I may be wrong about this but from what I can infer from my ovservations there is, generally speaking, peace in the world and even where there is violence there are some basic rules of conduct. As an example the biggest threat to peace in modern times is ''religious'' extremism and religion at its core is ethics. — TheMadFool
Yet we all know, using philosophy as a benchmark for any sound moral theory, there is no universally applicable ethical theory. Yes, there's consequentialism, deontology, etc but these have been demonstrated to have serious flaws in them — TheMadFool
I don't understand this sentence.Statistically speaking any individual seems satisfied with the moral principles of his fellow human. — TheMadFool
I don't understand this sentence. — Coben
I was trying to explain WHY there's peace, an indication of good moral principles, rather than chaos, an obvious consequence of a lack of morals. Isn't this odd given that we actually don't have a sound moral theory - something necessary to keep us on the right track so to speak? — TheMadFool
But note we generally use morality to work the public up for the war. — Coben
This is the flaw in our moral theories. Yet there's no global What keeps people from getting at each other's throats? — TheMadFool
Is it akin to nuclear deterrents which means the peace is empty, devoid of moral value or is it that people genuinely are of good moral character? — TheMadFool
I think is mostly fear. One, fear of large scale war — Coben
I don't think it's necessarily a bad thing that it's fear. Having a morality is a set of rules. It is not clear to me that that means people become good, but they many engage in good behavior. IOW even if we had a universal ethics, it doesn't mean we are doing things for 'the right reasons'. I mean, people are afraid of being bad. A society's rules are also habits.So peace as we know it is empty of any moral content. It's all got to do with fear. Perhaps true and so much sadder. Humans are animals after all. This probably has relevance to the nuclear weapons debate. Russia and America are at peace. — TheMadFool
Edit: it’s like we understand there’s a point we should not cross. — Brett
I don't think it's necessarily a bad thing that it's fear — Coben
Yes, you're right. Fear in itself isn't bad BUT what if you knew that a person was being good only because s/he didn't want to go to hell or prison? — TheMadFool
If I were to hazard a guess then one moral theory among the many has the least number of exceptions implying it works, say, 99% of the time. Which theory is that I wonder? — TheMadFool
I think this is pretty normal — Coben
I don't if this makes sense. It was once ''normal'' to think the Earth was flat. It was also ''normal'' to believe in witches. These are, as everyone knows, false.
Do you think it's better to be abnormal given that you describe ''normal'' to be fear based? — TheMadFool
Do you think it's better to be abnormal given that you describe ''normal'' to be fear based? — TheMadFool
Moral foundations? — TheMadFool
What do you mean here? Are you referring to learned or inherent — Brett
Its not a moral system that is consistent, its the commonalities that run through most moral
systems that are common — DingoJones
Whichever one you prefer. I just want to find out which moral theory is ''most'' consistent IF consistency can be described in terms of having the least number of exceptions. — TheMadFool
That could be but what is this overlapping common ground between various moral theories? I thought the main philosophical moral theories are mutually exclusive. — TheMadFool
but the important bit is whats common to both. Seems to me the answer to your question lies there. — DingoJones
i don’t think the GR is as fundamental as what Im talking about. Someone might be able to have a sensible moral theory without the GR in it but it cannot be sensible if it, for example, contradicts itself — DingoJones
However, it's my guesstimate that one of these theories has a greater scope than the other. I mean one may be applicable 99% of the time and the other a lesser 95% of the time. If that's the case then people, knowingly or not, will favor one over the other. I'm trying to figure that out. — TheMadFool
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