A correct moral position is e.g. one not leading to confusion about moral content, such as belief that eating babies is a human terminal value.
Confusion is a property of the mind. Something that is defined as correct by not causing confusion is thus necessarily subjective. If people (possibly only a person) were different, and it did cause confusion, it would no longer be correct.
Correctness is a property of the mind as well. And it’s not a definition, it’s an attempt for disambiguation, with an example. How many disclaimers do I need?
Correctness is not a property of minds. It’s potentially a property of conclusions, although this cannot be generally known. It’s only usefully a property of arguments considered as a whole.
Confusion is a property of the mind. Something that is defined as correct by not causing confusion is thus necessarily subjective. If people (possibly only a person) were different, and it did cause confusion, it would no longer be correct.
Correctness is a property of the mind as well. And it’s not a definition, it’s an attempt for disambiguation, with an example. How many disclaimers do I need?
Correctness is not a property of minds. It’s potentially a property of conclusions, although this cannot be generally known. It’s only usefully a property of arguments considered as a whole.