andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2007-03-26 05:41 pm
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It's not a matter of rights
I've been thinking about morality, and while I know _my_ thoughts on it, and how they got there, I'm interested in what tack other people take. Specifically, for people that believe in absolute morality I'm curious as to what their basis/reasoning is.
I've therefore simplified the different approaches down to five options:
1) There is no absolute right and wrong - all morality is subjective opinion.
For those people who believe that all moral statements are claims about the way that the speaker would like the world to be. "Homosexuality is wrong." translates as "I wish people didn't engage in homosexual acts."
2) There is absolute right and wrong - I know what it is because God/God's representatives told me.
Which includes all of those people who draw their morality from religion. And know what right and wrong are either because they've learned from religious teachers or spoken directly to a divine entity. "Homosexuality is wrong." translates as "God says that people should not engage in homosexual acts."
The problem with this approach is that you're dependent on your religious teachers not having been fooled by their own religious teachers (or _their_ teachers, etc) and that the morality wasn't just made up by someone who then told them that God said so. If you heard it direct from God then this doesn't apply, but you might want to wonder about your sanity.
3) There is absolute right and wrong - I know what it is because it feels Right/Wrong to me.
Which covers all of those people who _know_ that stoning homosexuals to death is wrong, but this knowledge stems from internal intuition and feeling, not from external sources. "Homosexuality is wrong." translates to "Homosexuality is just plain wrong. I can tell."
The problem with this is that feelings aren't terribly trustworthy, and you if you feel that something is right, while someone else feels the exact opposite then you have to question why your feelings would have a direct link to Absolute Truth and theirs wouldn't.
4) There is absolute right and wrong - I don't know what they are though.
For those people convinced that there is an absolute morality, but don't maintain that they have access to said Universal Truth. You'd never hear these people say "Homosexuality is wrong.", instead they'd say "Homosexuality might be wrong, how would we know?"
The problem with this is that if you don't have access to Universal Truth then you don't have access to anything which could prove that there's such a thing as Universal Truth.
5) I have no idea if there is absolute right and wrong.
For those people that just don't know whether morality is objective or subjective. Those people aren't actually likely to have read this far, and probably don't think or care about this kind of thing, so who knows what they'd use to justify their stance on homosexuality. They might fill in the poll though, because polls are kewl.
[Poll #954176]
I am interested, by the way, and I'd love to know more. So do tell me how exactly you don't fit into any of the above categories - if nothing else I'll delight in pointing out exactly how you do :->
I've therefore simplified the different approaches down to five options:
1) There is no absolute right and wrong - all morality is subjective opinion.
For those people who believe that all moral statements are claims about the way that the speaker would like the world to be. "Homosexuality is wrong." translates as "I wish people didn't engage in homosexual acts."
2) There is absolute right and wrong - I know what it is because God/God's representatives told me.
Which includes all of those people who draw their morality from religion. And know what right and wrong are either because they've learned from religious teachers or spoken directly to a divine entity. "Homosexuality is wrong." translates as "God says that people should not engage in homosexual acts."
The problem with this approach is that you're dependent on your religious teachers not having been fooled by their own religious teachers (or _their_ teachers, etc) and that the morality wasn't just made up by someone who then told them that God said so. If you heard it direct from God then this doesn't apply, but you might want to wonder about your sanity.
3) There is absolute right and wrong - I know what it is because it feels Right/Wrong to me.
Which covers all of those people who _know_ that stoning homosexuals to death is wrong, but this knowledge stems from internal intuition and feeling, not from external sources. "Homosexuality is wrong." translates to "Homosexuality is just plain wrong. I can tell."
The problem with this is that feelings aren't terribly trustworthy, and you if you feel that something is right, while someone else feels the exact opposite then you have to question why your feelings would have a direct link to Absolute Truth and theirs wouldn't.
4) There is absolute right and wrong - I don't know what they are though.
For those people convinced that there is an absolute morality, but don't maintain that they have access to said Universal Truth. You'd never hear these people say "Homosexuality is wrong.", instead they'd say "Homosexuality might be wrong, how would we know?"
The problem with this is that if you don't have access to Universal Truth then you don't have access to anything which could prove that there's such a thing as Universal Truth.
5) I have no idea if there is absolute right and wrong.
For those people that just don't know whether morality is objective or subjective. Those people aren't actually likely to have read this far, and probably don't think or care about this kind of thing, so who knows what they'd use to justify their stance on homosexuality. They might fill in the poll though, because polls are kewl.
[Poll #954176]
I am interested, by the way, and I'd love to know more. So do tell me how exactly you don't fit into any of the above categories - if nothing else I'll delight in pointing out exactly how you do :->
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I believe that there are a rather small core of actions which 'almost everybody' -- across all human societies -- finds pretty repellent. Breeding children for food, for example. (Repellent and also impractical and expensive, in that case). So unless you entirely reject the concept of absolute morality, there's this set of things that keep coming up, across ages and societies, as being not quite how people behave.
Note that very little in the way of consensual sexual activity would be in that category, and nor would capital punishment for major transgressions of societal norms.
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sigh
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Surely you need a "not" in one of those sentences?
Anyway, I'll go for 1 with the proviso that you replace "subjective" with "intersubjective" and accept that it's not about what world people would wish to see, but the one they do see. Because, while the law or the norm may be a "construct", it's a construct you get in a lot of trouble for deconstructing or choosing to disregard!
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Right and wrong are socially created values that are designed to allow a smooth(ish) functioning society. E.g. Murder is considered very anti-stability, hence big taboo, as is lying. But something not as directly societal threatening (even if questionable) like trident is less taboo.
A good example is homosexuality. Where this is not seen as a challenge to society it’s not a big issue. Where it’s seen as an attack on society, it is.
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Ooops
Kind of...
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I don't think it'd make sense for my own beliefs to be anything less than absolute to me. I have no desire to make other people follow them. Other people can do whatever the heck they like.
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let me tell you everything
ONLY PHYSICAL LAWS would rank as absolute, and even their we've got observer effects and local effects.
ONLY DREAM STATES are almost entirely without intersubective and objectyive input, but even they rely on previous experience of the world and other people.
MAYBE YOU ARE ASKING: is morality innate or acquired. Its pretty clear its innate, mediated by hormones like oxytocin, and necessary for the survival of the species.
IT IS ALSO PRETTY CLEAR that is is based on an intersubjectivity that strictly defines in groups and out groups.
THE BASIC MORAL LAW, biologically speaking is: preserve the in group and destroy or avoid the out group.
THATS ABOUT AS CLOSE to a human absolute as you will get. Without it none of us would be here.
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It is difficult to give examples and morality covers a number of subjects but in order to explain why there is no absolute I will use Murder. Most people would believe that Murder is an absolute wrong. But behind that statement there is quickly a number of contradictions.
If someone has a gun pointed at you and you have the opportunity to kill them before they kill you, I would say that is morally acceptable. If someone is pointing a gun at someone else and you have the chance to kill them first, I would say this is also morally acceptable. So right off the bat I have conceded that at some points, murder is acceptable.
Then there is what most would consider dodgy ground. If someone kills your lover in cold blood, is it morally wrong to kill them if you get the chance? The law definitely states it is, but I would be morally at odds over the subject, If it were me having lost someone I cared about deeply, I can't say for certain I would not do it or regret it afterward.
I know this is only one aspect of morality, but the value we place on human life is pretty intrinsic to our moral code. I'm probably oversimplifying it somewhat, but I fail to see how is there a clear cut code that we should follow; we all have to find our own way and live true to what we believe. Our interactions and observations help shape our opinions and morals and we should keep an open mind where possible.