P
polytropos
Guest
I agree. The modern paradigm would be that the fornicator should permit others to fornicate, full stop. And it is good for him to do so insofar that he would not be hypocritical, but that alone is an impoverished moral description of his actions.Actually, this is part of the reason I brought the issue up to begin with. Without the foundational ethical principles of Christianity, the Golden Rule is often trotted out as an exemplar of what justice means and that the Golden Rule leads, necessarily, to not interfering in the morals of others because “I don’t want anyone interfering with mine.”
I think that any use of the golden rule has to be tethered by other moral principles. Should one intervene when another person is about to use heroin? Well, I would want someone to intervene if I were about to use heroin, but I am not addicted by heroin (golden rule). But the heroin addict does not want to be stopped, so if one follows the silver rule (do unto others as you think they would like you to do), it would seem that you shouldn’t stop him. So if one were to take the golden or silver rule as a basis for morality, it’s not really clear what one should do. If I permit someone to take heroin, then I am doing what I don’t want done to myself; if I prevent them, then I am not doing what they want done.
So taking the golden rule to imply tolerance, full stop, seems not to get very far, but you are right - that is its main application today. It yields inconsistent results. Recreational drug use is a great example, since there is a continuum of drugs varying in degree of dangerousness. Few people think that the most dangerous drugs should be used freely, but in the case of other drugs, people are more likely to have a “go ahead” sort of attitude. But the more dangerous drugs seem to show that the golden rule is not anyone’s foundation of morality, since eventually the “I value my freedom, so I will let him do whatever” attitude gives way to some other principle regarding self-harm.