Motivations and circumstance, rather than the action itself, are, in my eyes, way more important in judging the morality of a certain action. In what way can it ever be said that the motivations and circumstances of all a groups' members are exactly the same? — Tzeentch
You make a good if obvious point: circumstances and motivations are important. — Aleph Numbers
Maybe a computer could do it. :chin: — Aleph Numbers
your conclusion itself is a fallacy. — MSC
You also assume 7 billion+ humans are the majority. — MSC
discerntion — god must be atheist
Please tell me what it is about morality that makes it different from everything else, and most prominently different from good and bad. — god must be atheist
I'll say it again then: if I define morality as "what is considered good behavior by most people some of the time" that means that if most people believe something is the correct thing to do morally some of the time it is the moral thing to do in the appropriate circumstances. Not a fallacy. — Aleph Numbers
what is considered appropriate behavior for most humans some of the time. — Aleph Numbers
Brah, are you drunk? I have no idea what you are talking about here either:
Please tell me what it is about morality that makes it different from everything else, and most prominently different from good and bad.
— god must be atheist — Aleph Numbers
who is doing the considering — god must be atheist
The additonal qualifyer "some of the time" completely obliterates any usefully tangible meaning in this attempt at a definition of morality. Thanks for putting that in. — god must be atheist
It totally is the opinion of the majority of people, yes — Aleph Numbers
So you believe in divine command theory, eh? — Aleph Numbers
Surely you do not believe that any given act could be moral in every situation? — Aleph Numbers
@Aleph NumbersObviously it is not I who haven't read your 2+ pages of posts, but it is you who were too lazy or inept to read my only one post. — god must be atheist
You are answering a question I did not ask. Which is fine. I don't mind if you exercise your right to free speech. Just saying that you are hedging, but I can't fault you for that. To wit: My question is, what is it about morality that ultimately, unambiguosly, and clearly delineates it from other human considerations? I ask, because my point is that though it may exist, humanity has not found out what it is, and therefore all speeches and conversations about morality that purport to make a point is futile. — god must be atheist
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