Seeking Wisdom
BC
I like sushi
Pfhorrest
Seeking Wisdom
I like sushi
180 Proof
The reason the question came about was because in my University class we were talking about moral theories and those who subscribe to theories involving God(s) or some form of afterlife have the external motivator of preparing for a judgment and I was trying to discover if moral theories that did not involve those beliefs (God(s) or afterlife) had a comparable external motivator to choose to be moral. — Seeking Wisdom
I like sushi
alcontali
Why would you choose to complete a difficult but morally right task over an easier but morally wrong one? — Seeking Wisdom
I like sushi
uncanni
I like sushi
uncanni
And if they are unwilling and/or unable to question the ‘moral code’ set out by society then I wouldn’t want them on my side when push comes to shove. — I like sushi
Deleted User
Morally wrong according to whom? IOW it might be that I do something not because it is moral (to others, say) but because I feel empathy for someone suffering, for example.If you are faced with two options and option A is morally right (deemed so by whatever moral theory you subscribe to) and option B is morally wrong, why would you choose option A? — Seeking Wisdom
Terrapin Station
I am trying to understand what motivates people to behave morally. — Seeking Wisdom
When it comes down to it the question I am asking is:
If you are faced with two options and option A is morally right (deemed so by whatever moral theory you subscribe to) and option B is morally wrong, why would you choose option A?
I am trying to understand what motivates people to behave morally.
Another different way to look at it:
Why would you choose to complete a difficult but morally right task over an easier but morally wrong one? — Seeking Wisdom
Hallucinogen
But occasionally, logic wins out. — Hallucinogen
Pantagruel
Seeking Wisdom
we invest time into people and understand they’re invaluable ‘resources’. — I like sushi
For a eusocial species like us, endowed with empathy & habits of care, the suffering of others, all things being equal, suffices more often than not as the "external motivator" of our moral agency. — 180 Proof
Then if I live in a group or culture where certain actions are considered moral and I don't really, deep down want to do them, motivations could include
guilt
shame
egotism - wanting to be seen a certain way.
fear
strategic motives
self-protection
conflicr avoidance
sneakiness
secret goals — Coben
The guy on the youtube video was basically saying, that morality is not one, but consists of two parts, and they have different attributes, which he describes, but similar reward/ punishment systems, both systems having rewards/ punishment coming from within, not from the outside world. — god must be atheist
Seeking Wisdom
Can you explain what you meant by this?The very idea of such ‘perfection’ is to my mind the doorway to insanity and the immoral. — I like sushi
I like sushi
Serving Zion
Congau
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