You've lost the distinction which began this all. Thought/belief and thinking about thought/belief. You've also rescinded the earlier agreement regarding what all things moral have in common. You've arrived at incoherence as a result.
Now you're just repeating conventional mistakes. I've no time at present. I can and will point them out clearly later on if you're interested. — creativesoul
Is this possibly the bandwagon fallacy? Could conformity ever be reasoned and rational? I think the answer is ''yes'' and that's what we should aim for. — TheMadFool
The process, even the human economic and political process, is now so complex that we arguably cannot hope to control it. What I really meant, though, is that, until you can, to some reasonable degree, sort out your own problems, you have zero hope of sorting out, or even significantly contributing towards sorting out, the larger problems of the human situation. — Janus
All thought/belief about acceptable/unacceptable behaviour are moral - in kind. That is precisely what they all have in common that makes them what they are as opposed to other kinds of thought/belief. — creativesoul
Some moral thought/belief is prior to language acquisition. — creativesoul
I wouldn't call the common core of all thought/belief 'primitive morality'. Primitive thought/belief? Sure. Not all thought/belief is rightfully called "morality". Rather, morality is codified thought/belief about acceptable/unacceptable behaviour(thought/belief that is moral in kind).
Morality is codified moral belief. Laws.
— creativesoul
No dispute, here. I just meant to clarify your position. I would say, if there is a primitive morality, it comes well after primitive [prelingustic] thought/belief. Hopefully we can discover approximately where that occurs. — Merkwurdichliebe
Descriptive accounts of acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour.
The example is this discussion... — creativesoul
Moral judgment - in the conventional sense - is existentially dependent upon adopting a worldview replete with morality. — creativesoul
Judgment is moral thought/belief. Not all moral thought/belief is judgment. — creativesoul
All things moral are about acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour. — creativesoul
That conclusion is at odds with our criterion for what counts as being "moral", which was arrived at by virtue of what all things moral, and/or called "moral" have in common. — creativesoul
What I'm prying into is whether or not the story is worthy of assent. — creativesoul
There are also new criterion being employed that are not quite up to snuff. Our foundation for drawing conclusions is supposed to be based upon a universal criterion. New claims are being levied that are not based upon the same solid ground. — creativesoul
One can know that they do not accept another's behaviour without judging their behaviour in any robust sense of moral judgment. — creativesoul
Not all moral thought/belief is judgment. And, that didn't answer the question... — creativesoul
So then you agree that not all adoption of moral principle is founded upon intellectual assessment? — creativesoul
There seems to be some preconceived notion at work in your reporting. What is a moral principle if not thought/belief about acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour? — creativesoul
The adoption of moral principle can happen during language acquisition. Intellectual assessment cannot. — creativesoul
We need this new reporting to dovetail with the previously established groundwork. — creativesoul
How would you define "ethical existence"? — Terrapin Station
If both pupil and teacher are moral agents, and it is impossible to be both ethical authority and ethical pupil at the same time, then moral agents can be both. The ethical pupil can be a moral agent. The ethical teacher can be a moral agent. — creativesoul
However, while internalization requires it sensory perception alone is not enough for internalization as I suspect it is being used here. — creativesoul
Internalizing a pre-existing morality results in one's moral 'feelings'.
These are involuntarily experienced during certain situations that are morally relevant to that particular person's worldview(morality). — creativesoul
They've yet to have been breached. Perhaps it is time. For robustness' sake. — creativesoul
What do the notions of relative morality and absolute morality add to the discussion? — creativesoul
A general rule of behavioural thumb. — creativesoul
Some ethical authorities do not frame ethics in terms of absolute right/wrong. — creativesoul
What sense doe it make then to differentiate between pupil and teacher based upon calling only the one assigned an ethical task the "moral agent" when they can both be. — creativesoul
Unnecessarily multiplying entities again. I cannot see the good in what this adds. — creativesoul
Deception is possible for a moral principle. — creativesoul
The task is in forming right thought/belief, and then integrating that right understanding into one's behavior - responsibility. — Merkwurdichliebe
The term "moral agent" has not been used to differentiate between different kinds of moral agents; those beset with an ethical task and those not. — creativesoul
Practicality, Schmackticality! Practical considerations, lifted out of their proper context and deified, as UTILITY, both lead to, and grow out of, the monetization of life. A vicious feedback loop! — Janus
Referring to Gautama we could say that we lay down the raft after crossing the river because there would be no need to carry it further. Some might say that we should continue to carry it just in case we are mistaken in thinking there are no more rivers to cross, but I say that we might find that each river requires a certain kind of raft, and we are better off not to worry about what lies ahead of us, but rather to trust in our ability to improvise when the need arises. — Janus