Timsup2nothin
Deity
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2013
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meta-ethics is a way more interesting field than normative ethics.
Well, hanging "meta" in front of something always makes it meta-interesting.
meta-ethics is a way more interesting field than normative ethics.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meta-ethicsWhile normative ethics addresses such questions as "What should I do?", thus endorsing some ethical evaluations and rejecting others, meta-ethics addresses questions such as "What is goodness?" and "How can we tell what is good from what is bad?", seeking to understand the nature of ethical properties and evaluations.
I was aware of the challenges you present when I made my post but didn't want to get bogged down in technicalities. I used "Murder" to mean acts generally assigned that distinction in popular discourse. In that sense wrongfulness is not simply implied by definition.The conceptual meaning of Murder is: "intentful and wrongful(without moral justification) killing of another living being".
Of course, whether an individual/group considers a specific "killing of a living being" to be 'wrong' (and thus qualifies as being labeled "Murder") is subjective and open for debate.
But it is the classification of a specific "killing of a living being" that may be uncertain and not whether the Murder classification in itself is considered a wrongful act or not.
So yes, Murder always carries the conceptual meaning of a wrongful act.
Morality isn't merely genetic. It's a complex phenomenon with social and biological aspects. It's in some ways like sexiness In having huge social modifiers to an instinctive drive.What I'm most interested in with this idea are the consequences of morality being genetic.
That gets tricky! I think one of the most important teachings of Christ is humility at the difficulty of judgment. In my mind all punishment involves inflicting suffering which is undesirable (I view the desire for vengeance as a moral weakness). However punishment is useful in regulating behavior so I am tolerant of it.Does that mean that (at least some) people who commit immoral acts are doing so because they can't help it, genetically? That people are "born" immoral? How can someone who is genetically predisposed to something be punished for following his/her "nature"?
I have to admit, you've taken me out of my depth with this post. I can't pretend to have good answers right now for some of your points, and you've inspired me to do seek a deeper understanding of different ethical systems.
What are some ethicists/philosophers you (and everyone else in this thread, too) would recommend reading?
I have a few responses and questions regarding several points below.
The problem I see with this is that the vast majority of humanity is far more concerned with their individual misery and the misery of those they love than about the misery of the human race as a whole. Misery for "other people" is abstracted, while misery for "me" or "those I love" is real.
This sounds an awful lot like a sort of communal hedonism, although I'm unclear if you draw a distinction between pleasure and happiness. I'm tempted to argue that this would fall afoul of the paradox of hedonism, but need some clarification before I do so as I do not want to argue past you.
Alright, so what happens when the desires/happiness of a "moral majority" (I regret using the term given its history, but I'm using it in a purely numerical sense) clash with the desires/happiness of a "moral minority"?
Would you say that the majority happiness should always be sought, even at the expense of the minority, as given the contradictory views the "moral majority" would be happiness for the maximum amount of subjects for the situation?
I'm fully aware of Godwin's law
Nevertheless, the Nazis are an excellent case study given that
(a) everyone is fairly familiar with them
(b) their actions are near universally condemned, and thus provide many points of philosophical common ground
(c) Nazism is relatively internally coherent
No, this is actually an incredibly important question for any ethics system. How do you protect an individual's or society's well-being or happiness when a different individual or group is bent on destroying it?
This brings us back to the NazisSure, they may not have subscribed to humanitarian ethics, but what is the ethical response to them?
I don't see a coherent answer from your system.
Do you expect a deity to do everything that he is capable of? If a deity has a will or personality, he may not always choose to do what he is capable of.
Do you expect every human to always do what he is capable of?
I would argue that a core assumption that goes along with a deity existing and also establishing a moral code would be that there are divine consequences, whether in this life or in eternity (if there is an immortal soul).
To put it crudely, if you don't want to go to hell you follow the deity's commands.
If there were no consequences for rejecting the deity's laws, then of course there would be no particular reason to do so.
Most modern religions would say that there are explicit laws (taken from a literal "do not do this" revelation, and which aren't really open to interpretation), and that there are interpreted laws (laws based on a certain intrepretation of a holy text, and which do not have an explicit "do this" or "don't do this"). These intrepreted laws would have to be consistent with the explicit laws in order for the moral system to be coherent.
There are certain questions which simply do not have answers outside of a faith-based belief (note that "faith" doesn't have to mean religious).
And yet every society, then and now, has enshrined methods of removing humans from society when they contravene the accepted moral or legal standards. Members of society were subject to slavery, as a punishment.
I agree that slavery is evil, but on a different philosophical basis.
It's only a problem if a deity does not actually existYou assume that while I assume one does exist.
If one does exist, then whether or not you believe in one is irrelevant, just as if one doesn't exist, whether or not I believe in one is irrelevant.
Unfortunately, while I can't definitively prove one DOES exist, you can't definitively prove one DOESN'T, which is why I had wanted to avoid the question in this thread as it would eventually simply take over the discussion. I admit that I was perhaps wrong in that, though, as it seems your view of morality depends on your views on the existence of God as a more basic question.
Indeed, I agree that without that assumption there is no foundation in a system without a deity. So, I actually think I agree philosophically that your ethical assumptions in a system without God are probably the best way to go.
But again, as I have seen throughout our discussion, it really comes down to your assumption regarding the existence of God, which I think is where our fundamental disagreement lies.
I think your ethics have an incredibly difficult systemic issue, as I've pointed out earlier in this post. And that issue is how do you balance society vs. an individual?
Thinking again on it, though, I think every ethical system battles this issue, but again, I'm struggling to see your solution.
Sidebar - I don't think religion will become outdated until we can definitely answer the question as to "where the universe came from."![]()
My rejoinder would again be that very few think of the "greater good", instead focusing on what is happening to themselves and to those they love, which would just as easily lead a good person to doing extreme harm.
Again, you've taken me out of my depth. I still see issues with the system you have supported, but I think most of those issues stem from our differing foundational assumptions. But you've helped me see some reasonable philosophical bases for morality without God, which I appreciate. You've also inspired me, like I said, to do additional digging into this issue as it's one I find fascinating.
I'll end this post here.
These things are only inconsistency because you're introducing your own postulates. It's not a lack of internal consistency, it's inconsistency with what you hold to be true.
- evoked Nietzsche for the concept of superman, postulating the Arian ethnicity as so, without ever giving a reason for that postulate;
- Evoked Darwin for pretty much the same reason, with the same error in postulation;
- Simultaneously accused the Jews of running the international banking powers that held debt of Germany and ruined German economy, AND of being heads of communism - the discourse changed whether the audience was population or the heads of companies;
- Valued the initiative of "exceptional" individuals and instituted censorship and repression;
- Formally stood for law, order and family, but used mobster intimidation tactics to beat up and intimidate domestic opposition;
- Like I said before, defended the perfecting of the human race using peripheral and unimportant traits to select who was "worth".
These things are only inconsistency because you're introducing your own postulates. It's not a lack of internal consistency, it's inconsistency with what you hold to be true.
Merrian Webster Dictionary said:1
a (archaic) : condition of adhering together : firmness of material substance
b : firmness of constitution or character : persistency
2
a : degree of firmness, density, viscosity, or resistance to movement or separation of constituent particles
3
a : agreement or harmony of parts or features to one another or a whole : correspondence; specifically : ability to be asserted together without contradiction
b : harmony of conduct or practice with profession <followed her own advice with consistency>
- Evoked Nietzsche for the concept of superman, postulating the Arian ethnicity as so, without ever giving a reason for that postulate;
- Evoked Darwin for pretty much the same reason, with the same error in postulation;
Simultaneously accused the Jews of running the international banking powers that held debt of Germany and ruined German economy, AND of being heads of communism - the discourse changed whether the audience was population or the heads of companies;
Valued the initiative of "exceptional" individuals and instituted censorship and repression;
Formally stood for law, order and family, but used mobster intimidation tactics to beat up and intimidate domestic opposition;
Like I said before, defended the perfecting of the human race using peripheral and unimportant traits to select who was "worth".
Simultaneously accused the Jews of running the international banking powers that held debt of Germany and ruined German economy, AND of being heads of communism
They did indeed hilariously do this.
But it's not necessarily inconsistent unless they maintained that the same Jews were simultaneously heads of the international banks and heads of international communism. Which I don't think they did.
And even if they did, the inconsistency could have been said to lie with the Jewish heads of banks and communism rather than the (allegedly) keen-eyed Nazis themselves.
And even then, if the avowed intent of the Jewish heads of banks and communism was bringing about the collapse of Western civilization (iirc such was Nazi theory), why couldn't they have approached the "problem" from both ends at once?
However I look at, I'm not getting the idea that Nazism was inconsistent just based on this one facet. Though it does appear so at first sight.
Actually, I would say morality (in terms of "ethics" if you prefer) can ONLY come WITHOUT a deity.the thread is simply asking whether or not the concept of morality makes sense without a deity - any deity.
Direct contradiction. Being the leaders of international banking is the epitome of capitalistic endeavor, the shrine of individual accumulation of property. To hold true that these people are the same as the leaders of the communist internationals, that aimed to end with the system of private property is a monstrous internal contradiction on the Nazis worldview. So there, again, is inconsistency.
If it's from a deity, it's just a set of command - benevolent or not, it's still just "follow my rules", which is completely arbitrary
Cause if you are 'moral' out of expecting some reward in a next realm, or trying to avoid punishment there, you aren't really moral for morality itself.
If I say God doesn't like it when people suffer and therefore it's wrong.
"so what? what makes that true? Why does God's opinion matter?"
As far as I'm concerned. Positing a God doesn't really help the situation, it's merely a convenient point for someone to throw their hands up and quit thinking.
[What a God does is] Provide a convenient solution to the is-ought problem.
Anyone's free to throw in their opinion into the ring, that's the beauty of it.
What are some ethicists/philosophers you (and everyone else in this thread, too) would recommend reading?
I was aware of the challenges you present when I made my post but didn't want to get bogged down in technicalities. I used "Murder" to mean acts generally assigned that distinction in popular discourse. In that sense wrongfulness is not simply implied by definition.
"Because I said so" isn't a moral argument. No matter how big and powerful the One saying it is.
Now I know a lot of Christians will say this is a misrepresentation. It's not about how powerful God is, it's about how good he is!
OK, what makes God good? If we're back to "because I said so": no dice. But if there's some particular fact about God that makes for goodness - He's kind, for example - OK that right there is the basis for morality. In that case, even if God didn't exist, human beings who are kind, would be good.
I don't see how. See above.
Tim Scanlon, What We Owe to Each Other
i didn't mean as a statement of my own personal beliefs. i understand the problems with the divine command theory (see my posts on the first two pages)
Actually, I would say morality (in terms of "ethics" if you prefer) can ONLY come WITHOUT a deity.
If it's from a deity, it's just a set of command - benevolent or not, it's still just "follow my rules", which is completely arbitrary and only worth as much as the authority claiming it.
If it exists without a deity, THEN it means it has worth in itself and can be considered a valuable moral system.
This makes absolutely no sense.Actually morality would be useless without a deity.