Also, what is Harris’s quote supposed to mean? (About the moral duty to save children, that is. Not the god one, which is wholly unobjectionable.) I want to interpret it as some kind of skepticism about normative statements, but if that’s what he means, it’s very oddly expressed. Perhaps it’s supposed to be some conceptual analysis about “duty?”
I mean, one ought to understand a syllogism, just as one ought to save the drowning child… no?
Also, what is Harris’s quote supposed to mean? (About the moral duty to save children, that is. Not the god one, which is wholly unobjectionable.) I want to interpret it as some kind of skepticism about normative statements, but if that’s what he means, it’s very oddly expressed. Perhaps it’s supposed to be some conceptual analysis about “duty?”
I mean, one ought to understand a syllogism, just as one ought to save the drowning child… no?