best color (lacking an arbitrarily chosen definition of âbestâ like my wavelength example), even in principle, it doesnât surprise me that you think morality is objective. We simply have no possibility of agreement if you canât cede the subjectivity involved in having a favorite color.
What are you talking about?
Where did I even hint that âthere is an objectively best color?â
Using that spurious conclusion as a warrant for dismissing why I think morality is objective is, pardon my bluntness, unfettered audacity. Apparently, you âattemptedâ to read my post but clearly missed the entire point of it.
It is true that we likely will have no point of agreement if you continue to misread completely the points I do make.
Clearly, your use of âbestâ regarding colour was ambiguous. It implied âfavored by meâ and nothing else. So I clearly
DONâT âthink there is an objectively best color.â In fact, I argued that because your second sentence was preferential, while purporting to be objective, based on your ambiguation of â
bestâ with â
my preferred,â that was the reason you mistakenly claimed â
bestâ is a subjective term.
The word â
bestâ when clearly stipulated is amenable to objective judgement. It is a superlative, which means that with respect to some quality or purpose the item in question is more fit than any other. Clearly, that involves judgement, not preference. There might even be a âbestâ colour depending upon its purpose, if we clearly define âbest for what.â If you simply mean âbest for meâ that is indistinguishable from âpreferred by me,â which IS purely subjective. However, âbestâ for stopping traffic is clearly not merely a subjective determination. Experiments can, and I assume have, been run.
I said, basically, that both your sentences regarding colour were preferential (wholly subjective) although the second used the word âbestâ ambiguously, which is why you think it is objective, when clearly it isnât.
âBlue is my favorite colourâ is not an objective claim since it cannot be objectively verified, although it can be corroborated. It cannot be objectively verified because there is no way for the word âfavoriteâ to be measured independently of your claim and your intention regarding its semantic content. We have to âtake your word for it.â That is why it does not meet any criteria for âobjectiveâ verification. Yes, a certain area of your brain might âlight upâ every time you see the colour blue, but how does the meaning (semantic content) of the word âfavoriteâ for you necessarily entail a causally symmetrical relationship to that specific brain event being monitored? Subjective claims are unverifiable which is why they are not objective - although they might be dismissed as unconvincing or inconsistent with behaviour, but that is another matter.
Morality is objective and has to be. You could not live with the implications of purely subjective morality. If ârape is wrongâ simply means the same as âI prefer not to be rapedâ the rapist could counter with âI prefer to rape.â If there is no objective means of deciding which of the two preferences is objectively âbetter,â because, as you claim, âbestâ is subjective, then we have no basis upon which to say which of the two claims objectively holds in a court of law - they are both subjective. The rapist has as much a claim as the one being raped to their preferred option. Either morality is objective or we are in deep doo-doo.
Letâs call this an argument ad absurdum. If morality is subjective, there are absurd consequences that result, i.e., there is no objective means by which to distinguish between moral claims when they conflict, so âto each his own.â You couldnât rationally live with that, unless you are certifiably insane. Are you?