A
Areopagite
Guest
I wasn’t “explaining it away” at all. I was defining it.I don’t think morality can be explained away that simply.
Most philosophers in history have defined morality that way. Even atheistic ones. Just FYI.To say it is the fulfillment of our happiness sounds nice, but I can’t see how it holds water.
I deny that. It may be noble and heroic to “postpone your own happiness” for the sake of the happiness of others … and it may even increase your own happiness in the end … but such a thing is not obligatory (rather it’s supererogatory). Heroism is to be admired but by definition it is not ethically required.For many people, something that might make them happy would come at the expense of another. Indeed, that is why morality it tricky. I think that sometimes we need to postpone or deny our own happiness so that a fellow human may get closer to it.
I’m not sure what “it” means. Are you saying “would morality come more easily” or “would happiness come more easily”? In any case, for those who try to attain happiness in this life, I know very few who have attained it … especially hard for those who live immorally. Those who live moral lives seem more contented to me … more, dare I say, fulfilled.If morality simply followed the route of our own happiness, would it not come more easily?
What then is your definition of morality then? If you don’t offer an alternative, then I will be quite satisfied with the one I have … and the one most people have had throughout history. It is only uncommon and strange philosophers who have tried to sunder “happiness” from “being good.” One of the worst conceptual divorces I know of.I think the difficulty in pinning down morality shows just how complicated it can be. I will grant this, our happiness may be a component of it, but I think there is too much more to it for that to stand alone.
God is not the only one in this life that can dictate something and thus make something moral. I believe a government has the moral right to execute a dangerous criminal if the safety of society cannot be insured otherwise. However, I don’t think private individuals have the right to just kill anyone they think is dangerous even if they have committed crimes. The leaders of a society have the right to make that call for the society. Likewise, the leaders of society can grant an individual to carry out the execution. Hence, the moral goodness or badness of an individual executing a criminal is dependent on the dictate of a higher authority. Same kind of thing happens with God’s dictates, because God has the right to end people’s lives too … anyone’s life in God’s case.If you are conceding that God could allow rape to be moral, you are in essence saying that anything can become moral if dictated by God.
Now, I made a case to show how rape could possibly be permitted by God as well. I might be dead wrong. But simply saying that I’m wrong because then I am “in essence saying that anything can become moral if dictated by God” is not going to cut it. For, as I said before, certain dictates made by legitimate authorities can make certain actions moral. You have to prove why rape would not apply to that.