3. He is objectively neither right, nor wrong, because the question of who is and is not a member of your community is a subjective one.
You've already dismissed 3. If you accept 2 we have to also accept that vast quantities of people both act immoraly, and lie about their moral feelings when asked (which undermines the evidence base for universality). But that leaves us only with 1, which is the racist option.
Do you see the problem? — Isaac
To my way of thinking the entire civil rights movement is an exercise in higher morality. As such it - the exercise - comes at a cost. In a business/accounting metaphor, the reward, the revenue, is greater than the expense - it had better be! - and adjudged worth it; but the simple plain facts of the matter do not make the expense disappear - and they had better not! Among those are the moral and other expenses - costs - of breaking the law. — tim wood
Probably not. But some folks here argue that in terms of the morality/immorality of breaking the law, that there is no - zero - expense, that no immorality attaches to the breaking, because they have decided so. And expand this to the "doing of illegal drugs," of the title of this thread. I hold the first a fairly serious error/deficiency in understanding, the second an absurdity.So its (civil rights movement) morality outweighs its immorality? That is how I make every moral decision. I call the side that outweighs as the correct moral choice. Despite our MASSIVE disagreement on semantics, I am not sure our views on morality are that opposed. — ZhouBoTong
662
prior to that is the presupposition of respect for the law as law. Not as law-in-principle or as abstract, but as law. — Isaac
Again, you're not making the distinction that I am making. As such, every argument that you make misses the mark. — tim wood
As a member of a community, you are always under law, even while sleeping. As such, I hold, you are under a moral obligation with respect to the law - which is to say that you acknowledge the other in the law and his or her right to your compliance as supporting and maintaining your community. — tim wood
Disobedience (as observed before) is revolution writ small - or large! — tim wood
does your moral obligation to obey the law absolutely stop you from breaking the law? It does not. Clearly it does not. What follows then if you break it? A likely-hood of real harm to you and real harm to your community. And who authorized that other than you? — tim wood
It seems to me that "law as law" is law in general or law in principle, as opposed to 'law as a law' which is law in particular. — Janus
I call the side that outweighs as the correct moral choice. Despite our MASSIVE disagreement on semantics, I am not sure our views on morality are that opposed. — ZhouBoTong
Fuck off, mere-S. This adds nothing to the discussion. You're wasting my time and everyone else's time. — tim wood
But don't you suppose that topic, having nothing to do with this topic, deserves its own thread? — tim wood
And counter question: let's suppose you-all are right: that breaking the law is not immoral in any way in itself, then what happens to the law? — tim wood
So every question you can't or don't want to answer is stupid, vague and loaded, huh? :chin: — Shamshir
I'm guessing you're a person who obeys the law, or nearly all of them. The question is why? Because you have educated yourself on all of them and have got detailed knowledge of each, and from that knowledge base make a personal decision for yourself in every applicable situation and on every occasion whether to obey or break that law? Is that you? Or do you just comply, no-brainer, to most of it, and that for the precise and simple reason that it's the law. At every stop sign before you stop, in order to inform your decision as to whether to stop, do you consult road and traffic conditions, the weather, take into account the condition of your tires and the tire pressures, your brakes, the presence of other cars, pedestrians, or the possibility of a lurking police car, all in order to make the best decision about stopping? Or do you just see the sign, and stop? If you just obey the law because it's the law, that's towards what I mean by law-as-law.Yes, but no one has provided either a definition of what law in general, or law in principle, actually is. Nor, most importantly, how it is more than the sum of its parts. — Isaac
then how do you avoid the exhausting and constant consideration of your circumstances you need to be in compliance? Or do you just blow through stop signs?I'm claiming that things like 'law' as law do not exist. Law, as a concept is not coherent. — Isaac
Your failings span multiple topics. In this discussion, your failings relate to the ethics of taking illegal drugs. And the specific failing I pointed out was your failure to ask a sensible question. That failure is a reoccurring failure, in spite of my pointing it out earlier. The solution would be to put more thought into a question before asking it.
Hope that helps! :grin: :up: — S
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