Vraith wrote:Cozarkian wrote: I don't think it is impossible for the universe to have some inherent objective standard of morality despite the difficulty in grasping it.
I'm not prepared to say "impossible."...but I'd say the chances infinitesimal and shrinking all the time.
If it existed, I think we'd have seen some sign of it in math and sciences...even if only indirect.
I think it is something that emerges from/through the interaction of intelligence, instinct, and environment in the pursuit of survival. [so is adaptive and relative, not ideal and objective].
Interesting topic. I'm with Vraith here - conceptually, morality is a human construct, which has evolved alongside societies with a view to serving the ongoing existence of those societies. It therefore cannot be considered objective, but simply supported by consensus. It is indeed both relative and adaptive, since morality changes over time - well, acceptability certainly does and that's tantamount to the selfsame thing.
As to other objective truths, I'm sure they exist at least in the field of science, whether we've perceived them or not. There's an argument that has already been made here that we may be incapable of perceiving pure objective truth by the very way in which our consciousness works. We may well be helplessly subjective, for all our best efforts to the contrary.
Then again, as has also been mentioned, perhaps our attempts to detect and observe ultimate truths alter the nature of what we're trying to observe in the first place.
As to whether you can have a correct point of view or opinion - I'll attempt to deal with the difference in a second - in mundane terms, yes you can on those subjects that do have an objective external existence (presuming one accepts that such subjects do in fact exist outside of anyone's perceiving of them - and I do realise that this is an ask). It's just not proven, which is what makes it a point of view or opinion in the first place. The follow-up question this thread is now on to is "can it actually ever be proven"?
Strictly semantically, a "point of view" is more limited than an opinion. Example - I might wake up one morning to notice what seems to be a small white square with six little black dots on it suspended directly above my face. From my limited point of view at that moment, that's to me is a 2 dimensional thing. Needless to say, if I got up and took another look from a different angle, I might find out that some jokester had carefully suspended an obviously 3 dimensional die from my bedroom ceiling and my opinion on what I was looking at would change, having been informed by an extra point of view or two.
However, people use "point of view" (aka "from where I'm standing") and "opinion" (aka "what I think/believe") interchangeably, which may lead to confusion.