Here a scenario for you to consider:
Someone strapped a few bombs to his body, and blew up some people whom he considers his enemies. He also died in the process.
If you
agree with the person, you will consider him a “
morally upright, self-sacrificing hero”.
If you
disagree with the person, you will consider him a “
morally evil, horrible terrorist”.
Conclusion: the application of the adjective “moral” is the result of your subjective assessment of a fact. It has no “objective” meaning. It is just one of the feel-good, but meaningless “filler” words. Think about it.
I haven’t read the other replies yet, which I’m assuming have highlighted the distinction between one’s subjective moral *opinions ***about **objective moral
facts and the reality of those facts themselves (namely, facts pertaining to real actions in the world). I’ll instead go ahead and basically agree with your “
Conclusion: the application of the adjective “moral” is the result of your subjective assessment of a fact. It has no “objective” meaning.”
You’re quite right. We base our moral predications on our individual opinions, on our subjective inner worlds as *we *see them, which we only
suppose to reflect reality – the facts – though w/out shared certainty. When we voice our judgments, we’re professing something subjectively, not objectively accessed. And that makes sense, being that we’re the only ones who *can *see our inner worlds of concepts, propositions, and knowledge.
Man gives meaning to his terms, and moral terms like the ones you mention are not absolute. They’re conventional. If no minds existed, then a leftover sheet of paper that reads, “Murder is wrong,” would be meaningless, for failure to ever again possibly signal the thoughts of an individual’s subjective judgment.
But obviously you’ve given no argument for that last conclusion (“
It is just one of the feel-good, but meaningless “filler” words”). That was rather grossly and illogically smuggled into the discussion. Blatant
non sequitur. My refutation?
I do
mean something when I say, “The killer is morally evil.” Even if you and your friends don’t. And if meaning is subjective, then you’re thus out of bounds when you claim factual knowledge regarding
my subjectively accessed meaning and intent. I guess we’re just speaking different languages.
On that note: You have inexcusably breached the English language’s grammatically institutionalized laws for its man-made semantics of moral pronouncements. You see – I’m a hardcore linguistic prescriptivist, not some willy-nilly, “anarcho-terminological” descriptivist. The many liberties you’ve taken up to this point with ethical words, on this accusation, amount to very egregious attempts at absconding them away from their rightful owners, indeed, from the democratically lain foundation of the public communicative good itself. Your sentence? You must create a *new *word to function as a “feel-good, but meaningless ‘filler’” in specifically ethical propositions. Maybe it’ll catch on and in the future nobody will confuse the folks actually making moral judgments with the folks simply dressing up their gustatory/emotive expressions!