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Ender
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I’m making a finer point than this. We have a moral obligation to address the problems of the poor. Fulfilling that obligation, however, requires us to make decisions about what will or will not work and in the application of specific solutions we are not faced with moral problems. It isn’t clear to me that determining what to do about the minimum wage is any more of a moral concern than determining how to get your neighbor’s car started. Once the decision has been made to do what one can to help the rest is mechanics.I agree with a lot of what you said, with the exception that minimum wage, etc are not ethical issues but merely economic. Ethical approaches, utilizing inherent moral guidance of conscience, should dictate economic policy while making sure not to hurt the economic model in the process for the community at large. If it were purely economic, there wouldn’t be a question on how or why these things exist- they wouldn’t.
The argument that economic issues are moral issues as well can only be sustained if you judge someone’s intent. If you accept that everyone wants to do what is best, where is the moral distinction?
But this isn’t my point and this is not the problem we face in resolving social ills. If we accept a just objective - which is a moral choice - the choices (within reason) of how to reach that objective have no moral component. Pick any issue at all and tell me what specific policy constitutes an immoral choice as distinct from a mistake.When one seeks to divorce morality and ethics from any governmental or personal decision, that person has just swung a wrecking ball at the thread which barely holds our society together.
I confess to not reading the sources but your summary shows we are still on different points. The question is not whether or not we should care or behave ethically but about which approaches work and which do not. Is, for example, the decision to accept or reject Dr. Sowell’s conclusion a moral choice or a prudential one?Notice what Dr. Friedman says at the end, as it raises the economic question built upon by Dr. Sowell and then shows how morality and ethically sound approaches actual do better without intervention, such as in church programs, hospitals, etc.
Ender