Continued from above post:
We can know through our “psychological” make-up some moral values (a la natural law), but their ontological make-up is still a bit uncertain. I don’t see how grounding them in the properties of human beings gives them solid enough ground for being objective. The properties could still have been otherwise.
Well, in theory yes they could, but in actuality, as we are driven to ensure the survival of the species, I dont think they could have been otherwise. Because working in a co-operative group we learned very quickly actions have consequences, and we can learn the lessons of these consequences, and come to a clear decision as to whether they will help us achieve our goal or not.
When my kids were really young, too young to have a conversation with, they did what mommy told them to. So, to use the same example as before with the cookies, the first lesson is it’s wrong to steal because mommy said so. I know the consequences for the group, family, individual, but the best I can do a that age is say NO! As they grow older, they learn that if they steal the cookies, the whole family are mad at them, and theyre shunned by their siblings who are furious with them, and family time is shortened, and theres not a nice atmosphere, and that feeling is so much worse than anything mommy can say!! Still a little later on, they can appreciate that being seen as a co operative member of the group, sharing, pulling their weight, makes life so much better for everyone, no just immediately around them, but even further, such as relatives, or strangers in public. So it becomes hardwired into them, part of their conscience, stealing hurts the individual, those around her, the family, friends and neighbors, and ultimately the whole group or society. And now its not a case of not stealing because mommy said so, it’s because the whole of society says so, and the consequences are clear. Properly informed they wont steal not because they fear being caught, but because they have a deep understanding of how it hurts the whole group, or the whole of society.
So, yeah, I can see how they are subjective now, rather than what I was calling ‘‘objective’’ but I wonder if simply moving the decision on what is acceptable or not onto God, as opposed to the group, is not just the same thing.
But remember my first distinction earlier, the problem is not know-ability but exist-ability. Do these moral values exist objectively as values independently of human development via evolutionary properties?
This is the point I was refering to where I said your post and some other posters made me think, which is great.
Good question - and I dont think they do exist outside of our human evolutionary development. They couldnt, because they evolved as we evolved. We have the ability to see way into the future and imagine, something the other animals as far as we can tell cannot do. This gives us the ability to plan for the future, to look at actions and consequences, and decide what is morally acceptable and what is not, based on the driving urge to survive as an individual in a co operative group setting.
In other words, could the objective moral values be otherwise if we were otherwise hardwired? If so, are they really objective in a metaphysical sense?
I loved the way you made my brain dance with those last two questions. I guess my answer is see above. In theory I suppose it could have been otherwise, but not really if we wanted to ensure our survival, which we are driven to.
And in fact our morality *was *otherwise with Holy wars, inquisitions, burning witches, stoning homosexuals, keeping slaves, denegrading women - but I would argue that it was our own secular morality, driven by a sense of injustice, wrong, and ultimate harm to our society and survival that started the processes to bring these immoral actions to an end.
Have a great day. And thanks for the well-wishes on my profession.
You too - and you’re very welcome. I told my husband I was talking about morality with, amongst others, a soon to be priest and he nearly blessed himself


Sarah x
