I think enforceability is one problem for morality. — Andrew4Handel
It is almost like force triumphs over ideology. — Andrew4Handel
Morality seems seriously undermined if people can just override a moral claim by an action. — Andrew4Handel
For example it seems pointless to call The Holocaust wrong after it has already happened and millions of people have died and are apparently beyond the scope of justice. It seems a belated moral judgement. — Andrew4Handel
I don't think we know if any action is moral — Andrew4Handel
I think some people act and they feel satisfied with their action and that makes them believe the action or their prior intuition was correct. — Andrew4Handel
Morality changes, but moral guidance continues. — Bitter Crank
And then you're wondering how we can enforce morality. Wouldn't laws work? We think it's immoral to kill someone premeditatively, where the killer initiated the action, so we make that illegal, and then we can arrest and incarcerate the perpetrator. That's enforcement, isn't it? — Terrapin Station
The first thing I find curious is that you're apparently thinking of morality as something that it shouldn't be possible to act against, either literally or practically. Or at least if one can act against it, you therefore see morality as pointless. — Terrapin Station
This realization goes back at least to the Greeks. On the other hand, individuals aren't that powerful away from groups. Any force sufficient to triumph on a large scale is therefore to be expected from a group. — macrosoft
Indeed, and sometimes that is a good thing ---if, for instance, human beings are understood as property or if homosexuality is considered evil — macrosoft
You can't "prove" that something is moral or immoral because the idea of that doesn't even make sense. — Terrapin Station
A car and a heart have a function that can be proven when they stop functioning. I don't think biological functions are mind dependent at all. — Andrew4Handel
The body functions successfully and performs vital tasks to keep a live. — Andrew4Handel
I don't agree with your characterization of morality. — Andrew4Handel
One state that they're in is not objectively preferable to any other state they're in or can be in. — Terrapin Station
Morality, factually, is simply ways that people feel about interpersonal behavior. — Terrapin Station
It is not a case of whether a state is preferable but whether it is performing a function. — Andrew4Handel
Everthing physically possible is a function.
"How something functions ideally" is about individuals' preferences. There is no objective "ideal," no factual "ideal," beyond that people prefer. — Terrapin Station
I don't see why the way someone feels about a certain behavior equals a morality. — Andrew4Handel
I don't consider all my responses to behavior of myself or others as moral responses. — Andrew4Handel
Can you not tell the difference between when your computer of phone is functioning or malfunctioning? — Andrew4Handel
Certainly I can. But how? Well, based on how I think about that, what my preferences are, etc. — Terrapin Station
What about the fact that there are objectively different states something can be in. A malfunctioning computer is no in the same states as a functioning one. — Andrew4Handel
But I think moral needs something more rather than just stating that something is harmful or not to your preference. — Andrew4Handel
Because that's factually all that's going on when we "do morality." — Terrapin Station
I don't think the fact we have a preference and or intuition about certain behavior means that is all that is going on. — Andrew4Handel
So for example pain caused by standing on glass does not lead me to a moral judgement — Andrew4Handel
Right. For one, because morality is judgments about interpersonal behavior, and that's not interpersonal behavior. That's not an exhaustive definition, just part of it. — Terrapin Station
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