Word games. What is the basis of "morality" for moral relativism? One's whims and fancies? That is the "basis"? — Ram
Don't act like you're not guilty of playing word games. Whims and fancies? Trying to trivialise a position you disagree with? Anyway, it depends on what it's relative to. I've already provided the answer and given an example in a previous reply. The example I gave was the culture of the United Kingdom, which is certainly not that anything is permissible. We don't look approvingly on rape, murder, and so on. — S
So the basis of "relative morality" is what the local culture is? You said something about the culture of the UK. I didn't see that post. — Ram
Okay. So you say the "basis" of "morality" for the moral relativist is whatever is accepted in the local culture. — Ram
So if you live in a culture where human sacrifice is okay- then human sacrifice is okay? — Ram
So the basis of "relative morality" is what the local culture is? You said something about the culture of the UK. I didn't see that post.
— Ram
It doesn't have to be relative in that sense. It's a broader position than that. It could be relative to a culture, a group, or an individual.
Okay. So you say the "basis" of "morality" for the moral relativist is whatever is accepted in the local culture.
— Ram
It can be, under moral relativism.
So if you live in a culture where human sacrifice is okay- then human sacrifice is okay?
— Ram
Relative to that culture, yes. But personally, I wouldn't approve of that aspect of that culture, as it clashes with my own sense of what is right and wrong. — S
What? So if you live in a society where human sacrifice is accepted, you would be against it? It clashes with your own sense of what is right and wrong?
So very strangely, I don't think you are actually a moral relativist. I think you clearly believe in an objective morality. — Ram
That's the type of merely assertion I'm talking about. You don't actually show your claims to be truthful.
Their texts show otherwise. Sartre asserts an objective morality based on the objectivity of reason and human freedom. His ethics are somewhat similar to Kant's in this respects. He uses what is essentially the Catergorical Imperative to identify our responsibility to each other as agents of freedom.
de Beauvoir argues we ought to recognise how humans are free agents who make choices. In this space, she talks about the significance of humans actions towards each other, forming a space in which actions have objective significance to each other and a range of ethical consequences.
Nietzsche is dedicated to the objectivity of values. One of the major parts of his analysis is how states and actions of the world are characterised by meaning. His primary target is exactly the sort of nilhism which claims life had no value or meaning.
This is partly why he attacks religions so harshly. He identifies the religious move of saying "God must be there to give the world meaning" is premised on an initial idea that the world is without meaning . God only needs to be there to add meaning to the world if it lacks meaning in the first place. Thus, the malaise of "meaningless" didn't begin with atheism, but actually has far older origins that lie at the base of much religious thought.
It is factually wrong to assert these thinkers are relativists. They hold objectivity to meaning, ethics and value. — TheWillowOfDarkness
What is a religious morality.
Do you have to believe in a particular religion to be moral by its standards. Could you for example follow the most of the ten commandments closely but be considered immoral because you don't believe in God?
Is it consistent to follow a religious morality closely but not believe the religion itself is true?
Is it hypocritical to pick and choose different parts of religions whilst ignoring or rejecting some of their central dogmas.
As someone who grew up in a strict religious environment I some times wonder about the possibility of being condemned because I no longer believe the religion and its values even if I have what appears to be very good or rational reasons not to do so.
Some religions demand blind obedience and or blind faith and appear to rely on fear to reinforce this.
Morality as commandments (deontology?) seems strong in one sense as being enforceable because the alternative maybe moral nihilism or uncertainty.
However religions tend to have unreasonable commandments and contradictions.
How does one prove incest is wrong using objective moral values (OMVs)?Mark Dice (who I'm not particularly a fan of but who has made some good points at times) has here demonstrated how accepting atheistic premises will lead people to accepting incest as okay.
However, the matter is very basic.
There is simply no secular basis for morality. — Ram
There is simply no secular basis for morality.
Morality from a secular position is necessarily subjective.
Atheists will try to dance around this and you will see some incredible logical gymnastics around this but the plain fact is that when you boil it down.... consistent atheists don't believe in objective morality. They want to have their cake and eat it too. They claim that religions are immoral- but they have no basis for determining what is and isn't immoral. — Ram
However, I think the question still remains: where does this notion of morality come from? When you say, “it’s objectively immoral based on the harm alone,” do you mean that there is some independent moral truth that exists which humans have the ability to perceive, connecting the pain to “wrongness”? Or, do you mean that the widely accepted idea that senseless suffering is wrong is a sufficient basis for the term “objectively immoral” because of its popularity? — tenderfoot
It also has to do with what we value in our lives, and a life free of senseless pain seems to be a something that almost all people value; and this arises out of the kind of biological beings we are (and I'm not thinking necessarily in terms of evolution), i.e., it's the background reality of our biology, what we value, what we feel, how we reason, etc. — Sam26
I think there is an objective moral principle that we generally follow as people, viz., that we shouldn't inflict undo pain on others for no good reason. — Sam26
I believe what I'm saying is not only objectively true, but I'm saying that most people recognize it as true, it's self-evident for most people. — Sam26
Another final point that I already alluded to, but needs to be emphasized. It also has to do with what we value in our lives, and a life free of senseless pain seems to be a something that almost all people value; and this arises out of the kind of biological beings we are (and I'm not thinking necessarily in terms of evolution), i.e., it's the background reality of our biology, what we value, what we feel, how we reason, etc. — Sam26
I disagree with the claim that this would be objective. You already state it yourself; "... for no good reason." Who decides what is a good reason? The perpetrator? The victim? A neutral third? All of these will have very different ideas of what a good reason might be. And why would any of their opinions be more valuable than that of the other? — Tzeentch
If I understand you correctly, there is nothing about this example that is objectively immoral? The screams of the person in pain, the arm on the ground, the blood, the anguish of friends and family, none of this is objectively true? This, it seems, is a paragon case of immorality. One doesn't need to appeal to anything beyond the case itself. — Sam26
In virtually every case of immorality, the harm done is the reason it's referred to as immoral. And in cases where we argue over whether something is or is not immoral, usually it's because we don't see the harm, i.e., it's not clear that harm was done. — Sam26
The question is, why do I need to appeal to anything beyond the example to defend the idea that this act (my example) is immoral? Are you making the claim that the only way I would know this act is immoral is by appealing to something metaphysical, for example, God? — Sam26
All I need to appeal to is the harm, nothing further. If I can make a clear case of the harm done, then I can make the claim that it's immoral, as in the example. — Sam26
Who decides what's reasonable? We do. There are principles of correct reason that are applied, just as there are principles of mathematics that determine the correct and incorrect use of mathematical symbols. Moreover, I would say that these principles are discoverable. They are built into the universe, i.e., they are built into the background of reality. — Sam26
The objectivity in the example you gave that you mentioned above seemed to be that the pain was undeniable and it was caused without reason, thus it must be immoral. You are assuming I suppose that this is a necessary fact about the world we live in? Is it that we call actions that promote life “moral” and things that promote death we call “immoral”? — tenderfoot
is it possible for this biological basis to be independent of evolution? Looking at the tenacity of life and how throughout history there is a drive in human beings to survive and create good lives, it makes sense that these life-promoting values be things we know a priori due to the “background reality of our biology.” If the inclination to follow that objective moral truth is innate in human beings, is it distinct from an evolutionary mechanism optimizing survival and reproduction? The question becomes: are actions moral on account of evolutionary advantage or are they moral in themselves and also coincidentally evolutionarily advantageous? The core of my questions here is whether these morals are based on an independent truth value or the product of random variation and natural selection (I sure hope not — tenderfoot
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