No Wonder So Many People are Depressed
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- David
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Last edited by David on Sun Aug 26, 2018 12:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
Forget the word "morality". In this context, "Moral Law" just means "objective determination of better or worse, right or wrong". There's no reason why we need to make something "conducive to the functioning of a process in question", so if that's your definition of "better", we are free simply to act against making anything "better". The only reason we should care about anything being "better" is that "better" in this context means more than that. (The problem, of course, is that words do have different meanings in different contexts.) If you just impose the "conducive to the functioning of a process" definition, then it's fine to let the baby starve to death.
Last edited by K on Sun Aug 26, 2018 12:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- David
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Last edited by David on Sun Aug 26, 2018 12:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
Well, what one includes is part of one's own beliefs about what the Moral Law is (so I cannot put that in the general definition of "Moral Law"). People don't agree on this (namely, what to include), but in arguing about it they do assume the Moral Law exists, regardless of whether this is a good or bad assumption. Environmentalists do believe, for example, that your asteroid example matters --- or at least glaciers, mountains, etc. Others will disagree.
The question is not what we care about, or why we care about it.
I think I should find and use a different term from "Moral Law", because the word "morality" is taking you down different paths.
The question is not what we care about, or why we care about it.
I think I should find and use a different term from "Moral Law", because the word "morality" is taking you down different paths.
Last edited by K on Sun Aug 26, 2018 1:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- stui magpie
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There are similar morals common to almost all cultures, of which you can use the 10 commandments as an example.
Every culture I can think of has had their own definitions of right and wrong, that suited their culture. eg, killing someone within your "group" was wrong, but it was ok to kill people from other groups in battle.
Right and wrong exist, in every culture, just the details vary.
Every culture I can think of has had their own definitions of right and wrong, that suited their culture. eg, killing someone within your "group" was wrong, but it was ok to kill people from other groups in battle.
Right and wrong exist, in every culture, just the details vary.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
I don't think anthropological arguments are powerful enough fully to confirm or refute the Moral Law.* They might be more powerful (for the affirmative side) if the commonalities were displayed over a wider range of creatures; humans are, after all, just one species. As for differences, they don't tell us anything in support of the negative side, i.e. the non-existence of the Law; they simply demonstrate imperfect knowledge of Question 2 (if Question 2 is well defined).
David, you simply made claims about Questions 2 and 3. You don't seem to realize they don't say anything in a philosophical sense about Question 1.
The point is not that you are forced to believe in the Moral Law by some sort of proof. The point is that your expressed views are completely inconsistent with non-belief in the Moral Law. You make statements that assume its existence, instead of realizing what non-existence implies.
* I have to return to discussion of Lewis at some point. His argument quoted in part seems to mix in assumptions about psychology.
David, you simply made claims about Questions 2 and 3. You don't seem to realize they don't say anything in a philosophical sense about Question 1.
The point is not that you are forced to believe in the Moral Law by some sort of proof. The point is that your expressed views are completely inconsistent with non-belief in the Moral Law. You make statements that assume its existence, instead of realizing what non-existence implies.
* I have to return to discussion of Lewis at some point. His argument quoted in part seems to mix in assumptions about psychology.
Last edited by K on Tue Sep 04, 2018 6:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- stui magpie
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Yeah, Stui, but then if we look at the whole animal world, we see it full of murder, rape, cannibalism, ... Humans of a philosophical bent then state that animals are "not Moral Agents". Well, they may state this independently of whether they see and are disturbed by animal murder, rape, cannibalism, ..., simply on the basis of their assumptions about animal intelligence and what level of intelligence is required to be a "Moral Agent". We thus have the spectacle of certain bioethicists, for example, assuming that animals "have moral worth" but "not moral agency", in which case it's claimed it's bad to do anything harmful to them but you cannot stop them from doing bad things to other creatures.*
*I was probably thinking about certain animals I hate when I wrote the above, but even monkeys, which I love, behave in startling ways if they have the chance to.
*I was probably thinking about certain animals I hate when I wrote the above, but even monkeys, which I love, behave in startling ways if they have the chance to.
- stui magpie
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Lets stick with Mammals, and understand that "morals" evolve with a society. Judging primate behaviour by 2018 moral standards is as dumb as judging 1918 human behaviour against the same.
The point is, every group shows a sense of acceptable and unacceptable behaviours. Right and wrong.
The point is, every group shows a sense of acceptable and unacceptable behaviours. Right and wrong.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
- stui magpie
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