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    The intrinsic badness of pain for the person who has it i... — Carmelics
    Home/Consciousness & Mind
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    Supports→Either we must accept moral skepticism about the objective badness of pain, or we must understand the intrinsic badness of pain as not being objective in the strong stance-independent sense.

    The intrinsic badness of pain for the person who has it is a stance-dependent truth.

    Consciousness & MindTruth & Knowledge
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    Consciousness & MindTruth & Knowledge

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    1 linked claim · 1 topic

    Skepticism1 linked
    The experience of physical pain being intrinsically bad for the person who has i...

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    Either we must accept moral skepticism about the objective badness of pain, or w...Pain's badness cannot simultaneously be stance-dependent and stance-independentl...Stance-independent objectivity requires that a truth hold independently of any e...The experience of physical pain being intrinsically bad for the person who has i...

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    The experience of physical pain being intrinsically bad for the person...95%The intrinsic badness of pain for the person suffering it is a stance-...95%Yet physical pain's badness is arguably stance-dependent.88%If pain's badness is both universally objective and stance-dependent, ...85%

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    SEP: moral-epistemology
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    There are two ways to go if one wishes to defend the possibility of moral knowledge against the argument from moral objectivism. One is to reject the concept of stance-independent objectivity as a necessary condition on moral truth. Studies show that even young children after a certain age make an intuitive distinction between conventional demands and moral demands (Nichols 2004). Basic moral demands unlike conventional ones are taken to be independent of authority (for example, that of a teache

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