J
John21652
Guest
It’s no good having a “your definition” or “my definition” of what “objective” means. We need to qualify our terms or we can’t have a meaningful discussion.john: no worries. i agree up until the “therefore, objectively” part. i agree to the existence of common, natural inclinations (which you described), but the fulfillment of these inclinations isnt an objective pursuit in my view, because my definition of objective requires for there to be no bias, prejudice, or personal feelings involved.
For something to be considered as “objective” it must be something that can be discerned as mind independent and universal. In other words, whatever it is that is called objective must be able to be recognised by many minds, or even by all minds and it must be something that is diswcrrnable evrywhere, in different places and at different times. That means that whatever is to be considered as objective must be discernable by everyone and everywhere. That is what I meant when I used the terms universal and mind independent. They are commonly accepted requisites for objectivity. That is how science arrives at objective truths. As you stated, there are no subjective feelings, bias, or predjudice involved in discerning something as being objective.
I never made the statement that it is objectively wrong to chop off your head. What you are getting at is the possibility that it is objectively wrong to kill. It is objectively wrong to kill without due cause, which usually refers to protecting your own life and/or the lives of others. It is not objectively wrong to kill per se. If that were the case, then it would be wrong to defend your own life and to take another’s life if that is what is required. Natural Law allows you to defend your own life and to even kill in self defense. It is this propensity to protect our own lives when threatened which allows us to discern that most people value their own lives.assuming i would die if beheaded, id lose the life im naturally inclined to guard. true. but i do not agree with this statement: “it is objectively wrong to chop off my head.”
We are not talking about the wrongness or otherwise of killing. We are talking about the right to life as an objectively discernable aspect of human existence.the statement is unqualified, categorical. beheading is the right course of action if one means to kill, therefore, i do not view it as wrong in every context. i view its wrongness (unqualified) as relative.
We are not talking about the supposed right to a gay relationship. We are talking about the objectivity of the right to life. You, here, are attempting to compare apples with oranges. Your intial premise was that such rights were an ‘invention’. According to what you have agreed with thus far, you must now agree that there are indeed Natural Law rights which are not merely “invented”. To discern what those Natural Law rights are, we do indeed ‘pretend there is no government’ and we ascertain what is normative about human nature and behaviour. The natural inclination to live a life and to protect that life is an objectively discernable normative aspect of human nature. Take it away, that is, alienate it, and you are dealing with an incomplete and non-normative human nature. Hence the ‘right to life’ as a Natural Law moral right.as far as unalienable… lets pretend there is no government. you have the right to have a gay relationship, and the right to life. you subscribe to unalienable rights; you might say the right to life is unalienable, but the right to gay relationships is not. is there an unalienable right to liberty? How do you decide whats unalienable and what isnt?