Only if moral realism is also true.
Yes, of course. I was illustrating how the theory works.
If the above sentence is false when uttered by Clippy, it has a truth value which is indexical to who is uttering it, meaning that moral realism is false.
No, it doesn't. The thing is that on the view I'm talking about here, sentences don't have truth-conditions, but propositions have. (Some) sentences express a proposition dependent on the context of utterance. Moral realism thus has to be the position that moral statements express propositions, because it wouldn't make any sense otherwise - sentences don't have truth-conditions anyway. When clippy says "One shouldn't convert humans into paperclips", he is simply not expressing the same proposition that I am expressing when I utter that sentence.
The point you are making is again, not interesting.
Then why exactly are you having a discussion that seems to be based on you not understanding concepts that you find "uninteresting"? I find your sense of "relative", which seems to be "in any conceivable way dependent on anything", pretty uninteresting, actually...
When clippy says "One shouldn't convert humans into paperclips", he is simply not expressing the same proposition that I am expressing when I utter that sentence.
Why shouldn't the truth-value attach to a (proposition, context) tuple? Why, for that matter shouldn't it attach to a (sentence, language, context) tuple?
Continuing my quest to untangle people's confusions about Eliezer's metaethics... I've started to wonder if maybe some people have the intuition that the orthogonality thesis is at odds with moral realism.
I personally have a very hard time seeing why anyone would think that, perhaps in part because of my experience in philosophy of religion. Theistic apologists would love to be able to say, "moral realism, therefore a sufficiently intelligent being would also be good." It would help patch some obvious holes in their arguments and help them respond to things like Stephen Law's Evil God Challenge. But they mostly don't even try to argue that, for whatever reason.
You did see philosophers claiming things like that back in the bad old days before Kant, which raises the question of what's changed. I suspect the reason is fairly mundane, though: before Kant (roughly), it was not only dangerous to be an atheist, it was dangerous to question that the existence of God could be proven through reason (because it would get you suspected of being an atheist). It was even dangerous to advocated philosophical views that might possibly undermine the standard arguments for the existence of God. That guaranteed that philosophers could used whatever half-baked premises they wanted in constructing arguments for the existence of God, and have little fear of being contradicted.
Besides, even if you think an all-knowing would also necessarily be perfectly good, it still seems perfectly possible to have an otherwise all-knowing being with a horrible blind spot regarding morality.
On the other hand, in the comments of a post on the orthogonality thesis, Stuart Armstrong mentions that:
This is not super-enlightening, partly because Stuart is talking about people whose views he admits he doesn't understand... but on the other hand, maybe Stuart agrees that there is some kind of conflict there, since he seems to imply that he himself rejects moral realism.
I realize I'm struggling a bit to guess what people could be thinking here, but I suspect some people are thinking it, so... anyone?