In some occasions obedience is quite logical, even if you don't think the command is the most optimal.It seems to me that rational or justified action involves acting on reason. But obedience requires acting based on authority or submission.
If someone makes a reasonable command you can judge it to be reasonable and then obey. But obedience usually requires suppressing ones own ideas and does not imply recourse to reason. — Andrew4Handel
To be rational is to be in conformity with a grounding principle of rationality — Joshs
It can further be reasonable to invest this authority with force that is not subject to immediate questioning. — Echarmion
What if the legislating authority and the obeying subject are the same? It would appear that obedience in such case could hardly be irrational. — Mww
Far too easily people look at obedience as some kind of social power issue and not a result of simple necessity. — ssu
So many things really where it would be much better to seek out someone who actually knows what they're talking about and follow what they say word for word. — Judaka
Nevertheless I still process advice through reason and do not just obey instructions unthinkingly. — Andrew4Handel
Rationality means nothing outside of a system of valuation. So 'ought' orients and organizes the meaning of any system of facts by requiring facts to be interpreted according to a scheme or paradigm — Joshs
On the other hand, a hierarchy of positions of authority can lead to more efficient workforce, or military force. — Harry Hindu
No man can escape responsibility for his actions because his actions were ordered. — tim wood
To me the culture of obedience is anathema to rationality. But as Erich Fromm argues people fear freedom and therefore obedience allows people to rely on something else that they (falsely) believe is an authority. — Andrew4Handel
I was talking about people willingly acting in compliance with a competent individual's recommendations unquestioningly. — Judaka
What examples can you give where obedience is treated as morally praiseworthy? — Judaka
Scientific rationality has more in common than one might think to obedience to religious authority. To be rational is to be in conformity with a grounding principle of rationality. This ground itself is generally not questioned by those who see truth in terms of rationality. Thus they don't recognize their obedience to this ground. In the age of Reason,the authority of religious faith was replaced by the authority of scientific rationality, via truth as correspondence. — Joshs
Obedience will be a very careful, rational response. — Bitter Crank
If I obey the traffic lights on a road then I am submitting. If ignore a red light and cross when I feel like it I am not submitting. Unless they are trained by humans, pets will do what they feel like. Humans are unique for the vast array of rules they submit to. — Andrew4Handel
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