To Express Duty or Moral Obligation": of Being
To Express Duty or Moral Obligation": of Being
To Express Duty or Moral Obligation": of Being
How do these considerations, elliptical as some of them are, support a skeptical conclusion about the objective existence of moral facts? The
Sophists, on Nietzsches account, advance two related claims: (1) that every
morality can have the appearance of being dialectically justified, either because its logical
invalidity is not apparent or, more likely in this instance, because its premises, while apparently acceptable, are not true . Yet Nietzsche
goes further when he asserts that the second claimnamely, that all attempts to give reasons for morality are necessarily sophisticalis
established (proved [bewiesen] he says) by the work of the philosophers from Plato through to Kant. But in what sense do the moral
philosophies of Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, Hutcheson, Mill, Kant, and Schopenhauer et al. establish or prove that all attempts to give reasons
for morality are necessarily sophistical? Nietzsches thought must be that all these philosophers
appear to provide
dialectical justifications for moral propositions, but that all these justifications actually fail. But that still does not
answer the question of how the fact of there being all these different moral philosophies proves that they are sophistical,
i.e., that they do not, in fact, justify certain fundamental moral propositions? Heres how the Nietzschean explanation might
go. The existence of incompatible moral philosophies providing dialectical justifications for moral propositions is
best explained as follows: (1) there are no objective facts about fundamental moral propositions,
such that (2) it is possible to construct apparent dialectical justifications for moral propositions, even
though (3) the best explanation for these theories is not that their dialectical justifications are sound but that they
answer to the psychological needs of philosophers. And the reason it is possible to construct
apparent dialectical justification for differing moral propositions is because, given the diversity of psychological needs of
1 The American Heritage Dictionary, Negate. 4th ed. Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009.
is always possible to find people for whom the premises of these dialectical
justifications are acceptable.
Moreover, the competing traditions indicate that philosophical discussions arent moving us any
closer to a true morality. Leiter 2
Leiter, Brian. Moral Skepticism and Moral Disagreement: Developing an Argument from Nietzsche. March 25, 2010.
With respect to very particularized moral disagreements e.g., about questions of economic or social policy which often trade on obvious
factual ignorance or disagreement about complicated empirical questions, this seems a plausible retort. But for over two
hundred
years, Kantians and utilitarians have [developed] been developing increasingly systematic versions of
their respective positions. The Aristotelian tradition in moral philosophy has an even longer history. Utilitarians [They] have become
particularly adept at explaining how they can accommodate [others] Kantian and Aristotelian intuitions about particular cases and issues, though
in ways that are usually found to be systematically unpersuasive to the competing traditions and which, in any case, do nothing to dissolve the
disagreement about the underlying moral criteria and categories. Philosophers
(1) even if the actor unit sees the resolution as something good, they are merely permitted to take
that action, but there is no force out there to say they are morally obligated to do so everyones free
to do what they want.
(3) the resolution wouldnt be true because the converse of the resolution is just as valid, and since
the resolution is phrased as an objective statement, you would negate.
(3) This applies to legal obligations as well since my argument is the right thing, even in a legal
sense, cant exist universally. But, these would devolve into moral obligations anyway since we
create laws for our societies based on if theyre good or bad, but that is relative to interpretation.
And, presume neg
1) Burden of proof. They have the theoretical burden to prove the res true, so if theres no
offense, then theres no reason to believe the truth of the resolution, and you negate.
2) Strategy skew.
a. aff speaking first, setting the terms for the debate, forcing the neg to shift strategy.
b. aff speaking last, allowing it to have the last word and do meta-weighing between
1ar and NR weighing on theory and substance.
c. aff getting more speeches, meaning more strategic ability to kick stuff, develop
new positions, and choose outs
a) Skep denies objective obligations which takes out the arg about what you have to do as a
judge based on your ballot question
b) Fairness is a normative concept if equality isnt objective valuable you dont need to
vote on the theory argument
c) Skep is especially true on theory because truth literally varies from round to round
plans can be good in one but not in another
The living wage increases job loss, as employees are replaced with technology in order for
businesses to save money. Sherk (2013):
A recent study by the Heritage Foundation concluded that the current proposal before Congress to raise the federal minimum wage from
$7.25 to $10.10 per hour would likely eliminate an estimated 300,000 jobs per year and lower the national gross domestic product by an
average of $40 billion per year. The negative effects on employment are likely to be more profound in the long run, as employers shift to
labor-saving methods of production when labor costs rise. ATMs
improvements that strengthen the initial investment. Fully capitalizing on the unique
nature of software does not happen by accident. Maximizing productivity gains, reducing
downtime and driving innovation should be well planned activities within a strategic
initiative. The best way to increase value from software is to do so throughout its entire
lifecycle.
As software becomes more advanced, the robots created from it will cause extinction..
Third, the instrumental convergence thesis entails that we cannot blithely assume that a
superintelligence with the final goal of calculating the decimals of pi (or making paperclips,
or counting grains of sand) would limit its activities in such a way as not to infringe on
human interests. An agent with such a final goal would have a convergent instrumental
reason, in many situations, to acquire an unlimited amount of physical resources and, if
possible, to eliminate potential threats to itself and its goal system. Human beings might
constitute potential threats; they certainly constitute physical resources.
Taken together, these three points thus indicate that the
they mature and gain confidence in their own judgments and capabilities. A system motivated to promote our interests might be making a
mistake if it allowed us to shut it down or to construct another, potentially unfriendly AI.)
A. Interpretation: On the January to February 2015 NSDA Lincoln Douglas debate topic,
debaters must specify multiple employers. To clarify, debaters must not read evidence
from only one employer.
B. Violation: My opponent specifies ______
C. Standards:
1. Textuality:
Cambridge Dictionary2: Nouns can be either singular or plural. Singular means just one
of the person, animal or thing which the noun refers to. Plural means more than
one.
The resolution specifically says Just governments ought to require that employers pay a living
wage. The s at the end of employer makes it a plural noun. Thus, there is a reason why the
resolution does not say a employer.
2. Predictability: If my opponent doesnt follow the text of the resolution, theres no way
for me to reasonably predict what he is running. Thus, he will have infinite prep
because he knows what he is running and I will have no prep because none of my
arguments will be applicable to his case. Predictability is key to fairness because if I
have no prep and my opponent has infinite prep, its impossible for me to win.
3. Ground Skew: If my opponent doesnt follow the text of the resolution, he has infinite
ground because he can debate about anything he wants. My opponent can write his
case on a resolution that clearly flows AFF and has no NEG ground. Furthermore, by
not debating the resolution, my opponent skews my ground because I dont have any
preparation on his resolution and thus all of my cases and blocks will be nonresponsive. Ground Skew is the key to fairness because I cant win if I dont have
anything to debate about and my opponent will automatically win if they have infinite
ground.
2 http://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/grammar/british-grammar/nouns-singular-and-plural