Life's "ultimate meaning", and the value of money

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Odd, I see on the other thread that you’ve identified Anselm’s error, but you suppose yet, that your concepts of value and meaning, as opposed to Anselm’s concepts of “maximall greatness” somehow necessarily obtain extra-mentally, intrinsically. You are at odds with yourself on these two threads!
Not at all. See my posts 28 and 29 (which may have been overlooked) for more. In short, it is only because my epistemology is subject/object based that I can consistently reject Anselms proofs.
 
In the second place, their views aren’t representative of those of all atheists.
Then you need to read them again until you understand them.
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antitheist:
There’s nothing sillier than someone trying to tell another person what the other person’s position should be.
If someone told me they were a Christian but thought that Jesus was a product of historical fabrication, I’d go on to tell him that he wasn’t really a Christian, regardless of what he thought.

You can have whatever world view you want, sure, but if you want to be consistent, you need to understand your position a bit better.
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antitheist:
“Meaning” and “value” are words that express personal meaning and value that individuals attach to things. There is no value outside of those attachments that our mind creates. The money example illustrates this admirably.
Ah, so they are preferences, since they reflect personal tendencies and what not. In which case, what you find meaningul is entirely personal, and what I find meaningful is entirely personal.

I hope our meanings don’t conflict!
 
Imagine telling your neighbor:

*That $20 bill has no real value! Why would you suppose it has value, or carry it around? If it’s not issued in some ultimately authoritative sense, it’s not valuable at all!

*He’d look at you like you are crazy:

Hey, I can trade this thing for a case of Guinness beer down at the local market. And get some change back. There’s value for you, mate!
In a different context, imagine telling your neighbor:

That negro is a human being, with real value, just like you! Why would you suppose you can own another human being? The real value and the intrinsic meaning of being a human being precludes your owning him.

He’d look at you like you are crazy:

Meaning and value are social constructs. Value is as valuation does, like I always say. I own this slave. There’s value for you, mate!

Then imagine you reply:

But what about game theory? Don’t you know you’re being dumb? This is really a sub-optimal social arrangement.

He’d again look at you like you are crazy:

Didn’t you hear me the first time? Not too bright, are you, mate?

Then, waxing philosophical, he might continue:

“The currency of our lives is what we want it to be, and what we make it, individually, and collectively. Life is meaningful in God’s absence (and especially so in that case!) because we have resources like time and energy to invest, and life is the means of investing it. We have ambitions, emotions, goals and instincts we are born with, and which we develop as part of our nature. We are social species, and together, these produce all the real, practical meaning that is to be had.”
Theists, do you suppose money, currency not backed by anything ultimate, has value?
First, I don’t think it’s true that money is not backed by anything ultimate (you talk rather naively, as if you have never heard of the relation of intermediate to final ends as it is explained, for example, in the Nicomachen Ethics), but if it were not, it would be valueless.
 
So all values are a matter of taste and opinion?
If you believe values are a matter of taste you must value your belief. If you thought your belief were valueless you would discard it…
So your life is valuable only if you think it is? It is impossible for you to be mistaken about its value?
Yes and yes.

In that case you are contradicting yourself >>>
Our judgments do not have to be infallible. We may make mistakes.
So it** is** possible to be mistaken about the value of life…
The answer is either yes or no.
True, but to choose needs time to contemplate. I don’t have it right now.

So perhaps not all human behaviour is a response to something?
The value system each of us has is purely subjective.
Are all value systems equally valuable?!
So rationality depends entirely on what you believe?
We all believe that our thought process is rational.

What does being reasonable depend upon?
The adjective “rational” and “irrational” cannot be applied to natural processes.
Then theism is more rational than the belief that rationality is produced by non-rational processes!
Don’t you think and behave as if life is purposeful?
Yes, but only in the sense that I create my own purposes.

Don’t they depend on the type of person you are?
quote Isn’t a lump of money valuable because it serves a purpose? (2) Is it reasonable to depend on money. (2) It depends on your value system. A fakir in India would not value money, because his value system is different. Regardless if we consider his attitude rational or not, it is his value system. (3) A simple, biological reason: we are both individuals and social beings.
We value the company of others, we are dependent on others, just as they are dependent on us. This natural fact is a good foundation to value other human beings - even if they just a bag of chemicals.

So the value of human beings is based on a fact, not an opinion! Our value as individuals is not a matter of taste but based to a large extent on our interdependence. A fakir’s values are mot a matter of taste but based on his purpose of advancing spiritually without being distracted by material possessions.
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So the value of human beings is based on a fact, not an opinion! Our value as individuals is not a matter of taste but based to a large extent on our interdependence. A fakir’s values are mot a matter of taste but based on his purpose of advancing spiritually without being distracted by material possessions.
Let’s just stick to the important part. The fakir’s value system is based upon what he considers important - which is a matter of taste. But even a fakir depends on other people, if for nothing else than the small handouts which enable him to keep on living. They do not starve themselves to death, they need some very minimal sustenance. Of course it is a biological fact that one needs some material to maintain one’s life.

The central question was, (and we keep on deviating into irrelevancies due to your questions) whether one can value another humanly bag of chemicals, if one does not believe in some supreme being. It is obvious that the answer is: yes.
 
No response!
So your life is valuable only if you think it is? It is impossible for you to be mistaken about its value?

Yes and yes.
In that case you are contradicting yourself >>>

Our judgments do not have to be infallible. We may make mistakes.

No response!
The value system each of us has is purely subjective.
Is our power of reason valueless if we think it is valueless?

No response!
The adjective “rational” and “irrational” cannot be applied to natural processes.
Theism is more rational than the belief that rationality is produced by non-rational processes!

No response!
Don’t you think and behave as if life is purposeful?

Yes, but only in the sense that I create my own purposes.
Are all your purposes arbitrary? Don’t some of them depend on the type of person you are?

No response!
We value the company of others, we are dependent on others, just as they are dependent on us. This natural fact is a good foundation to value other human beings - even if they just a bag of chemicals.
So the value of human beings is based on a fact, not an opinion! Our value as individuals is partly the result of our interdependence as social beings.

No response!
The fakir’s value system is based upon what he considers important - which is a matter of taste. But even a fakir depends on other people, if for nothing else than the small handouts which enable him to keep on living. They do not starve themselves to death, they need some very minimal sustenance. Of course it is a biological fact that one needs some material to maintain one’s life.
In other words his values do not depend entirely on what he considers important but also on his physical needs. Thank you for confirming that values are objective as well as subjective!
The central question was… whether one can value another humanly bag of chemicals, if one does not believe in some supreme being. It is obvious that the answer is: yes.
  1. One can choose to value anything - even if it is valueless and purposeless!
  2. As you agreed, we are not morally infallible and we can make mistakes about what is valuable.
  3. A “human bag of chemicals” is not purposeless because “it” is more than a bag of chemicals. We are purposeful beings - as you have also agreed - because we act according to our needs.
  4. Our basic purpose is to survive and even if life ceases to appeal to us we don’t cease to have a purpose: then our purpose is to stop living. We either value life or we value escaping from life!
  5. It is impossible for a reasonable person to live without any purpose or values. Those who lack purpose altogether lack intelligence.
  6. Materialists are inconsistent because they believe the universe is purposeless and valueless even though it sustains persons who are purposeful and valuable.
  7. Consistent atheists like Camus and Sartre recognised the absurdity of life, i.e. the absurdity of life in an absurd universe - a life which occurs for no reason and leads to nothing. Yet they too were inconsistent and arbitrary in their decision to become humanists. They overlooked the fact that - according to them - humanity is a purposeless phenomenon and everything occurs in the meaningless context of a mindless system…
  8. Money has a value because it was created for a purpose. We have value because we too are created for a purpose.
  9. It does not make sense to say purposes exist accidentally. They refer to the future whereas physical events are limited to the present.
  10. Inanimate molecules by themselves are purposeless and valueless. They have no raison d’etre. Only when they are transformed into living cells do they become purposeful and valuable. They have an urge to survive but their urge is not the result of their complexity.
  11. Increased complexity alone does not explain anything. Nor is increased complexity an accident.
  12. There has to be a reason for increased complexity which entails organization and purpose. And that reason is a Rational Mind…
 
In a different context, imagine telling your neighbor:

That negro is a human being, with real value, just like you! Why would you suppose you can own another human being? The real value and the intrinsic meaning of being a human being precludes your owning him.

He’d look at you like you are crazy:

Meaning and value are social constructs. Value is as valuation does, like I always say. I own this slave. There’s value for you, mate!

Then imagine you reply:

But what about game theory? Don’t you know you’re being dumb? This is really a sub-optimal social arrangement.

He’d again look at you like you are crazy:

Didn’t you hear me the first time? Not too bright, are you, mate?

Then, waxing philosophical, he might continue:

“The currency of our lives is what we want it to be, and what we make it, individually, and collectively. Life is meaningful in God’s absence (and especially so in that case!) because we have resources like time and energy to invest, and life is the means of investing it. We have ambitions, emotions, goals and instincts we are born with, and which we develop as part of our nature. We are social species, and together, these produce all the real, practical meaning that is to be had.”
OK, I’ve imagined your scenarios there, and can’t but think the historical resonance of, say, slavery supports my thesis here. Valuation is valuation does, and while I value my life and also value the benefits of social reciprocity (I treat others as I want to be treated), that’s my valuation. Every human has value because, in my view, they are all me, and have the same resources I value – reason, time to invest, energy, emotions, aspirations, creative talents, etc.

But the crucial point is that is my model of valuation. A slave owner who doesn’t value those things and values economic advantages (or maybe just the ability to dominate and control other human beings) won’t endorse my model.

There’s no “intrinsic” value to point to as some cosmic or religious currency. It’s not even a coherent concept; what would really be meant by this is "God values human dignity, and God is my authority so therefore I value human dignity, which is a subjective position on both God’s parts and mine, which, again, proves my point – valuation is subjective, and valuation is as valuation does.

So the fact that slave owners are a part of history is empirical evidence for the idea in this thread. It’s not a value assignment I endorse or would tolerate, but that’s the whole point – it’s not my valuation, but his, his assignment of priorities in value. And when we look at what changes the situation, we see a realignment of values in the people; some slave owners I guess are/were persuaded to a more humane and enlightened set of values, but others simply had to be forcibly overruled and constrained in their practices by law and social arrangements. These forces coalesce around the minds in the community that collectively value human dignity and liberty.

Humans are now what they were 2,000 years ago, but our valuation has changed a bit, and the currency has been changed, in at least a good many places in the world where humans are valued as the basic anchors of liberty and dignity and self-determination.

“Intrinsic” value doesn’t get off the ground, for just the reasons contained in your scenario; the slave owner says “Get lost, I know nothing of this ‘intrinsic’ worth, and behold the power of my whips and chains”. It’s only by convincing him to embrace a different set of values, or by convincing the powers that be to adopt values that will prevent his continued ownership and abuse of slaves that the slave is actually, practically valued, unchained, unowned.
First, I don’t think it’s true that money is not backed by anything ultimate (you talk rather naively, as if you have never heard of the relation of intermediate to final ends as it is explained, for example, in the Nicomachen Ethics), but if it were not, it would be valueless.
If you don’t think that, then what is the ultimate backing for the value of money?

-TS
 
  1. One can choose to value anything - even if it is valueless and purposeless!
You’re not even being definitionally consistent, here. If one values some thing, even it was otherwise unvalued, it becomes valued as soon as one chooses to value it, by definition!

-TS
 
You’re not even being definitionally consistent, here. If one values some thing, even it was otherwise unvalued, it becomes valued as soon as one chooses to value it, by definition!
Your criticism is based on your assumption that values are entirely subjective. My point is that some things - like life - are valuable even if their value is not recognised.

There are four basic possibilities:
  1. A thing is objectively valuable (OV) but its value is not recognised = ignorance
  2. A thing is objectively valuable (OV) and its value is recognised (SV) = appreciation.
  3. A thing is objectively valueless but value is conferred on it arbitrarily (SV) = fantasy
  4. A thing is objectively valueless and value is not conferred on it = insight
If you don’t value your power of reason you are certainly ignorant! To value reason is to be realistic because without it you cannot even know what value is. It is valuable whether we recognise the fact or not. 🙂
 
Your criticism is based on your assumption that values are entirely subjective. My point is that some things - like life - are valuable even if their value is not recognised.

There are four basic possibilities:
  1. A thing is objectively valuable (OV) but its value is not recognised = ignorance
  2. A thing is objectively valuable (OV) and its value is recognised (SV) = appreciation.
  3. A thing is objectively valueless but value is conferred on it arbitrarily (SV) = fantasy
  4. A thing is objectively valueless and value is not conferred on it = insight
This is a good example of “not even wrong”. 3 and 4 are as incoherent as 1 and 2, because “objectively valueless” is just as incoherent ans “objectively valuable”. Value is necessarily subjective – it’s an activity of subjects! Even on Catholicism, the value of human life is perfectly subjective; any value assigned to human life by God is just that – assigned. It doesn’t obtain independent of will or mind, which is the necessary condition for any “objective value”. It is assigned, subjectively by God.

It’s as incoherent on your views as it is on mine, you are just (and this is common so take heart) bewitched by the lazy language and thinking of Catholic apologetics. You use “objective” where you actually, demonstrably mean “subjective”.

Here’s another try to get through, using a nearby word. Do you believe in something being an “objective favorite”? If that seems problematic, and it should, then I think can grab a handle-hold on the idea that will show the folly of your usage above. “Favorite” by definition is subjective, it’s the allocation of favor by a subject, an activity of the self. It can’t obtain objectively, it’s an incoherent term. Where “favorites” are chosen, you necessarily have subjectivity.
If you don’t value your power of reason you are certainly ignorant! To value reason is to be realistic because without it you cannot even know what value is. It is valuable whether we recognise the fact or not. 🙂
Even if I don’t recognized it, and human life is valued by God, it’s still just as subjective as can be, it’s just the will/mind of God doing the choosing, God’s autonomy/sovereignty at work rather than mine. It’s perfectly non-objective.

The basic problem running through your arguments here is that you are confused, thoroughly, on the subjective/objective distinction. Where you have value, you necessarily have a subject allocating priority or importance. “Objective value” has no meaning or coherence at all. Value is only meaningful in relation to a subject.

This is why the money analogy works so well, here. You can understand, easily, I think, the subjective nature of valuation of money. And there you have all you need conceptually to see the errors in what you said above. Forget whether God exists or what’s real or not and all that for now, just consider that your thoughts are not coherent, not internally consistent. They aren’t sufficiently well formed to be right or wrong.

-TS
 
So imagine TS telling his neighbor:

That negro is a human being, with real value, just like you! Why would you suppose you can own another human being? The real value and the intrinsic meaning of being a human being precludes your owning him.

He’d look at TS like he was crazy:

Meaning and value are social constructs. Value is as valuation does, like I always say. I own this slave. There’s value for you, mate!

TS replies:

Of yeah, I forgot. My model of valuation is mine and yours is yours and both are completely arational. So I’d like to convince you to lay down your whips and chains…

Then, waxing philosophical, TS might continue:

“The currency of our lives is what we want it to be, and what we make it, individually, and collectively. Life is meaningful in God’s absence (and especially so in that case!) because we have resources like time and energy to invest, and life is the means of investing it. We have ambitions, emotions, goals and instincts we are born with, and which we develop as part of our nature. We are social species, and together, these produce all the real, practical meaning that is to be had.”

To which the slave owner might reply:

*Uh… right. The only thing I’m convinced of is that you have nothing rational to say that could convince me that **my *model of valuation is to be rejected in favor of yours. So have a nice day, mate!
 
OK, I’ve imagined your scenarios there, and can’t but think the historical resonance of, say, slavery supports my thesis here. Valuation is valuation does, and while I value my life and also value the benefits of social reciprocity (I treat others as I want to be treated), that’s my valuation. Every human has value because, in my view, they are all me, and have the same resources I value – reason, time to invest, energy, emotions, aspirations, creative talents, etc.

But the crucial point is that is my model of valuation. A slave owner who doesn’t value those things and values economic advantages (or maybe just the ability to dominate and control other human beings) won’t endorse my model.

There’s no “intrinsic” value to point to as some cosmic or religious currency. It’s not even a coherent concept; what would really be meant by this is "God values human dignity, and God is my authority so therefore I value human dignity, which is a subjective position on both God’s parts and mine, which, again, proves my point – valuation is subjective, and valuation is as valuation does.
This is an embarrassingly naive view. Do you really think that you have proven that a valuation is merely subjective by pointing out that it is subjectively apprehended? “If an object is apprehended by a subject, then that object is merely subjective” is the nonsense non sequitur you ground your thinking in here, isn’t it? And what do you think ‘objective’ means? Not apprehended by any subject? That’s nonsense, bud.
If you don’t think that, then what is the ultimate backing for the value of money?
Think something like eudaimonia. Maybe you should read some Nicomachean Ethics, then you would at least have a clue about the argument that you actually need to defeat, rather than proceeding in your current mode of ignoratio elenchi.
 
So imagine TS telling his neighbor:

That negro is a human being, with real value, just like you! Why would you suppose you can own another human being? The real value and the intrinsic meaning of being a human being precludes your owning him.

He’d look at TS like he was crazy:

Meaning and value are social constructs. Value is as valuation does, like I always say. I own this slave. There’s value for you, mate!

TS replies:

Of yeah, I forgot. My model of valuation is mine and yours is yours and both are completely arational. So I’d like to convince you to lay down your whips and chains…

Then, waxing philosophical, TS might continue:

“The currency of our lives is what we want it to be, and what we make it, individually, and collectively. Life is meaningful in God’s absence (and especially so in that case!) because we have resources like time and energy to invest, and life is the means of investing it. We have ambitions, emotions, goals and instincts we are born with, and which we develop as part of our nature. We are social species, and together, these produce all the real, practical meaning that is to be had.”

To which the slave owner might reply:

*Uh… right. The only thing I’m convinced of is that you have nothing rational to say that could convince me that **my ***model of valuation is to be rejected in favor of yours. So have a nice day, mate!
And then they might have a brutal civil war in order to resolve their arational dispute in a manner consistent with their claim that they are purely arationally opposed to each other (although they of course have not even begun to rule out the obvious other possibility, namely that they are both being irrational).
 
This is an embarrassingly naive view. Do you really think that you have proven that a valuation is merely subjective by pointing out that it is subjectively apprehended? “If an object is apprehended by a subject, then that object is merely subjective” is the nonsense non sequitur you ground your thinking in here, isn’t it? And what do you think ‘objective’ means? Not apprehended by any subject? That’s nonsense, bud.
Apprehension or observation don’t matter. If something obtains objectively, it obtains independently of mind or will. The reality exists without any dependency on a subject, on the will, choice or mind of anything.

When a subject observes an object, and supposes it obtains objectively (i.e. reality is real), it’s not the observation of the object that gives it reality. The subject is incidental, irrelevant. It is what it is whether a mind wills it, wishes it, wants it, observes it, understands it, likes it, hates it or wants to date it or not. All of that has perfectly no bearing on the object if, the object is objectively real.

I’ve not said anywhere that the object itself is subjective. If reality is reality, and it is a real object, the subject doesn’t matter to the reality of the object. The choices a mind or will makes ABOUT an object are necessarily subjective, though. Valuation is an volitional activity of the subject. The valuation of the object is subjective, then, even as the reality of object is objective. The valuation is dependent on the mind/will of the subject (even if its God), and the reality of the object does NOT depend on any mind or will if its reality is objective.
Think something like eudaimonia. Maybe you should read some Nicomachean Ethics, then you would at least have a clue about the argument that you actually need to defeat, rather than proceeding in your current mode of ignoratio elenchi.
See, it’s good to have read all that, but embracing that in a way where you would recommend that here is precisely how one gets so thoroughly confused about subject-object relationships. It’s not that I’m not aware of the concept of, say “human flourishing” as something intrinsic or fundamental from Aristotle; the whole point of this thread is to demonstrate that the concept is itself incoherent, and at odds, demonstrably with the way humans actually assign and process meaning and value.

-TS
 
Even on Catholicism, the value of human life is perfectly subjective; any value assigned to human life by God is just that – assigned. It doesn’t obtain independent of will or mind, which is the necessary condition for any “objective value”. It is assigned, subjectively by God.
Since God’s nature is existence, he necessarily grounds all being whatsoever. Thus what he wills, and what he knows, obtains objectively, since they depend on his very essence to exist. If God wills human life to be meaningful, then, human life is meaningful. Now, this is “subjective” in the sense of being known by a knower and willed by a willer, but it is not “subjective” in the sense of being determined by what is known, or being determined *by *what is willed.

This is “assigned” by God, but it is not “just assigned.” The “just” only comes in when you try to claim the same relating to humans. This is because humans are subjects which do not determine their objects by their knowledge. The human will and mind are rather determined by these things, instead of determining them, as is the case with God.

But anyway, this is all beside the point, i.e. a red herring. What is at question is how it is possible for atheism to ground meaning objectively. All other worldviews could be terribly wrong (Catholicism worst of all), and that wouldn’t mean atheism was therefore right.
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touchstone:
It’s as incoherent on your views as it is on mine
So you admit your view is incoherent? Again, it makes no difference how incoherent the other view is (or how incoherent you think it is). Two incoherent views don’t make them both true, and if one incoherent view is false, it does not follow that another is therefore true. Thus this point is irrelevant; i.e. another red herring.
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touchstone:
you are just (and this is common so take heart) bewitched by the lazy language and thinking of Catholic apologetics.
This is sophist nonsense. It is only on the assumption that language is meaningful and that it can definitely grasp some element of common reality which constitutes certainknowledge that communication is even possible.

If you don’t think this is so then nothing you say can possibly be meaningful, since you would be talking about something which you have no knowledge of. If nothing can be certainly defined, then we will go on ad infinitum defining our terms, since each term must rely on another term for its meaning. Further, if you don’t mean something definite when you speak, then what can you mean? At some point in your own language you must admit that you are actually expressing a truth.

To state positively that “we are bewitched by language” amounts to the same irrationality as the positive statement “we are all liars.” If it is true, it therefore must be false.

Perhaps we should all just wait until Touchstone gives us a sentence he thinks is actually true? (Further, am I the only one who finds it odd that the person espousing such views has the avatar “Touchstone” in the first place? One cannot ground certainty or language by destroying certainty or language.)
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touchstone:
Where “favorites” are chosen, you necessarily have subjectivity.
Your examples are so vague (e.g. the “telic impulses”) that they hardly warrant consideration, and they certainly don’t justify a rebuttal (although they are put forward as such). What do you mean by “favorites”? Do you mean something desired by the natural senses (e.g. food, sex, etc)? Do you mean something desired by the intellect (e.g. happiness, truth, beauty as such)?
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touchstone:
Even if I don’t recognized it, and human life is valued by God, it’s still just as subjective as can be, it’s just the will/mind of God doing the choosing, God’s autonomy/sovereignty at work rather than mine. It’s perfectly non-objective.
God is what gives objectivity to things, since his essence is existence. Nothing could obtain, were God not to will it so, since “to obtain” is convertible with “to exist,” and God gives existence to all that is.

Since there is no “subject” indepedent of the necessary, ever present and infinitely exhaustive being of God, there is no dichotomy between subject and object that can be appealed to. There is no state of existence one can set up against what God wills to exist, which would be the “subjective side,” since such a thing cannot exist.

But again, this is a red herring on your part.
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touchstone:
The basic problem running through your arguments here is that you are confused, thoroughly, on the subjective/objective distinction.
You’ve yet to clarify your position on this distinction, which I put forward to you in posts 28 and 29 I believe.
 
And then they might have a brutal civil war in order to resolve their arational dispute in a manner consistent with their claim that they are purely arationally opposed to each other (although they of course have not even begun to rule out the obvious other possibility, namely that they are both being irrational).
Do you suppose pointing to “intrinsic value” or “objective value”, meaningless, incoherent concepts, literally as self-contradictory as “circular squares” is the “rational” choice?

Really?

I don’t support the notion that such a conflict, or the values driving it, more precisely, are arational in some essential sense. A disposition for, or against slavery is a value commitment, and hence a subjective one, but the reasoning that informs and commends those value choices can be more or less rational, depending on the thinker. One can come to different value judgments (or the same ones) based on different levels of rigour and discipline in reasoning. That doesn’t mean the value judgment itself is rational (it may be, subjective does not negate rational!), but we can’t class value judgments up front as “arational”, if we are considering what contributed to those judgments.

-TS
 
This is an embarrassingly naive view. Do you really think that you have proven that a valuation is merely subjective by pointing out that it is subjectively apprehended? “If an object is apprehended by a subject, then that object is merely subjective” is the nonsense non sequitur you ground your thinking in here, isn’t it? And what do you think ‘objective’ means? Not apprehended by any subject? That’s nonsense, bud.
This was at root in his misconception in the “sweetness” thread, and is at root here. For what it’s worth, I think this “heartbeat” of a thought underlies a great deal of atheistic thinking. It’s comforting that I’m not the only one to recognize this misapprehension on Touchstone (as well as others’) part.
 
This is one of those conversations that use big words and quickly drifts off into a philosophy I don’t understand.

I have no idea what points either of you are making 😊 🤷
 
Since God’s nature is existence, he necessarily grounds all being whatsoever. Thus what he wills, and what he knows, obtains objectively, since they depend on his very essence to exist. If God wills human life to be meaningful, then, human life is meaningful. Now, this is “subjective” in the sense of being known by a knower and willed by a willer, but it is not “subjective” in the sense of being determined by what is known, or being determined *by *what is willed.
That is the pinnacle of subjectivity. It couldn’t be more purely subjective than God’s relationship to reality, on Catholicism. You’ve just admitted as much, right here. Reality is what it is by the will of God. All of it, every little last nuance of it, exist as the result of God’s will. It’s the theoretical maximum subjectivity you are describing.

Objectivity doesn’t obtain by the basis of knowing. That’s the fundamental thing it rejects – any dependency on a subject (knower or willer) at all.
[qutoe]
This is “assigned” by God, but it is not “just assigned.” The “just” only comes in when you try to claim the same relating to humans. This is because humans are subjects which do not determine their objects by their knowledge. The human will and mind are rather determined by these things, instead of determining them, as is the case with God.
There’s nothing necessary about just. It works perfectly well without it. “Assigned by God” establishes the subjectivity of that relationship as perfectly as can be. Being human or God, or alien or duck makes no difference whatsoever. If X is objectively real, it is not dependent on any mind or will or knower whatsoever. Full stop.
But anyway, this is all beside the point, i.e. a red herring. What is at question is how it is possible for atheism to ground meaning objectively. All other worldviews could be terribly wrong (Catholicism worst of all), and that wouldn’t mean atheism was therefore right.
Well the import of my thread here was to show the incoherence of the theist notion of “objective value” or “intrinsic meaning”. That is really the worthwhile insight available here, made available by means of the money analogy, which I think is quite pedagogically useful in showing this. People understand that money does not have “intrinsic worth”. It has value by convention, agreement, subjective choices and priorities, individually and collectively.
So you admit your view is incoherent?
No, I meant that “objective value” is incoherent, no matter if you are talking from a Catholic perspective or an atheist perspective. It’s the same as supposing that “square circles” obtain, and is as broken from a Catholic or atheist perspective as “square circle” is.
Again, it makes no difference how incoherent the other view is (or how incoherent you think it is).
I’m not aware of any charges here that subjective valuation as a concept is incoherent. Is that your claim? That’s why I invoked the example of the way we value money and trasact with it. It’s both demonstrably subjective and demonstrably practical, effectual as “object of valuation”. We transact with it!
Two incoherent views don’t make them both true, and if one incoherent view is false, it does not follow that another is therefore true. Thus this point is irrelevant; i.e. another red herring.
You must be thinking I though my own views were incoherent. I don’t. I was saying that “objective value” is a “square circle” for the Catholic and atheist alike.
This is sophist nonsense. It is only on the assumption that language is meaningful and that it can definitely grasp some element of common reality which constitutes certainknowledge that communication is even possible.
Sure. “Bewitched by language” does not mean language is not meaningful, nor self-defeating, nor impractical. It is useful, effective, and practical. But it’s power in those respects are seductive, and tempt us to ascribe meaning and coherence and utility where none obtain. It’s very effectiveness is the reason it’s so easy to BS oneself and others, by falling for the “appearance of meaning and coherence”.

-TS
 
The Exodus:
If you don’t think this is so then nothing you say can possibly be meaningful, since you would be talking about something which you have no knowledge of. If nothing can be certainly defined, then we will go on ad infinitum defining our terms, since each term must rely on another term for its meaning. Further, if you don’t mean something definite when you speak, then what can you mean? At some point in your own language you must admit that you are actually expressing a truth.
OK, you’re jumping the gun, again, here. Bewitched by language doesn’t mean from me, nor Wittgenstein, what you are going for here. Language is effective, meaningful, practical. It’s also problematic for just those reasons – it’s easy to get confused in thinking language being used is effective when it’s not. Being disciplined in examining the language provides help and remedies from this. But it’s a risk. And theology revels in this kind of lazy, casual and incoherent language.
To state positively that “we are bewitched by language” amounts to the same irrationality as the positive statement “we are all liars.” If it is true, it therefore must be false.
Ugh. See above.
Perhaps we should all just wait until Touchstone gives us a sentence he thinks is actually true? (Further, am I the only one who finds it odd that the person espousing such views has the avatar “Touchstone” in the first place? One cannot ground certainty or language by destroying certainty or language.)
Double Ugh. You launched into the wrong sermon, here. You are arguing against ideas I haven’t offered and that I do not endorse.
Your examples are so vague (e.g. the “telic impulses”) that they hardly warrant consideration, and they certainly don’t justify a rebuttal (although they are put forward as such).
It’s not vague – we humans have a psychological disposition toward intentionality – see a simple search, here, for more specifics. We have survived and thrived evolutionarily because we are acutely oriented toward designs, plans, goals. This is the cognitively lens through which we view the world around us.
What do you mean by “favorites”? Do you mean something desired by the natural senses (e.g. food, sex, etc)? Do you mean something desired by the intellect (e.g. happiness, truth, beauty as such)?
I think either work. As long as the mind or will is effective in making the choice, it holds.
God is what gives objectivity to things, since his essence is existence. Nothing could obtain, were God not to will it so, since “obtain” is convertible with “existing,” and God gives existence to all that is.
This would only hold if God was not a will, a mind, a personality. If we stipulate, arguendo, that some Stephen Hawking like “metaphysic physics” obtains, and just is, as a brute fact, the way it is, and gives to universes as it does, or whatever, then that works as an objective context. But insofar as God can choose, assign, will, do or not do, in relation to the nature of reality, our reality (on that view) is maximally subjective.

That’s why it’s such a kick to hear William Lane Craig argue for the “objective morality” on his theism. It’s “right” because God said so, or willed it thus, or however you want to express his adoption, his personal nature.
Since there is no “subject” indepedent of the necessary, ever present and infinitely exhaustive being of God, there is no dichotomy between subject and object that can be appealed to. There is no state of existence one can set up against what God wills to exist, which would be the “subjective side,” since such a thing cannot exist.
Sure there is. If atheism obtains, and reality is a brute fact of impersonal physics, wholly independent of any mind or will in being what it is, our universe is objectively real. QED. On materialism, the universe is objectively real. On theism, or Catholicism, at least, it can’t be.
But again, this is a red herring on your part.
Red herring? This is a fundamental distinction that is systematically overlooked/ignored/denied by theists, and which undercuts all of its apologetics toward “intrinsic value” and “objective meaning”. It’s like you are telling me that your reliance on the reality of “square circles” is a distraction for me to point out.
You’ve yet to clarify your position on this distinction, which I put forward to you in posts 28 and 29 I believe.
OK, I’ll get back there and respond to those. I don’t recall them, but I expect my response will be very much the ideas in this post.

-TS
 
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