I am only going to argue it out with people who will accept that if the law is wrong then it needs changing — unenlightened
But literally no one either here or in the entire moral philosophy canon is arguing that a law which is 'wrong' is best left unchanged. I can't think of a single person whom your caveat rules out. — Isaac
plenty of people argue that it might be good sometimes. — unenlightened
The defined word 'morality' is alignment to good, an evil alternative would be as sub-versive as possible. — Qwex
No, I don't think I will. — unenlightened
↪Isaac Oh, hush your mouth. You did well to get that much out of him.
Besides, he answered your question earlier:
There are plenty of people who believe in extra-judicial killings, enhanced interrogation, etc. They believe injustice is right. — unenlightened — Banno
But to live outside the law, you must be honest
I know you always say that you agree
Alright so where are you tonight, sweet Marie? — His Bobness
I am certainly not beyond the possibility of equivocation, but Anscombe is a smart cookie and you ought to give her published work at least the respect of being very careful about such accusations. — unenlightened
You read her as rejecting rules? No, she rejects obligation. — Banno
Grayling drew my attention back to this article, when in his History of Philosophy he says she:
...argued that both deontology and consequentialism assume a foundation for ethics in the concept of obligation, which makes no sense in the absence of a lawgiver which or who imposes it... — Banno
he thing about extra-judicial killings is that they are not murders such as you and I might commit, but acts of the law-making state, exempting itself from its own definition of justice. So an individual or a revolutionary group can honestly reject the law, but the state itself cannot. — unenlightened
He thinks that every word has a strict definition, every thing a genus and differentia.
But it ain't so.
Hence, for him, the world equivocates. — Banno
But meanwhile - is it not clear that there are several concepts that need investigating simply as part of the philosophy of psychology and, as I should recommend - banishing ethics totally from our minds? Namely - to begin with: "action," "intention," "pleasure," "wanting." More will probably turn up if we start with these. Eventually it might be possible to advance to considering the concept "virtue"; with which, I suppose, we should be beginning some sort of a study of ethics. — Anscombe
From a psychological standpoint, starting with "character" puts the cart before the horse. — Galuchat
The boundary between "learned" and "innate" is not so clear, so I do not think reference to such a boundary could make a useful moral principle. — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, if "virtue" could only refer to learned characteristics, then if we were to judge innate characteristics they could only be judged as vices or indifferent. If all innate characteristics are indifferent, then we cannot learn to overcome any innate tendencies to become virtuous. — Metaphysician Undercover
The boundary between "learned" and "innate" is the boundary between "culture" and "nature". — Galuchat
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