V
Vera_Ljuba
Guest
All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others…No one here should be asserting that if moral absolutes exist then there’s a correct answer for every moral question.
All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others…No one here should be asserting that if moral absolutes exist then there’s a correct answer for every moral question.
Huh?All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others…![]()
Ahh… but that’s exactly the problem – you’ve just couched it in different terms. Instead of asking for a judgment call on what’s moral, you’ve instead asked what the criteria is upon which one is to be judged a ‘reasonable person.’ In asserting the subjectivity of a moral code, you’ve merely replaced it with a subjective judgment on reasonableness.You might have noticed that alll the moral problems raised are the ones to which we’d all agree, being reasonable people.
That’s a problem with the “reasonable person” standard, not the “objective morality” standard – things that are “too hard” get eliminated from the test for reasonableness…But when a minor problem is brought up and ones asks for a solution, then it goes in the too hatrd basket. Factory farming? Killing whales? Minimum wage?
So how do you determine the objectively correct answer to problems where there are a multitude of differing opinions?So, sadly, we’re back to square one: if there’s no objectivity in morality, then there’s only convention. Therefore, if you want to argue against an objective morality, we can argue that your disagreements with it demonstrate your lack of reasonableness.
Before we get to this interesting and worthy tributary, we first need to establish that there are some things in the moral world which are, objectively, wrong.So how do you determine the objectively correct answer to problems where there are a multitude of differing opinions?
'A study into the attitude of teenagers in Jordan’s capital city of Amman reveals that almost half of boys and one in five girls believe that killing a daughter, sister or wife who has ‘dishonoured’ or shamed the family is justified. A third of all teenagers involved in the research advocated honour killing. …]Or are you going to say that there might be some people who could rightfully conclude: it is permissible to kill my daughter for being raped.
That would be relevant if and only if our non-absolute scientific laws were non-absolute because they were based off our opinions. But, they are not. Our scientific laws cause things to behave as they do regardless of what we think. It is my position that the same is true of morality. One person among two who differ on a moral position can be closer to the truth than another. That is not possible if morality isn’t objective in some way. But no one thinks that North Korean culture is morally superior to modern western culture. Except, of course for some North Koreans and a few others, but we think they are mistaken; and we think they are mistaken not just because we arbitrarily decide they are mistaken. Thinking they are mistaken would be meaningless unless we legitimately think we are appealing to a higher standard than just what society as a group decides.Your analogy with science is a good one. Because in science there are no absolutes. None at all. What we state as facts, from a scientific point of view, are assumptions based on previous obsevations. Nothing is set in stone.
That there are facts about the world upon which we can all agree and that there are moral absolutes are two entirely different aspects of reality.
The statement ‘killing for pleasure is wrong’ is not an absolute statement no more than is ‘factory farming is wrong’.
If you consider both of them to be statements of absolute morality, then it is incumbent upon you to tell me why you should consider them both the same. Or tell me why we should treat them differently.
I never actually said anything about morality being innate, just that it is objective. Children have to be taught mathematical truths, that does not mean that 6/3=2 isn’t true. The person who says that it equals 4, instead, is wrong. That morality has to be taught is no obstacle to its objectivity. Just because it must be taught doesn’t mean that it gets its truthfulness from society arbitrarily saying it’s true.Don’t forget to add: “with similar upbringing”.That is why we evaluate those behaviors the same way.
You can ask these questions until you are blue in the face, and you will never get an answer. Only evasions. In certain ancient cultures violence was the norm. Ancient Greeks had no problem with killing deformed babies, after all their society was composed of warriors amid constant fighting with their neighbors. Small children are innately “vicious little brutes”, because they did not develop empathy YET. They torture animals, until they are taught that such behavior is wrong.
It might be interesting to create an isolated society and teach children that torturing animals is fine. If there would be some innate “moral code” against such behavior, they would reject this teaching. But children have no critical skills, they swallow whatever the adults teach them, and that forms their basic attitude toward the world. There is no “mysterious” moral code inscribed on our “heart”.
Actually, such isolated societies exist, even today. The clannish white supremacist groups teach their children that black, Jews, Catholics, Slavs, etc. are inferior people. And to support this teaching they like to do some quote-mining and select texts from the Bible.
And, of course there is no “innate moral code” against nudity, against contraceptive sex, against meat eating, against factory farming, and zillions of other behaviors - which some people find “morally wrong” and others find perfectly acceptable. But “other side” is unwilling to face these questions, and they constantly try to evade with “torturing baybees is wrong, is it not?”
Thank you for bringing us back to the actual question. We are not arguing if morality is objective. We are arguing whether it is rational behavior to get morally outraged while also thinking that moral statements are only true because some societies arbitrarily decide that they are true.Well, yeah. Because it’s the wrong question.
No one here should be asserting that if moral absolutes exist then there’s a correct answer for every moral question.
It’s a straw man.
But you all can’t answer the question: if moral absolutes don’t exist, then how can you tell someone that what he’s done is wrong?
That’s a question that we ask until we are blue in the face and we’ll never get an answer from you guys.
We can cross that bridge whenever my actual original thesis is addressed. To repeat myself, my thesis is that it is irrational behavior to become morally outraged by anything while also thinking that society arbitrarily decides the truth of certain moral statements and that it goes no higher than that.So how do you determine the objectively correct answer to problems where there are a multitude of differing opinions?
Unless you are going to suggest that not all moral problems can be couched in absolute terms (in which case you are going to need to explain how do decide which ones are absolute and which ones are not), then we need an answer to this.
It is futile telling me that there is an absolute answer to a moral problem if you cannot tell me how we access it. All I am getting are trite statements followed by a declaration that the scenario given must represent absolute morality because…well, it’s just obvious.
All one has to do is bring up a not-so-obvious scenario and there is a deafening silence.
No, we don’t have to agree with their code, but unless we disagree with it because it is, in fact, wrong, then it is irrational behavior to do so. Differing opinions should be able to back up why their opposing views are correct over and against the other. “From my point of view, it is unacceptable.” is not good enough.Just one example: "in the ancient Roman times the whole family of deposed rulers was executed (to protect the new rulers, obviously). However, to execute a VIRGIN girl was not allowed according to their peculiar “moral” code. So the executioners first raped the girls, and THEN executed them. From our perspective this practice is horrendous. From THEIR perspective, it was fine. Do we have to agree with THEIR code? Of course not. From our point of view it is unacceptable.![]()
I’m thinking out loud here, but I wonder whether a distinction is in order at this point in the discussion:So how do you determine the objectively correct answer to problems where there are a multitude of differing opinions?
Unless you are going to suggest that not all moral problems can be couched in absolute terms (in which case you are going to need to explain how do decide which ones are absolute and which ones are not), then we need an answer to this.
I think not. An open question in the sciences is whether all scientific questions can be answered through recourse to the scientific method. The fact that the logical potential for such a sweeping affirmation isn’t helpful – the question is whether answers to all questions are accessible through these means. (In a way, I’m asking a question not entirely unlike computer science’s “P=NP?” question in the realm of morality.)It is futile telling me that there is an absolute answer to a moral problem if you cannot tell me how we access it.
Channeling Persig, I’d answer that this usually means that the wrong question is being asked. I say, “mu! re-ask the question!”All one has to do is bring up a not-so-obvious scenario and there is a deafening silence.
I disagree to an extent.Before we get to this interesting and worthy tributary, we first need to establish that there are some things in the moral world which are, objectively, wrong.
Do we agree on this?
The fact that you seem to think that questions on factory farming are hard moral problems is revealing. The simple ones appear to be the ones where there are consensus – genocide, torture , rape. But ask a Catholic if we should keep chickens in a shed and it becomes a difficult question.You don’t think it’s possible for there to be absolute moral answers to the harder questions without us (currently) having the ability to discern them.
Fair point. Maybe a better analogy might be maths and absolute morality. Because that what seems to be argued from your side of the fence. That just as there are mathematical truths (the square on the hypotenuse etc), then there are moral truths ‘out there’ waiting for us to find them. Just as it is more the case that we discover these mathematical truths and we can’t individually decide what they should be, then absolute truth is there for us to discover. Somehow.That would be relevant if and only if our non-absolute scientific laws were non-absolute because they were based off our opinions. But, they are not. Our scientific laws cause things to behave as they do regardless of what we think. It is my position that the same is true of morality.
I don’t believe you are correct. I think that there are valid reasons for choosing the type of society that we live in over that of North Korea and those reasons are valid whether you believe them or not. And in this case we are talking about facts, not morality, so I have no problem in maintaining that there are positions you can take based on those absolute facts. In the same way, there are facts relating to, for example, torture. And we can make a stand saying that it is abhorrent (in almost all circumstances) because of that fact. That doesn’t make torture morally absolute. For it to be so then you would have to argue that it is wrong in all circumstances and my position is that that is not possible.One person among two who differ on a moral position can be closer to the truth than another. That is not possible if morality isn’t objective in some way. But no one thinks that North Korean culture is morally superior to modern western culture. Except, of course for some North Koreans and a few others, but we think they are mistaken; and we think they are mistaken not just because we arbitrarily decide they are mistaken. Thinking they are mistaken would be meaningless unless we legitimately think we are appealing to a higher standard than just what society as a group decides.
Here I depart from Vera’s position. I do say that it is innate. It is the position from which I am arguing. Morality doesn’t need to be taught and there are libraries of references I could give you that would indicate this. Children only a few months old exhibit morality. It is part of who we are as a species. We wouldn’t be here without it. It is not correct to propose that an isolated island full of people would grow up without it.I never actually said anything about morality being innate, just that it is objective. Children have to be taught mathematical truths, that does not mean that 6/3=2 isn’t true. The person who says that it equals 4, instead, is wrong. That morality has to be taught is no obstacle to its objectivity. Just because it must be taught doesn’t mean that it gets its truthfulness from society arbitrarily saying it’s true.
I don’t see any problem with getting uptight about a question of morals whether you perceive morality to be objective or not. There are reasons for getting upset about certain matters that have nothing to do with whether there is a morally absolute answer to the problem.Thank you for bringing us back to the actual question. We are not arguing if morality is objective. We are arguing whether it is rational behavior to get morally outraged while also thinking that moral statements are only true because some societies arbitrarily decide that they are true.
You know, this kind of reasoning would be an excellent start, IF ONLY you could follow it through.But no one thinks that North Korean culture is morally superior to modern western culture. Except, of course for some North Koreans and a few others, but we think they are mistaken; and we think they are mistaken not just because we arbitrarily decide they are mistaken.
You could continue from here. Tell us about that higher standard, and how is it applicable. Because so far you did not offer any argument, except: “we legitimately think…”. And that is not much of an argument. Neither “ethics”, nor “aesthetics” have an objective foundation. Most people agree that rape is “wrong”, just like most people agree that the Ninth Symphony is beautiful. But these are subjective opinions. There is no epistemological method which would separate the “moral” and “immoral” actions, just like there is no method to separate the “beautiful” music from the “mundane”.Thinking they are mistaken would be meaningless unless we legitimately think we are appealing to a higher standard than just what society as a group decides.
Well, saying: “it is not good enough” is just an opinion,No, we don’t have to agree with their code, but unless we disagree with it because it is, in fact, wrong, then it is irrational behavior to do so. Differing opinions should be able to back up why their opposing views are correct over and against the other. “From my point of view, it is unacceptable.” is not good enough.
Actually, this is a misunderstanding. I say that the question: “is action X moral” is an irrelevant question, UNLESS you can offer an objective method to separate the “moral” and “immoral” behavior. On the other hand, “is action X legal” is an objective question. Legality has nothing to do with “morality”, and the problem is that no one can provide a good definition of “morality”. At least I have never seen one.You proposed a way to solve the question of whether racial discrimination is acceptable or not. You also came to the conclusion that the only practical way to find a solution is to take it into the legal realm.
My mistake, I apologize. I have always been told that there is some “innate moral law”, usually followed by the phrase “inscribed on the heart”. If you wish to distance yourself from this concept, that is fine by me.I never actually said anything about morality being innate, just that it is objective. Children have to be taught mathematical truths, that does not mean that 6/3=2 isn’t true. The person who says that it equals 4, instead, is wrong. That morality has to be taught is no obstacle to its objectivity. Just because it must be taught doesn’t mean that it gets its truthfulness from society arbitrarily saying it’s true.
Is it a wrong question: “should one walk stark naked on the beach in broad daylight”? In many western societies public nudity is “indecent” and therefore “immoral”. In other societies it is simply: “ho-hum”… “who cares”?Channeling Persig, I’d answer that this usually means that the wrong question is being asked. I say, “mu! re-ask the question!”![]()
Yes!!Fair point. Maybe a better analogy might be maths and absolute morality. Because that what seems to be argued from your side of the fence. That just as there are mathematical truths (the square on the hypotenuse etc), then there are moral truths ‘out there’ waiting for us to find them. Just as it is more the case that we discover these mathematical truths and we can’t individually decide what they should be, then absolute truth is there for us to discover. Somehow.
But unless you can say: yes, it’s morally permissible for a father to kill his daughter for being raped, because, after all, that’s what his tribe has discerned is the right thing to do…Is it a wrong question: “should one walk stark naked on the beach in broad daylight”? In many western societies public nudity is “indecent” and therefore “immoral”. In other societies it is simply: “ho-hum”… “who cares”?
Do that and you have answered the whole question. Tell me what you think the difference is between a matter that you consider to be an absolute truth and one that is just a matter of personal opinion based on available facts.I’m thinking out loud here, but I wonder whether a distinction is in order at this point in the discussion:
Can we distinguish – reasonably and logically – between ‘objective morality’ and ‘subjective understanding and acceptance of moral questions’? This would seem to resolve a couple of problems, not the least of which is the question of how we contextualize the ‘reasonable person’ conundrum.
I’m not suggesting that you have the answer to all problems to hand. Or even that you personally know how to access them. But you do need to admit that there could be a method whereby we could access absolute truths AND know that we are correct when we think we have found them.Therefore, the answer of the question “is there an absolute answer?” is not necessarily identical to the answer of the question “do we know how to access the answer today?”. That’s the assertion that you’re attempting to make, and I’m not certain that it’s a valid assertion. After all, I could turn the assertion around on you and state (quite absurdly), “it is futile telling me that there is an absolute answer to the question of the origins of creation if you cannot tell me how we access it.”
Comparing apples and oranges is an age-old, but still deplorable tactics to evade hard hitting questions.But unless you can say: yes, it’s morally permissible for a father to kill his daughter for being raped, because, after all, that’s what his tribe has discerned is the right thing to do…
…and I’m certain that you will NEVER say that…
then the above point you’ve made is otiose.