I’d rather not beat the little bits of pulp that used to be this particular horse any more. For a specific example, check out Kant’s Groundwork of the Metaphysic of Morals.
I know it, and the other systems. I don’t know if those are rightly called absolute.
1-they are contingent
1(a)As contingent they are only absolute so long as we say they are absolute
Silly Sally Went To the Happy Store to Buy a Kitty, But they were all gone
That sequence of marks has an absolute meaning in the same sense Kants Categorical Imperitives do
There are plenty of others, though: moral absolutism need not depend on God, only on something – anything – held to be absolute.
I think you’re way off.
Would Peter Singer say he was a moral absolutist?
It does not make just any absolutist ethic right, but one cannot deny that it is absolute.
Well what do you mean by “absolute”, I think most people here speaking of the natural law refer to a transcendent morality indipendent of human existence with a true reality, clearly that is not what a utilitarian means for his system of ethics.
And so it is perfectly plausible to speak of a ‘just government’ without having to drag God and the people who claim to speak for God into the picture
Alright, a just government is one in which atheists and agnostics are excluded from the political process.
Now we are back to me asking why you should be included?
The only response I have seen is why shoulden’t you be included, to which I would respond because we have the power and don’t want you to.
I just don’t see how you can rationally complain about that, other than you simply dislike it.