To me, it looks like the blogger (Coel) is trying to say that morality is a fact about what we humans want, rather than a fact of the universe which can be deduced independently from what anyone wants.
My opinion is Coel makes this clear when he explains, “Subjective does not mean unimportant.” “Subjective does not mean arbitrary.” “Subjective does not mean that anyone’s opinion is “just as good”.”
“Separate magisteriums” seems to refer to dualism, where people believe that their consciousness/mind exists outside the laws of physics, and cannot be explained by the laws of physics.
But my opinion is Coel didn’t imply that subjective facts are a “separate magisterium” in opposition to objective facts. He said that subjective morals are explained by objective facts: “Our feelings and attitudes are rooted in human nature, being a product of our evolutionary heritage, programmed by genes. None of that is arbitrary.”
But I’m often wrong about these things don’t take me too seriously :/
To me, it looks like the blogger (Coel) is trying to say that morality is a fact about what we humans want, rather than a fact of the universe which can be deduced independently from what anyone wants.
My opinion is Coel makes this clear when he explains, “Subjective does not mean unimportant.” “Subjective does not mean arbitrary.” “Subjective does not mean that anyone’s opinion is “just as good”.”
“Separate magisteriums” seems to refer to dualism, where people believe that their consciousness/mind exists outside the laws of physics, and cannot be explained by the laws of physics.
But my opinion is Coel didn’t imply that subjective facts are a “separate magisterium” in opposition to objective facts. He said that subjective morals are explained by objective facts: “Our feelings and attitudes are rooted in human nature, being a product of our evolutionary heritage, programmed by genes. None of that is arbitrary.”
But I’m often wrong about these things don’t take me too seriously :/