Once again, you are allowing only an either/or scenario, which is a fallacy of logic.
That makes no sense. One of the basic principles of Philosophy is the either/or scenario. It’s called the Principle of non-contradiction, which we’ve already discussed.
Now, not all things are either/or. In fact, most of Catholicism is both/and.
But **
either **you must obey your conscience always, **
or **you’re obeying something else when you decide on the morality of a situation.
You can not provide any example of someone doing the morally right thing who disobeys his conscience and obeys something else.
I believe that the best behavior is a combination of one’s own conscience informed by the morality and historical and artistic and cultural history of one’s society. There is no such thing as ONLY one’s conscience or ONLY the cultural values. Put another way, I object to the claim that EITHER one follows the cultural mores OR one must follow one’s conscience. One can, of course, find ways to combine both or ways to avoid both.
So give me an example in which one would be morally right to disobey his conscience.
For the record, I** don’t think that one “must”** ever do anything, except exist and die…eventually.
I think this is an example of one of those statements that you referenced earlier: (see below)
I will, in the next week, contradict myself
You’re going to say that you do realize that there are things we as moral human persons “must” do. (Well, I know you’re not going to admit it here on a semi-public forum, but…)
I know you are a moral person, or I would not be giving you the time of day. “Ignore” status would be my release from this.
A moral person knows he is obligated to do good and avoid evil. It is our
obligation if you’re a moral person. That is, it is a MUST.