But someone can base their morality on harm assessment. — Andrew4Handel
So they can refer to objective suffering and harm in making a moral claim and their objection to another persons moral intuition can be based on the persons failure to take into consideration harm. — Andrew4Handel
Like I said in another post this is how I differentiate between things I dislike and thinks I morally object to. — Andrew4Handel
I had a long discussion about this in my "quality of life" thread and I think that facts about the world can cause feelings and these feelings can be predicted from facts about the world. So that it is unlikely that feelings completely severed from what actually happened like can happen with a random emotional bout of sentiment.
This correlation between external facts and predictable emotional responses makes certain emotions seem inappropriate or absurd in response to certain scenarios. It is as if the scenarios demand certain responses.
Then again a lion can eat a deer alive without negative emotions. Natural examples of this kind make nature seem quite amoral. — Andrew4Handel
At any rate, there's zero evidence of there being moral rules built into the world somehow. — Terrapin Station
So you think it would make sense for someone to say, "I don't dislike rape representations in pornography, but I feel that rape representations in pornography are morally wrong"? — Terrapin Station
So you think it would make sense for someone to say, "I don't dislike rape representations in pornography, but I feel that rape representations in pornography are morally wrong"? — Terrapin Station
I think this is a possible brain state to have. It might just be cognitive dissonance but I feel (heh) that at least the inverse of your statement applies to some of my views.
For example, in the abortion debate, I asked whether being responsible for an injury means one should donate blood or even organs to alleviate it. While I feel that as a matter of personal conscience, I should donate blood in that case, I am at least sceptical whether it can be a moral obligation. And on the topic of abortion itself, I consider abortion a tragedy but do not consider it morally wrong. — Echarmion
I think feeling that rape is wrong is adequate to make rape representations problematic. I think it is possible with porn to be aroused by things we would not do ourselves.
People can even become aroused against their wishes when being raped. — Andrew4Handel
Now you yourself have even said "if some people thought about this more" which seems to invoke reason. — Andrew4Handel
I don't quite understand this response. What, exactly, are you saying you don't dislike but feel is morally wrong? — Terrapin Station
I am saying that I can dislike things and not consider then morally wrong (e.g. abortion). — Echarmion
And I can certainly like doing things that I consider immoral. But that might not be exactly what you mean. — Echarmion
Isn't what someone thinks is good for them based on feelings? — Andrew4Handel
The problem is that moral philosophy has failed to reach a consensus about morality or resolve moral issues. Materialism or the scientific don't appear to leave room for moral or value claims. — Andrew4Handel
So now thinkers are resorting to the idea we should just go with our feelings of what is appropriate or harmful.
I think reason can be a useful tool and moralizing but it does not seem to resolve moral disputes. — Andrew4Handel
1. Do what is positive for the well-being of yourself and others combined.
2. Morality is an evolving process and each situation must be assessed carefully according to point 1.
3. Assessing what is morally good needs to involve current knowledge about human psychology, sociology, and knowledge about human well-being for the individual and larger groups. — Christoffer
For example, maybe you enjoy stealing things, but you think it's morally wrong in general for people to steal, It would be an equivocation in that case to say that you don't personally dislike stealing, but you think it's morally wrong for people in general to steal, because maybe you think the economy wouldn't be workable in that case, or whatever. That's an equivocation because you'd not be thinking that exactly the same thing, in the same respect, for the same reasons, etc. is something that both you don't dislike and that you think is morally wrong. — Terrapin Station
Anyways as to the topic of "objective morality", I think it's just a misnomer. Or perhaps a case of asking the wrong question. The point of morality is, after all, not to provide information on some object. It's to provide practical rules. — Echarmion
Practical rules that are objective in their intention of the well-being of all humans (and maybe beyond). — Christoffer
This means you can create a foundation of morals that are based on a moral method of thinking, not specific acts to do in certain situations that are contextual. — Christoffer
What does it mean for a rule to be 'objective in it's intention"? — Echarmion
Making moral decisions is about using moral reasoning. Trying to find rules which can be applied consistently to all cases, like the scientific theory looks for theories that are consistent with all observations. — Echarmion
No, you can deduce what is good for you. — Christoffer
I'd say that your statement makes sense. Isn't this the structure of temptation? To like something which one objects to? — Moliere
So how does reason relate to feelings? — Andrew4Handel
You can, but what you're explaining is about your feelings. It wouldn't make any sense to deduce what's good for you where the deduction results in something that you're indifferent towards, that makes you feel bad in the long run, etc. — Terrapin Station
My experiences led me to moral nihilism because of the unreliability of guilt feelings and other emotions and the lack of a moral authority.
And this is why I think feeling something is wrong is not adequate for a morality.
Now you yourself have even said "if some people thought about this more" which seems to invoke reason. — Andrew4Handel
That's not succinctly summarizable, because it relates to feelings in so many ways, but the important thing is that reason isn't objective. Reason is a mental function. — Terrapin Station
Morality has nothing to do with your emotions since morality is not about you, — Christoffer
You don't just have emotions/feelings about yourself. — Terrapin Station
That's not the point, the point is that there are people in the world that you might not even care about who is affected by your moral choices, therefore morality isn't about emotions and feelings. — Christoffer
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