Alright, so for all here who have settled upon relativistic morality, explain the basis of your moral outrage against the rapist and why I should find your reasons compelling. — Hanover
Such a self-deprecating remark as you make above is either a sample of false humility (which is offputting), or just a plain declaration of incompetence (which is also offputting). — baker
Ethics are either a code of conduct set by a culture, based on values, traditions and evolving attitudes, or they are handed down by a transcendent source - (deity or idealism).
What are the other options? Does virtue ethics operate in the context of cultural values interacting with those of the individual? — Tom Storm
Other options? Perhaps, since we don't see other social animals murdering their fellows, there is also, at least in regard to murder, an instinctive anti-disposition. Should we think of anyone capable of murder as being somehow radically disordered? — Janus
Kaufmann considered I and Thou a shameful performance in both style and content. In style the book invoked “the oracular tone of false prophets” and it was “more affected than honest.” Writing in a state of “irresistible enthusiasm,” Buber lacked the critical distance needed to critique and revise his own formulations. His conception of the I-It was a “Manichean insult” while his conception of the I-Thou was “rashly romantic and ecstatic,” and Buber “mistook deep emotional stirrings for revelation.” (Kaufmann [1983] pp. 28–33). The preponderance in Buber’s writings of rhetorical figures, such as “experience,” “realization,” “revelation,” “presence” and “encounter,” and his predilection for utopian political programs such as anarchism, socialism, and a bi-national solution to the intractable national conflict between Jews and Arabs in Palestine, are in line with a vagueness in his philosophical writing that often renders Buber’s thought suggestive, but elusive. Similar criticisms apply to Buber’s claim that language has the power to reveal divine presence or uncover Being. — SEP
Alright, so for all here who have settled upon relativistic morality, explain the basis of your moral outrage against the rapist and why I should find your reasons compelling. — Hanover
Thereby falling right back into the false dichotomy which characterises modern philosophy, that there is what is scientifically demonstrable and objectively verifiable, and anything else, no matter whether it's noble or profound, must always be a matter of personal conviction. — Wayfarer
I wonder if our capacity for atrocities is simply the shadow side of our intellect.
It's understood chimps murder. They also patrol their boundaries and tear apart intruders. Dianne Fossey documented this and it shocked her.
Nature itself seem radically disordered - a suburban backyard is a bloodbath - insects and animals eat each other alive. Even the idea that food means eating another living thing seems perverse.
In relation to virtue ethics, I was pondering if this might be a third option as a source of ethical behavior or is it just an example of cultural values being interpreted by an individual? — Tom Storm
I don't think there's much here for our consideration. — Banno
It hurts to think of women I know being raped. I just extrapolate out from there. It's a feeling with a "no" at the center of it. — frank
I don't think there's much here for our consideration. — Banno
What to call it if not (informed) personal conviction? And what's so awful about (informed) personal conviction? — ZzzoneiroCosm
The world as it is, is the world as God sees it, not as we see it. Our vision is distorted, not so much by the limitations of finitude, as by sin and ignorance. The more we can raise ourselves in the scale of being, the more will our ideas about God and the world correspond to the reality. "Such as men themselves are, such will God Himself seem to them to be," says John Smith, the English Platonist. Origen, too, says that those whom Judas led to seize Jesus did not know who He was, for the darkness of their own souls was projected on His features. And Dante, in a very beautiful passage, says that he felt that he was rising into a higher circle, because he saw Beatrice's face becoming more beautiful. — Dean Inge, Christian Mysticism
Because nature was seen as the creation of God, then one's relationship to it was more of 'I-Thou' than 'I-it'. The world couldn't be seen as simply an array of things being acted on by physical forces but was the expression of intention. The loss of that sense is what was referred to be Max Weber as the Disenchantment (which is kind of the flip side of the Enlightenment.) — Wayfarer
We all have intellects, but by no means all of us have a capacity for atrocities; at least not self-motivated atrocities.
Do chimps murder others of their own troop?
Eating others is necessary; it is part and parcel of the natural order; so I don't see it as disordered; it is, I think, by mere definition, not disordered.
I am not very familiar with the idea and tenets of virtue ethics, so I am probably the wrong person to ask about that question. I will say that I think all our principles and beliefs are pretty much examples of cultural values being interpreted by individuals. — Janus
If you do not find rape repellent, then that is about you, not about rape. If you need an argument to convict you that you ought not do such things, you are morally bankrupt. — Banno
Sure, the social order is set by what the culture determines as valuable. If a rights based view, or a religious morality predominates, the order is likely to reflect those values. And those values may shift as the culture changes. — Tom Storm
So then a guy comes along celebrating the joys of rape, and you can't tell him rape is wrong — Hanover
Emotivism then? And if I don't share those emotions, then what's bad to you is good to me and there is no one correct answer? — Hanover
Belief in a morality that transcends time and place requires belief in some kind of "afterlife" (such as in the sense of the Christian afterlife, the Hindu reincarnation, or Buddhist rebirth).
Without God's judgment or karma, the notion of justice doesn't apply, and without justice, morality is unintelligible. — baker
So you accept a law from a higher power? — frank
how would we demonstrate what that law is and what that higher power is? — Tom Storm
Cannot any position be justified as the will (or law) of some higher power? — Tom Storm
both instances we have reasons to condemn the rapist. And with more powerful arguments than 'god says so.'
Can you demonstrate an objective morality? — Tom Storm
I think almost everyone has the capacity for atrocity. It simply takes the 'right' situation or triggers - war; holocausts; dictatorships, extremes of poverty, prison... — Tom Storm
The fact something is natural doesn't give it a free pass... — Tom Storm
Yes, chimps beat, kill and sometimes cannibalize from their own tribe. — Tom Storm
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