I think Richard is saying that what is “right” is rigidly determined by my current (idealised) desires—so in a possible world where I desired to murder, murder would still be wrong
...is your real claim here, independent of any points about language use?
If so, I think I would just straightforwardly modify my paragraph above to say that my statements are not trying to talk about language use or human brains / desires, albeit that desire is both an optimization target of, and a quotation of, morality.
I’m not sure what you have in mind here. We need to distinguish (i) the referent of a concept from (ii) its reference-fixing “sense” or functional role. The way I understood your view, the reference-fixing story for moral terms involves our (idealized) desires. But the referent is “rigid” in the sense that it’s picking out the content of our desires: the thing that actually fills the functional role, rather than the role-property itself.
Since our desires typically aren’t themselves about our desires, so it will turn out, on this story, that morality is not “about” desires. It’s about “love, friendship,” and all that jazz. But there’s a story to be told about how our moral concepts came to pick out these particular worldly properties. And that’s where desires come in (as I understand your view). Our moral concepts pick out these particular properties because they’re the contents of our idealized desires. But that’s not to say that therefore morality is “really” just about fulfilling any old desires. For that would be to neglect the part that rigid designation, and the distinction between reference and reference-fixing, plays in this story.
Does that capture your view? To further clarify: the point of appealing to “rigid designation” is just to explain how desires could play a reference-fixing role without being any part of the referent of moral talk (or what it is “about”). Isn’t that what you’re after? Or do you have some other reference-fixing story in mind?
This all does sound good to me; but, is there a way to say the above while tabooing “reference” and avoiding talk of things “referring” to other things? Reference isn’t ontologically basic, so what does it reduce to?
Basically, the main part that would worry me is a phrase like, “there’s a story to be told about how our moral concepts came to pick out these particular worldly properties” which sounds on its face like, “There’s a story to be told about how successorship came to pick out the natural numbers” whereas what I’d want to say is, “Of course, there’s a story to be told about how moral concepts came to have the power to move us” or “There’s a story to be told about how our brains came to reflect numbers”.
Correct. Eliezer has misunderstood rigid designation here.
So does that mean this:
...is your real claim here, independent of any points about language use?
If so, I think I would just straightforwardly modify my paragraph above to say that my statements are not trying to talk about language use or human brains / desires, albeit that desire is both an optimization target of, and a quotation of, morality.
I’m not sure what you have in mind here. We need to distinguish (i) the referent of a concept from (ii) its reference-fixing “sense” or functional role. The way I understood your view, the reference-fixing story for moral terms involves our (idealized) desires. But the referent is “rigid” in the sense that it’s picking out the content of our desires: the thing that actually fills the functional role, rather than the role-property itself.
Since our desires typically aren’t themselves about our desires, so it will turn out, on this story, that morality is not “about” desires. It’s about “love, friendship,” and all that jazz. But there’s a story to be told about how our moral concepts came to pick out these particular worldly properties. And that’s where desires come in (as I understand your view). Our moral concepts pick out these particular properties because they’re the contents of our idealized desires. But that’s not to say that therefore morality is “really” just about fulfilling any old desires. For that would be to neglect the part that rigid designation, and the distinction between reference and reference-fixing, plays in this story.
Does that capture your view? To further clarify: the point of appealing to “rigid designation” is just to explain how desires could play a reference-fixing role without being any part of the referent of moral talk (or what it is “about”). Isn’t that what you’re after? Or do you have some other reference-fixing story in mind?
This all does sound good to me; but, is there a way to say the above while tabooing “reference” and avoiding talk of things “referring” to other things? Reference isn’t ontologically basic, so what does it reduce to?
Basically, the main part that would worry me is a phrase like, “there’s a story to be told about how our moral concepts came to pick out these particular worldly properties” which sounds on its face like, “There’s a story to be told about how successorship came to pick out the natural numbers” whereas what I’d want to say is, “Of course, there’s a story to be told about how moral concepts came to have the power to move us” or “There’s a story to be told about how our brains came to reflect numbers”.