K,Kshartle wrote:Notice how you just proved my point. You are closed minded about it. You provide no evidence or support for your belief but it prevents you from hearing my argument correctly.moda0306 wrote:Let's stick with trying to decide whether self-ownership and morally valid property ownership are provable moral imperatives.Kshartle wrote: PS.....this is the argument I have made. The posters who disagree with me do not dispute the logic or the substance of my argument. They just keep saying morality is subjective and there is no certainty so anyone claiming this must be wrong.
Not that PS or I think they aren't part of a discussion of morality, but we are stating that it can't be PROVEN to be the only moral measuring stick.
You are certain it can't be proven AS YOU JUST SAID. Therefore, anything I say is automatically false because it cannot be correct. You do not believe it's possible for me to be correct so you automatically reject my argument without listening to it. Your belief is so cemented in that you can't see how your argument is circular.
If you even said "maybe there is a slim chance that you could possibly be right, even though I highly doubt it" that would demonstrate the bare minimum of an open mind neccessary to have a real discussion.
You seem to have some real trouble understanding how logical assertions work, and you don't seem to be very open-minded about learning.
If you are making a deductive (an argument producing a "necessarily true" conclusion) argument, and I am "trying" to challenge you on the fact that it is deductive, I have to either 1) show how your premises are not NECESSARILY true (I don't have to prove them false), or 2) show how your conclusion does not NECESSARILY follow your premises (I don't have to prove that the opposite follows, or prove the Conclusion false).
Do you understand this? Do you agree with it?
If you think you've "proven" something, and I think you haven't, my job is to attack your premises/conclusion on the basis of 1) truth, and 2) connectivity. That's what I've been doing, as best I can, in the absence of you showing us how all your logic connects.
I'm stating that you haven't proven that absolute right or wrong exist and what they are. Perhaps there's a perfect argument out there for morality, but you certainly haven't found it, as (what appear to be) your premises aren't necessarily true, and your conclusion does not necessarily follow said premises.Kshartle wrote:So you are disagreeing with your previous stance (that you have been holding in all of these discussions) that it's impossible for absolute right and wrong to exist and that it's impossible to prove it?moda0306 wrote:K,Your minds are already closed to the possibility that there is an absolute right and wrong.
I'm not closed-minded to anything that can be proven with logic. I simply don't think you have done a good job proving it.
This would be huge. Have you changed your mind on this or are you just playing devil's advocate?
Why won't you use a deductive logic format to illustrate your "argument?" I really, really, really think that you're completely missing some logical/philosophical tools in your tool belt that would either aid you in making your argument better, or understand why your argument is invalid/unsound or both.

