NS,
We keep going round this because you keep wanting to link it my comments to Vlad's arguments. I'm not making his argument so your discussion of his argument here is pointless.
But you weighed in on an exchange I was having with him, which was the context of my reply (to him).
As you cover morality is the same as aesthetics, so in determining good art is the same as good morality is the same as good hummus.
But nonetheless, we
do make judgements about these matters – and in the case of morality we have to moreover if we’re to co-exist in any sort of organised and sustainable manner.
What is the difference between tarot and rationality in determining morality?
It’s the same difference as between a jig-saw with no pieces and a jig-saw with a handful of them. With the latter we might think the picture is a daffodil but it’s really a fire engine, but with the former it could be anything at all.
Take an example: say my neighbour buys a really nice car, and I need to decide whether or not it would be morally ok to murder him so as to steal it. If I apply reason to that situation I can arrive at a rationale that produces the answer “no” (his right not to be murdered, the potential effect on me if society thought murdering for cars was ok, that I might be caught and punished etc).
Now consider what would happen if I used the tarot instead – the answer would be determined by whatever card I happened to pick, and could well be the opposite answer if I tried it again. As a method it’s chaotic.
Does that mean that reason gives us morality on an objectively true basis? Of course not – for all I know there could be a better answer somewhere for why killing my neighbour for his car would be fine – but it does give us a functional, workable, good-enough steer on moral codes that we can apply in the real world. And that’s all I’m arguing.