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No. 67
>>61
I believe your position rests on an equivocation between "morality" and "morally right/wrong". The former refers solely to the issue of what is right and what is wrong, to the question of principles concerning the distinction between good and bad behavior. The latter refers to a stance on that issue, to a definite opinion on whether there are such principles and whether they can be justified.
To return to my example: there are Keynesian, monetarist, econometric, public-choice, Marxist, Georgist, Austrian, and mainsteam-neoclassical approaches to economic theory. Does this mean "economics" is meaningless? No, because the word simply refers to the study of economic phenomena. Similarly, the word "morality" (or "ethics", as I would prefer to call it) could be used to refer solely to the issue of what is right and what is wrong, independent of the means by which we answer that question or what our answers are.
To make it clear the way you did:
1) "Morality", "morally good", and "morally wrong" should be seperated conceptually.
2) "Morality" refers solely to the issue of ought and ought-not; there certainly is agreement on this meaning, just like there is agreement on the meaning of "economics".
3) "Morally good" and "morally wrong" refer to an opinion on morality, the same way "good economics" and "bad economics" refer to an opinion on economics. An Objectivist considers rational self-interest morally good and a Keynesian, say, considers Georgism bad economics.
Now, there is an agreement on (2) but obviously NOT a total agreement on what comprises (3) (though most human cultures share prohibitions on murder, rape, incest, cannibalism, theft, etc.). Yet this applies to almost every field of study, particularly the social sciences which studies the same phenomenon, human activity. So I submit that by the logic of your own argument, in addition to considering morality meaningless, we ought also to consider philosophy, political science, history, and even the natural sciences to some extent all meaningless as well.
I don't see any reason to do that because the mere fact that there exists disagreement does not in principle rule out the possibility that that disagreement could be resolved. In the social sciences there is general agreement as to how to go about resolving that disagreement, namely through the scientific method. In moral philosophy, there appears to be such an agreement as well, for example, that your sentences should be grammatical, your conclusions should follow from your premises and that you should attack others' views fairly stated and not strawmen.
Incidentally, I believe your non-cognitivism is undermined by your own argument. Namely, there is not only a divergence of moral theories; that is, theories that "morally good" means such and such -- the divergence includes amoral theories! Namely, theories that "morally good" doesn't mean anything. So if we ought to refuse to entertain moral theories because of divergence, it seems to me your moral skepticism, part and parcel of that divergence for a long time, ought to be discarded as well.
>The failure to breach the is-ought gap derives from the fact that [Rand's] statement goes beyond stating that person ought to do what is necessary to pursue a goal if he wishes to achieve that goal; it is the suggestion that goals necessitate their own resolution.
I don't believe that Rand's ethics demands that goals necessitate their own resolution.
We simply start with the observation that human beings are entities that are engaged in goal-directed action; that is, they seek values. We deduce that their ultimate value must be their life and that the means to such an end is rational self-interest. Then we say that the value that human beings are already committed to commits them further to the value of rational self-interest. It is not a demand that you ought to achieve your goals so much as a recognition that you want to achieve your goals and here's how.
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