However, morals are not mere matters of arbitrary, ad hoc opinion, are not mere whims of the moment; there are common/shared (involuntary) aspects of life, agreements, that render morals objective-like.
Yet, it seems that reducing morals to self-interest is the most commonly accepted justification, or understanding, thereof, like The Golden Rule, for example. — jorndoe
You want maximum personal freedom - but within a global context which is stable enough, integrated enough, to underwrite that very freedom. — apokrisis
Article IV - Liberty consists of doing anything which does not harm others: thus, the exercise of the natural rights of each man has only those borders which assure other members of the society the enjoyment of these same rights. These borders can be determined only by the law. — Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789
Taxes are what we pay for civilized society. — Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr
Perhaps the objective versus subjective dichotomy is sort of missing the point, or is a misleading line of inquiry. — jorndoe
Why do you think this is self-evidently the right thing to say? — apokrisis
Social conditioning is probably about as good at creating monsters as it is fostering care. I'm sure you know that from experience.A history of social conditioning? — apokrisis
Be authentic. — Mongrel
Love and do what you will. — Mongrel
I experience morality viscerally. — Mongrel
Well, why do we have (secular) law? — jorndoe
Why wouldn't suppressing an impulse to punch my boss be authentic anyway? — jorndoe
A degree of empathy can likely be cultivated — jorndoe
Perhaps a more interesting question is then: how do we learn, understand and rationalize morals and moral behavior, as social matters? — jorndoe
masturbation (pardon my French) — jorndoe
I experience morality viscerally. I work in healthcare and occasionally cause people pain. — Mongrel
Traditionally, across most cultures, morality is not a social issue. — Mongrel
1. involuntary: most of us like freedom, and dislike being harmed
2. subjective: (1) is not objective, and only has meaning in terms of us beings that dis/like things
3. morals: us liking freedom and disliking being harmed is relevant for morals
4. therefore morals are subjective (in part or whole) — jorndoe
Either objective versus subjective is a false dichotomy, or morals are subjective. — Jorndoe
Before the Protestant Reformation, Western Christianity was an institutionalized worldview laden with expectations of security for earthly societies and hopes of eternal salvation for individuals. The Reformation’s protagonists sought to advance the realization of this vision, not disrupt it. But a complex web of rejections, retentions, and transformations of medieval Christianity gradually replaced the religious fabric that bound societies together in the West. Today, what we are left with are fragments: intellectual disagreements that splinter into ever finer fractals of specialized discourse; a notion that modern science—as the source of all truth—necessarily undermines religious belief; a pervasive resort to a therapeutic vision of religion; a set of smuggled moral values with which we try to fertilize a sterile liberalism; and the institutionalized assumption that only secular universities can pursue knowledge.
If ought (pre/proscriptive propositions) cannot be derived from is (descriptive propositions), then it seems we start out with ought (independently of is)? — jorndoe
But healthcare is precisely where there is close social attention paid to the ethical dilemmas. — apokrisis
The Hippocratic Oath is an altruistic expression of moral duty. — jorndoe
That seems to be the problem to me--that people WANT morality to be objective.But, as much as I like to take objective morals for granted, — jorndoe
The only thing with that is that "societies should flourish" or "it's better for societies to flourish" (or whatever similar formulation) isn't objective.So what does morality boil down to. It boils down to the dynamic, the balance, that makes for a flourishing society. That is the general goal that morality encodes - and must do naturally, inevitably, just because societies only persist as systems if they are fit in this fashion. — apokrisis
I wonder if people like that would also say that playing the piano and driving a car are fundamentally socially mediated activities (because you couldn't do them if you were alone in the wilderness). — Mongrel
An odd reference since the incapacity has nothing to do with the isolation and everything to do with the absence of physical objects. — Barry Etheridge
Isn't that exactly how the first hermits and monks justified their existence? — Barry Etheridge
Yeah, I'd agree that there are such facts--although most of the conventional moral stance-related things that people claim to be such facts I think are highly dubious as such. In other words, I don't think it's at all clear that societies couldn't allow murders, rapes, etc. and persist. What people usually take to be epistemically sufficient for knowing that stuff--namely, "I thought about it for 10 minutes" (if that--it's probably usually less) "and it seemed intuitively correct to me"--is ridiculous in my opinion.I said it was a necessary one (for a social system to persist). — apokrisis
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