Really? Does it then follow that Ohio Quakers who hid fugitive slaves in 1850 were acting immorally because they were acting illegally?If it's not legal to park there, of course it's morally wrong to park there. — Metaphysician Undercover
Any judgement of "wrong" necessarily implies morally wrong, because that's what a judgement of right or wrong is, a moral judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
What I'm saying is that morality deals with our capacity to differentiate between good and bad, right and wrong. So, it follows that any type of decision making which is such as to distinguish between right and wrong, and this includes correct and incorrect, is inherently a subject of morality. Therefore all legal issues which distinguish between right and wrong are moral issues, and even the principles of mathematics and logic, where it is considered that there is a right answer, are issues of morality.Have you read Aristotle's "Nicomachean Ethics" where he discusses the intellectual virtues, and contemplation as the highest virtue? — Metaphysician Undercover
Are there "legal issues" (what we're actually talking about is legislation, but maybe that's a "legal issue") that do not distinguish between right and wrong and thus are not moral issues? — Terrapin Station
Really? Does it then follow that Ohio Quakers who hid fugitive slaves in 1850 were acting immorally because they were acting illegally? — andrewk
I haven't seen any good reasons here yet, just a whole lot of assertions, along with the odd facepalm...anyone who deviates from it - even if for good reason - is changing the definitions,,, — Sapientia
:-} Appeals to authority, as if I'm going to go off and search Hume's works! It's like trying to get blood out of a stone...what is the evidence...???? — John
I haven't seen any good reasons here yet, just a whole lot of assertions, along with the odd facepalm. — Metaphysician Undercover
There are right and wrong answers to mathematical problems, but getting a maths problem wrong is not normally regarded as morally culpable. — Wayfarer
It is the absence of those kinds of moral codes that gives rise to today's relativism and subjectivism, or BrainGlitch's 'meta-ethical nihilism'. That really amounts to saying that all such judgements are ultimately personal or subjective, which again implies that there is no objective morality. By contrast, I think the obtain to an objective morality is to believe that there are 'real moral consequences'. — Wayfarer
If it's not legal to park there, of course it's morally wrong to park there. — Metaphysician Undercover
There's lots of laws which I believe are wrong, therefore I believe they're immoral. But that's the thing with morality what I say is wrong, someone else might say is right. When the law says "it's morally wrong to do X", (park on that side of the street), I do not necessarily believe that X is morally wrong, that's free will. — Metaphysician Undercover
What? So, if it's illegal, then it's immoral. Even if the law itself is immoral. So, if the law says it's illegal not to kill someone who insults your family, then it is immoral not to kill that person. But you don't have to believe that, even though it would be irrational not to, given your premise. — Sapientia
I've provided my definition of moral, as concerning goodness or badness, right or wrong, of human behaviour, in all forms of right or wrong. You appear to be using "immoral" in a different way, which is very confusing.
Look, if it's illegal, then from the perspective of those who uphold the law, it is immoral. If you think that this law is immoral, then from your perspective, the illegal act is morally correct. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps, I don't know law very well. — Metaphysician Undercover
So if the subject here is this judgement process itself, whereby we judge between right and wrong, not the judgements being made, then these two, objective and subjective judgements should be classed together.
Yes, so that's the point, all judgements are inherently subjective. That is why we can class all forms of judgements in one category, as human judgements. Objectivity, we can see, comes about through producing conventions and adhering to them. It is through this adhering to the meaning of the symbols "2", "+", "=", etc., that mathematics gives us objectivity. And other forms of logic operate in the same way, there is a need to adhere to conventions. So we can extend that need, to adhere to conventions, right down to issues of human behaviour. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is very little difference between learning to judge Johnny's politeness as correct behaviour, and learning to judge "4" as the correct answer to "2+2". You learn to recognize "2+2=4" and apply the symbol "correct". Likewise, you learn to recognize the appropriate behaviour and apply "good" — Metaphysician Undiscovered
Objectivity, we can see, comes about through producing conventions and adhering to them. It is through this adhering to the meaning of the symbols "2", "+", "=", etc., that mathematics gives us objectivity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay. It seems like it would be important to know this, though, if we're going to claim that "illegal" necessarily implies "morally wrong." — Terrapin Station
All I'm saying is that mathematics is only perceptible to an intelligence capable of understanding numbers. Like, you can't teach mathematics to your pets. So I agree that '2+2=4' is not dependent on anyone's opinion, i.e. is 'mind-independent' in that sense, but on the other hand, it can only be known by a mind, it is not a physical fact. But that is a whole other thread and topic, i.e. 'reality of abstract objects'. — Wayfarer
There's a world of difference. You're obfuscating a really basic difference in moral philosophy in a way that will inevitably entail relativism. It's like saying 'there's no difference between novels and history, they're both simply types of books'. — Wayfarer
Objectivity doesn't obtain via conventions. If anything about mathematics is objective, it's because it's mind-independent. — Terrapin Station
We can readily see though, that we can differentiate two distinct categories of conventions relevant to this discussion:
(1) conventions that are established across cultural and societal bounds, such as those we invoke when we judge the truth or falsity of math and logic and science and everyday empirical claims and ...
(2) conventions that are situated historically and culturally, such as those we invoke when we judge the morality or immorality of a given behavior. — Brainglitch
Moral conventions demonstrably are culturally and historically situated.
Historically situated means operant in a given culture during a given time span.
On the other hand, the conventions for judging the truth or falsity of arithmetic, as well as other well-established math, logic, and science operate cross culturally, and are not likely to change, precisely because these conventions are clearly specified and universally agreed upon. — Brainglitch
For heaven's sake, because 'literature' and 'history' are different subjects. Imagine enrolling in Eng. Lit. and on your first class, the lecturer says, right, today we commence on the History of the American Civil War. Don't you think you might feel you were in the wrong class? Or would you say, 'hey, what's the difference, it's all just literature anyway'? — Wayfarer
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