J
josie_L
Guest
You are wrong in stating this, and here is why (I will post a conversation taken from a book entitled: A Refutation of Moral Relativism);Yes, I agree with you, as you have just stated that sometimes evil is justifiable, thus there is no such thing as a moral absolute.
Libby: So absolutes are unchangeable.
Isa: Yes, and universal, and objective. Those are the three characteristics that distinguish an absolute. It is not relative to time, so it doesn’t change. And it’s not relative to place or nation or class or culture or race or gender or any group - it’s universal. Third, it’s not relative to opinion or thought or belief or desire or feeling or any subjective consciousness. It’s objectively real, objectively true, whether I or you or anyone else knows it, or believes it, or likes it, or cares about it, or obeys it.
Libby: So personal opinions and beliefs and feelings and motivations and intentions - they don’t change morality?
Isa: No. . . .
Libby: So intentions aren’t important, ony the rules?
Isa: No, that’s not right. Some moral rules are about intentions. Others are about external deeds. For instance, “don’t be greedy” is about intentions, and “don’t steal” is about deeds. But both are absolute. Greed and theft are both wrong - always wrong, for everyone. No exceptions.
Libby: So a good intention doesn’t make a deed good?
Isa: It doesn’t make a bad deed good.
Libby: So love isn’t enough? A sincere, loving intention isn’t enough? Is that what you’re saying?
Isa: That’s what I’m saying. If I kill you because I’m sincerely trying to help the poor by killing the rich, that’s still a bad deed.
Libby: So only deeds count, not intentions?
Isa: No, both count. You need both good deeds and good intentions. Neither one can substitute for the other. A good deed doesn’t change a bad intention into a good one, so a good intention doesn’t change a bad deed into a good deed either.
Libby: And what about situations? Changing situations don’t change morality either, according to your absolutism?
Isa: No, they change how you should apply the rules, but they don’t change the rules.
Libby: So it’s just as wrong for Jean Valjean in Les Miserables to steal a loaf of bread to feed his starving family as it for Blackbeard the pirate to steal the King’s gold to make himself rich? Is that what you’re saying?
Isa: No, I say Jean Valjean did not steal at all. He had a right to that food. Blackbeard had no right to the gold.
Libby: I see. So the situation doesn’t ever change stealing from wrong to right, but it sometimes changes taking from stealing to not stealing.
Isa: Very well put, Libby.
Libby: Let’s be sure I understand this. You’re a moral absolutist, but you’d say it was morally right for a Dutch family who were hiding Jews from the Nazis to lie to the Nazis when they came to search the house, right? I mean you’d say that wasn’t lying at all, because the Nazis had no right to know. Is that right?
Isa: Yes. The Nazis had no right to know that truth, and the Jews had a right to conceal it, and the Dutch had a right to deceive the Nazis about it - an obligation, even. So it wasn’t wrong. Lying is always wrong, and that wasn’t wrong, so that wasn’t a lie, just as Jean Valjean taking the bread wasn’t theft. So the absolutes remain: never lie, never steal.