My statement may have been too strong, but if you refer to philosophical publications which actually defend ethical objectivism, you would realize that what actual objectivists define objectivism far differently than the definition you quote.Boyish-Tigerlilly wrote:This isn't from my book. I cut and pasted this from a LECTURE from a university webpage BY a professor of Ethics, so I highly doubt it's "ass-backwards," at least in the sense that it provides basic information. I don't agree with the Objective = "teh ueber," but the basic info is very reliable. THIS is what objectivism is, and my book agrees.
What you describe is called realism, not objectivism. Realism implies objectivism, but the converse is not the case. It's like defining elephants as a grey creatures with such-and-such properties, and completely ignoring that some elephants are white.Boyish-Tigerlilly wrote:What htey mean by spirit realm is either a "real of perfect moral forms" or the basic universe. Peolple discover these moral principles that exist independently of humanity. That's what ethicists agree is objectivism.
Ethical objectivists are concerned about the nature of valid moral principles, i.e., those that are proper guides to action, whereas the definition you quoted commits to Truth of its moral principles, which is something substantially more. It is exactly this kind of situation that is the reason why philosophers have differentiated objectivism from realism.
No, they do not. As I've said, actual essays by philosophers defending objectivism do not claim any such thing, nor is a commitment to 'Forms' implied in any way. Proponents of this view are, for example, Louis Pojman and R.M. Hare.Boyish-Tigerlilly wrote:I agree that's all they should do, but that isn't all they do do as I have just shown. They say it comes either from some type of Form OR discovered from the universe. It is explicitly NOT created by humans.
An oversimplification of the objectivist position. My argument proves that even if morality is a function of human interests (a view I agree with, actually), it does not invalidate objectivism. In fact, if there are sufficiently basic interests that are part of a common human nature, this view actually requires objectivism. The key distinction is that validity only requires results of adherence to those principles, whereas requring objective truth is metaphysical realist baloney.Boyish-Tigerlilly wrote:Well. I have heard of meta-ethics, and it's the study of not what ought to be, but where morals come from. Are they human creations or are they external to humans. They say they are external to humans and discovered.
Hum. The entry for moral relativism in the [url=http://plato.stanford.edu]Stanford EncyBoyish-Tigerlilly wrote:I highly doubt the definition in a majority of sources I have is wrong, and I also doubt that ethical philosophers fail to understand what Ethics is.
Since most use the same definition, or a close varient, I have no option but to trust it.