TheGreatEscape said:
aggrad08,
I'll respond to the rest of what you are arguing later.
I'm just trying to understand from where your authority of rationalism is.
I realized that you are using analytic philosophy.
Would you agree with this?
(Objectively true does not mean "analytically true": it does not mean: truth that follows simply from the application of the principle of non-contradiction. It does not mean "necessarily true", "absolutely true."
Rather, what it means is: true of that which exists independent from the subject who perceives or cognizes. Object and subject are correlative terms: it only makes sense to speak of objective truth if truth and knowledge are understood as a relation of subject and object. The concept of objective truth thus implies a turn towards subjectivism. Or indeed, what is objectively true is objectively true for the subject.
Is "there is objective truth" objectively true? Clearly not, since it is impossible for the relation between subject and object to itself become objectively knowable (true for) the subject. (This is why aesthetic judgment, for Kant, is the only thing that can really justify the hope that a rich and substantive objective knowledge of the world is possible)
Hence absolute idealism. Hence Hegel. The meaning of truth isn't "objective truth" (In the parlance of the Phenomenology of Spirit, consciousness), nor "subjective truth." Truth truths (I'll put it this way just to annoy analytic philosophers a bit) as the identity of the subject and object. For Hegel, moreover, this identity expresses itself through concepts, which is the native element of thought.
This is not to say that Hegel is right that he has the last word. But I would argue that if analytic philosophers speak of "objective truth," and conflate it with analytic truth or necessary truth or with the truth of mathematics they don't really know what they are talking about. They are not really post-Kantian and post-Idealist philosophers, taking their departure from Frege's critique of psychologism, but neo-Kantians. If they further claim that "objective truth" cannot be "objectively true," then they are rigorous disciples of Kant. They are willing to accept an ultimately opacity to philosophy. If they claim that "there is objective truth" can be "objectively true", however, they are deeply confused.)
Anonymous source
Dude, as a starting point, it's one thing to quote someone else in brief as a reference or to make a point. It's another to copy and paste another person's arguments wholesale.
The source isn't anonymous. It's a cut and paste of a Quora post written by Anothony Curtis Adler.
Analytic Philosophy: Is the statement, 'there is objective truth' objectively true? - QuoraArgue in your own words using your own understanding. Some of the other responses in there aren't too far from my own thoughts.
I'm not going to waste too much time on this side show, as it truly has nothing to do with the thread, feel free to start another after actually addressing your fundamental problem of not being able to demonstrate objective morals.
In short I think you are asking a more complex question than you may realize and it gets needlessly nitpicky and into the limitations of human language and understanding and how our definitions work and the limitations of epistemology
Suffice to say I believe there are things about our universe which can be known or are true and are not dependent on our opinions, subjective values or desires that can be empirically and logically justified.
If you are curious about various theories of truth Standford does a great job with various philosophical theories-much better than a random Quora post
Truth (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)In general I find arguments of various forms of "you must believe in god to believe in:" followed by logic, reason, evidence, anything but solipsism extremely poorly argued. Again, feel free to start another thread.