Chunderer,
You've got the wrong end of the stick Blue.
I doubt it, but let's see shall we?
All I am saying is that we are bound by whatever the truth is.
Meaning what? What do you mean here by "truth" - ie, that which we can best reason our way towards as the most probably true given the available data and reasoning we can do, or some ultimate, universal, objective version of it that you think we can know by some undefined process?
And in what sense are we "bound" by it in any case? Even if you pick the most extreme example you can think of in the area of morality for example, someone could still behave differently if they were so inclined.
If morality is relative then it is relative for all, If it is real then it is real for all.
What thought are you trying to express here? By and large most of us share intuitive moral values - not killing our children for example - for reasons of evolutionary advantage, and we add to that reasoned positions (however imperfectly) on the specifics - about abortion for example.
So what? Call that "relative" if you like, but it doesn't alter the fact.
These are ideas that can ever become extinct because ideas do not.
Of course they do. Ideas can readily be forgotten and, once they have been, there's no guarantee that anyone else will have them at a future time.
Assent may wax and wane but these ideas are non perishable and confront everything that has ever or will have our capacities.
In English please.
Your view of morality has difficulties....How can something pulled extra anally be taken so seriously and have the argument for superior arsepull made for it............How do we distinguish moral behaviour from plain behaviour.......My take on morality has difficulty because it is proving nigh on impossible to scientifically measure etc. but whichever is the actual truth that must be binding on all.
And again, in English please. Insofar as I can unscramble the sentiment though, lots of things that are "relative" are nonetheless taken perfectly seriously. People seriously think the late Beethoven quartets to be great music for example, and Kylie's output to be less so. No appeal to some supposed universal standard of great music is needed for that, any more than an appeal to some supposed universal standard of moral rectitude is needed to decide that on balance not stealing is morally better than stealing.
Oh, and the difficulty with your "take" on morality isn't that it's "proving nigh on impossible to scientifically measure etc." at all - that's a secondary issue. Your real difficulty is that you have no argument to demonstrate that there's anything to measure in the first place. Your apparent distaste for the notion that morality is "relative" is not an argument for it being non-relative.
Apart from that though...