No argument I could possibly state for moral realism would answer the questions I have asked here, or would help anyone argue for moral nihilism.
Are you arguing against moral nihilism without an actual argument against it?
And with no arguable alternative?
Nevertheless, perhaps this thread helps to demonstrate that the best argument for moral realism is the fact that the various forms of moral anti-realism just never make sense....
It makes perfect sense to not believe in things unevidenced.
Just as there is no evidenced cogent argument to believe in Thor, Allah,
God, Zeus, or Voldemort, there is none for objectively true morality.
You may believe what you want.
But you've offered no logical argument for your positions here.
So until you can prove this objective morality to be true, I won't believe in it.
, and those espousing nihilism and relativism don't seem to have any coherent answers to even the simplest questions.
Anyone can ask questions which even the smartest person cannot answer.
This does not make the questioner smarter, or his claims true.
Here we encounter the confounding thesis where the nihilist has already decided that no act is morally right or wrong, but his feelings dictate just the contrary. How does that make sense? Why abide by such allegedly erroneous feelings?
Individuals have their morality, even if they don't believe it's absolutely
true, inerrant, universal, or handed to us by the laws of physics or God.
Morality in society is by consensus of feelings.
And morality varies from society to society, & over the ages.
Thus the nihilist has already decided that there is no moral fact about, e.g., slavery, but he can have a feeling that it's morally right to enslave Africans and to vote for laws instituting slavery of Africans, so that's what he does. You couldn't come up with a more confused moral philosophy than that!
It's not at all confusing if one recognizes that morality isn't universal.
Slavery is an anathema to most modern people....but only most.
And historically, slavery was much more tolerated.
Christians & Muslims have a long history of believing it was just peachy.
I believe it's wrong.
But this is solely because I "feel" libertarian.
I can't prove that "libertarian" is The Truth.
In fact, most posters here think it's utterly wrong.
How does your universally true morality handle this?
Feelings do not motivate what we do when we use deduction to determine our behavior.
What are your premises from which you deduce morality?