Do you believe in an objective morality capable of being scientifically investigated (a la Sam Harris *or others*), or are you a moral nihilist/relativist? There seems to be some division on this point. I would have thought Less Wrong to be well in the former camp.
Edit: There seems to be some confusion - when I say "an objective morality capable of being scientifically investigated (a la Sam Harris *or others*)" - I do NOT mean something like a "one true, universal, metaphysical morality for all mind-designs" like the Socratic/Platonic Form of Good or any such nonsense. I just mean something in reality that's mind-independent - in the sense that it is hard-wired, e.g. by evolution, and thus independent/prior to any later knowledge or cognitive content - and thus can be investigated scientifically. It is a definite "is" from which we can make true "ought" statements relative to that "is". See drethelin's comment and my analysis of Clippy.
So first of all, that's not what Sam Harris means so stop invoking him. Second of all, give an example of what kind of facts you would refer to in order to decide whether or not murder is immoral.
If you are referring to facts about your brain/mind then your account is subjectivist. Nothing about subjectivism says we can't investigate people's moral beliefs scientifically.
Now it is the case that if you define morality as "whatever that thing in my brain that tells me what is right and wrong says" there is in some sense an "is from which you can get an ought". But this is not at all what Hume is talking about. Hume is talking about argument and justification. His point is that an argument with only descriptive premises can't take you to a normative conclusion. But note that your "is" potentially differs from individual to individual. I suppose you could use it to justify your own moral beliefs to your self but that does not moral realism make. What you can't do is use it to convince anyone else.
This discussion is getting rather frustrating because I don't think your beliefs are actually wrong. You're just a) refusing to use or learn standard terminology that can be quickly picked up by glancing at the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and b) thinking that whether or not we can learn about evolved or programmed utility function-like things is a question related to the whether or not moral realism is true. I'm a very typical moral anti-realist but I still think humans have lots of values in common, that there are scientific ways to learn about those values, and that this is a worthy pursuit.
If you still disagree I'd like to hear what you think people in my camp are supposed to believe.
I'm not sure what you're referring to here, but here's my comment explaining how this relates to Sam Harris.
I addressed this previously, explaining that I am using 'objective' and 'subjective' in the common sense way of 'mind-independent' or 'mind-dependent' and explained in what specific way I'm doing th... (read more)