Are you familiar with Kohlberg's theory of the stages of moral reasoning?
According to this theory, people at different stages of moral reasoning reason differently about issues of morality. On a metalevel, this explains the differences between people and how the same person can reason differently about the same moral issue, in different times of their life. — baker
This is where you differ from the people above. A consequent moral objectivist would either not ask about the origins of morality, or would be certain of a particular source of it. Either way, he would not struggle how to account for objective morality.
It appears that you're not a consequent moral objectivist. — baker
ethicists/bio-ethicists contribute disproportionately to the policies of organizations/corporations/government, and it matters whether or not they believe in an absolute morality. — ToothyMaw
I'm sounding like a stuck record, but... why? If a firm has gone to the trouble of consulting an ethicist what difference is it going to make to the outcome whether that ethicist believes in absolute morality? — Isaac
Which do you think is going to have the most normative force with the company? — Isaac
If they believe in absolute morality then they won't simply posit that ethics is relative - which is often equivalent to permitting just about anything within the scope of different cultures having different ethical beliefs. — ToothyMaw
It seems to me that unless the application of the absolute morality posited caused more net suffering - assuming a negative utilitarian stance - advising a company to do what is absolutely right would cause less suffering. — ToothyMaw
Indeed, tautologically so. And assuming a divine command theory stance - advising a company to do what is absolutely right would result in a happier God... Assuming a virtue ethical stance - advising a company to do what is more virtuous would lead to a more virtuous acting company... — Isaac
Knowing there is a methodology to making the incorrect moral decision adds at least a theoretical check on the decisions we make. Prior to committing crimes people are known to rationalize why the immoral act is in fact momentarily permissible. So, if I'm considering stealing I am also aware that a contextual lack of apparent immorality doesn't necessarily indicate the true nature of the situation. And yet when we test all our moral theories it's by demonstrating they produce a judgement that is inconsistent with some intuitive moral theory that takes precedent.I'm sounding like a stuck record, but... why? If a firm has gone to the trouble of consulting an ethicist what difference is it going to make to the outcome whether that ethicist believes in absolute morality? — Isaac
The lesson to take away is that subjective-as-in-phenomenal doesn't have to be subjective-as-in-relative, and conversely, something doesn't have to be objective-as-in-transcendent just to be objective-as-in-universal. — Pfhorrest
Really? It's not something I've ever encountered. I've sat on an ethics committee for a short while, permitting just about anything didn't come up, and absolute moral rightness wasn't even mentioned. The entire talk is about what people consider moral from different perspectives. What ethical committees are you thinking of where relativists say "anything goes!"? — Isaac
So how is following what 'seems best to me' not precisely relativism? — Isaac
when we test all our moral theories it's by demonstrating they produce a judgement that is inconsistent with some intuitive moral theory that takes precedent. — Cheshire
If some moral theory proved that killing some small child was the 'right' thing to do would you do it, or would you question the theory? — Isaac
Pedagogy and ideology – asa I've pointed out as the business of philosophers, et al – are, in fact, significant elements of "enculturation". — 180 Proof
I just assume that minimizing suffering is pretty much indisputably right, because that is how I and many people other feel — ToothyMaw
the few theists I've proposed it to just claimed the dilemma was "ridiculous" and rejected it. — ToothyMaw
I assume that by "apart from" you mean "independently of" and that "about an observer" you mean "depends on the observer". Right?I firmly believe things are right or wrong apart from who does them. But, I can't account for how this could be; because every case seems to be about an observer. — Cheshire
1. Is it Morally wrong to destroy a beautiful painting?
2. What if no one would have ever seen it?
3. What if you painted it? — Cheshire
I suppose I could arbitrarily specify that suffering is inherently bad, and then adopt a negative utilitarian position. That would lead to an absolute morality I think, even if not objective. — ToothyMaw
Pedagogue or ideologue are not "roles" for philosophers (sophists, clergy) to play? Your examples mostly belong to pedagogy. — 180 Proof
Pedagogy and ideology – as I've pointed out as the business of philosophers, et al – are, in fact, significant elements of "enculturation" — 180 Proof
Can you foresee any circumstance where the negative utilitarian position on an issue might, nonetheless feel wrong? If no, then no need for any moral thought at all, you already know what's right in any situation just by gut instinct. If yes, then what do you do? You only came up with negative utilitarianism because it's how you feel, so when it advises some course of action which clashes with how you feel in some other way, it has no greater claim to rightness. — Isaac
I have a preference to not suffer, and so does everyone else, so it should be avoided whenever possible — ToothyMaw
I can't think of any circumstances under which I would permit suffering if it could be avoided — ToothyMaw
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