If I spend $1000 one year on illegal drugs and 3% of that money ends up in the hands of mexican cartels or Al Qaeda (and ignoring the fact that if it was legal, then that would not be the case), do I need to justify my contribution of $30 to global terrorism? Surely my use of plastic water bottles is a more major moral failing? — ZhouBoTong
And perhaps you might consult your larger community on how they feel about your engagement with illegal drug infrastructure.Depending on my experience, I might think it the greater morality to shoot you - after all, they merely meet a need, but you are the problem. — tim wood
Depending on my experience, I might think it the greater morality to shoot you — tim wood
Seriously: can you offer some sort of reasoning behind your claim? Please explain how killing someone with a gun is more moral than their using illegal drugs? — Pattern-chaser
Seriously: can you offer some sort of reasoning behind your claim? Please explain how killing someone with a gun is more moral than their using illegal drugs? — Pattern-chaser
I didn't say it was. It might help if you could read and understand English — tim wood
If I spend $1000 one year on illegal drugs and 3% of that money ends up in the hands of mexican cartels or Al Qaeda (and ignoring the fact that if it was legal, then that would not be the case), do I need to justify my contribution of $30 to global terrorism? Surely my use of plastic water bottles is a more major moral failing?
— ZhouBoTong
And perhaps you might consult your larger community on how they feel about your engagement with illegal drug infrastructure.Depending on my experience, I might think it the greater morality to shoot you - after all, they merely meet a need, but you are the problem.
— tim wood — ZhouBoTong
I might think it the greater morality to shoot you — tim wood
Care to explain how your response here DOES NOT suggest that in some cases (at least) it is more moral to shoot someone than to use drugs? As far as I can tell, it does not even need to be implied. It is fairly directly included -
I might think it the greater morality to shoot you — tim wood — ZhouBoTong
Depending on my experience, I might think it the greater morality to shoot you - after all, they merely meet a need, but you are the problem. — ZhouBoTong
Proposition: It is not immoral to break the law. In support, Zhou, Pattern-chaser, et al. All yours. — tim wood
I should like at this point to disqualify any notion of "personal" morality. Were there to be such a thing, then there is potentially moral justification for anything at all. And if that be the case, morality itself disappears. Agree? — tim wood
do you accept that there always already exists a moral obligation to obey the law as law? — tim wood
you suppose that in breaking a law, its status as law is annihilated as if it never existed. Or alternatively you suppose that law as law is not in any way morally binding on you. — tim wood
Are all laws good and for the good? — tim wood
the only way out is to deny that there is any moral obligation to obey law; that any obligation is established by each law, law by law. — tim wood
Do you understand English? The first clause, "Depending on my experience," did you read that? If you did you clearly did not understand it. Try this: "Depending on my experience [playing golf - if that were our topic], I might get a hole-in-one." I do not play golf. Get it? It's a hypothetical. — tim wood
And then you responded,If I spend $1000 one year on illegal drugs and 3% of that money ends up in the hands of mexican cartels or Al Qaeda (and ignoring the fact that if it was legal, then that would not be the case), do I need to justify my contribution of $30 to global terrorism? Surely my use of plastic water bottles is a more major moral failing? — ZhouBoTong
Depending on my experience, I might think it the greater morality to shoot you - after all, they merely meet a need, but you are the problem. — ZhouBoTong
However, you don't give an example. To people like Pattern-Chaser and I, there is NO CONCEIVABLE SCENARIO where I deserve to be shot based on my actions above. But you are claiming there is. — ZhouBoTong
I should like at this point to disqualify any notion of "personal" morality. — tim wood
Hello-oo. That's why I move to dismiss the notion "personal morality."No. Consider: I am a pedophile.... To me, my practices are morally acceptable. — Pattern-chaser
Yes. Exactly.Morality does not disappear in such cases, — Pattern-chaser
Do you drive the speed limit most of the time? Do you dump your trash appropriately - you don't litter do you? You're in favor of and support public education and public health initiatives, yes? You have electricity and running water where you live? You travel on public ways? Do you benefit from participation - or even just presence - in your community? And on and on and on.... Pretty much all of this and more most folks do out of willingness and an understanding that it's all for greater goods. Not because they're forced to by a law and a gun.My community does not try to impose its morals onto me, and if it did, I would resist. Everyone does this, don't they? — Pattern-chaser
How does the law bind you? If you're just itching to break "immoral" laws, then how does that law bind you?Or alternatively you suppose that law as law is not in any way morally binding on you.
— tim wood
The latter. But the law does bind me, it's just that that binding is not a moral one. It's a simple and unqualified binding that my community places upon me: that I conform to its will, or get punished. — Pattern-chaser
So you drive on whatever side of the road you feel like driving on, whenever you feel like driving on it?No, the obligation(s) are put in place by my community, all of them (probably including me). My community doesn't tell me what's right and what's wrong. — Pattern-chaser
This was just above. What are your responses so far? One, mainly. that law and morality are not the same thing. NO ONE has said they were. Then for the rest, no argument at all, just claims. That doesn't cut it. And it doesn't really matter on TPF if you do not understand these things even well enough to articulate a reasoned position - but it does matter that it is apparently the level of your maturity. And that's bad.Proposition: It is not immoral to break the law. In support, Zhou, Pattern-chaser, et al. All yours. — tim wood
I thought that, but it's nice when someone else does too. :wink: :up:
Some people fall back on insults when their position is challenged. Sad. — Pattern-chaser
To be moral is to accept being a member of a community — tim wood
How do you connect right and wrong to accepting community membership? — Pattern-chaser
Do you drive the speed limit most of the time? Do you dump your trash appropriately - you don't litter do you? You're in favor of and support public education and public health initiatives, yes? You have electricity and running water where you live? You travel on public ways? Do you benefit from participation - or even just presence - in your community? And on and on and on.... Pretty much all of this and more most folks do out of willingness and an understanding that it's all for greater goods. Not because they're forced to by a law and a gun. — tim wood
Where did I say anything about "accepting community membership?"Do you benefit from participation - or even just presence - in your community? — tim wood
Does it matter? Is that what your morality is, such as you're moral, what someone tells you to think or do?Being member of a community imposes moral obligations.
— tim wood
Says who? — Pattern-chaser
Time for you to define morality/immorality. On your answer here I conclude you do not know what it - they - are.Do you deny that being a member of a community imposes obligations?
— tim wood
No, but the obligations are not moral obligations. Being a member means accepting the rules of the 'club'.
To be moral is to accept being a member of a community
— tim wood
How do you connect right and wrong to accepting community membership? — Pattern-chaser
What I wrote is - it's just above, three or four times- "to be moral is to accept...". That's what I wrote. Do you separate morality from matters of right and wrong?Where did I say anything about "accepting community membership?"
— tim wood
Here:
To be moral is to accept being a member of a community
— tim wood — Pattern-chaser
Is that what your morality is, such as you're moral, what someone tells you to think or do? — tim wood
Time for you to define morality/immorality. — tim wood
I buy that morality is mainly a matter of reason. — tim wood
And how does this not have a communal component? Does knowing the right from the wrong impose any obligation?Morality is knowing what is right and wrong, and using that knowledge to make judgements of what is right and wrong in situations that arise in RL. — Pattern-chaser
Big difference here. It is reason that identifies and determines. Emotions/feelings can be a check, but not a good check and sometimes a wrong check. Or have you never been around children of any age? (Including, unfortunately, adult children of any age.)Emotions and feelings play a large part in determining what is right and wrong, — Pattern-chaser
Does knowing the right from the wrong impose any obligation? — tim wood
If you think your actions are moral because you feel good about them... — tim wood
It is reason that identifies and determines. Emotions/feelings can be a check, but not a good check and sometimes a wrong check. — tim wood
Neither, but attempt to understand and if and as necessary, control their influence.to deny or minimise the impact emotions and feelings have on our lives and on our decisions, — Pattern-chaser
Emotions and feelings play a large part in determining what is right and wrong, — Pattern-chaser
?????If you think your actions are moral because you feel good about them...
— tim wood
Straw man. No-one said this. Tawdry. :vomit: — Pattern-chaser
And the world may shake for it! In the case of voting for Trump, there appears to be good evidence that their vote was an expression of a denial of reality in favour of some personal fantasy. If so, I'd call that stupid ignorance, not rising to the level of immorality. But those do his bidding, those are manifestly deeply immoral.Right or wrong ( :smile: ) people behave according to their emotions and feelings, maybe more often than they listen to the still small voice of reason? Millions of poor US citizens voted for Trump. Reason or feelings? — Pattern-chaser
Emotions and feelings play a large part in determining what is right and wrong, — Pattern-chaser
If you think your actions are moral because you feel good about them...
— tim wood
Straw man. No-one said this. Tawdry. :vomit: — Pattern-chaser
????? — tim wood
Incoherence gets the penultimate word. — tim wood
So you suggest that we can recognise that which is morally right because it makes us feel good, and I am the one who's incoherent? Hmm. — Pattern-chaser
If you argue that it's not immoral to break the law by taking illegal drugs, then how can you argue against someone who would hold it moral to prevent you from breaking the law? — tim wood
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