Note that to know what to do requires some guiding principles. We may call these "norms" or "prescriptions" of moral standards but free will is one step before that - whether we should be good or not and not what we should do which I presume is the domain of the philosophy of ethics.
Good is Unnecessary. — TheMadFool
We set a minimum standard for human behaviour barely above that of other social animals in many respects, and we continually appeal to evolutionary theory to excuse selfish, thoughtless and even destructive behaviour towards each other. — Possibility
Notice though that our nature, its evil side, causes us to make prohibitive laws - you can't do this, you can't do that, etc. Nowhere have I seen a law that enforces good which I infer to mean that goodness is a choice rather than a compulsion unless you happen to be like the OCD patient I met who couldn't pass a temple on the street without feeling an intense irresistible need to enter it. — TheMadFool
When I started the discussion I was confused by the existence and wide-spread practice of normative morals which implies necessity but it seems these apply only after a choice has been made on whether to be good or not. They tell us what we should do based on some principles but this sits in contrast with the widely-held belief that goodness must be a choice rather than an enforced code of conduct. — TheMadFool
There seems to be an implicit premise that choice comes first and that negates all moral philosophies which expound necessary moral actions. It's still hazy to me but moral philosophies and the moral norms derived thereof are about what to do and can never really tell us why we should be good. The choice is ours it seems. — TheMadFool
If humans are essentially selfish and evil, then how do moral laws come into being? — I like sushi
Goodness requires free will only inasmuch as free will is equivalent to the capacity for moral judgement to guide behavior, which NB does not require indeterminism. — Pfhorrest
Like I said, I think it would serve if you highlighted what you mean by ‘good’ and/or terms like ‘right’, ‘evil’ and ‘beneficial’. By the above I could easily construe what you’re saying as rational thought being separate from emotions/morals - there is little to no recent evidence to support this (to the contrary - see Damasio).
21m — I like sushi
With respect to things that are morally obligatory or impermissible, free will is still relevant in that you can choose to take the morally obligatory action or not. If you do not, then you've chosen to not act morally. — Terrapin Station
If you assume good is unnecessary we must also link any relations to good also unnecessary.
You could also say that everything is unnecessary, really. — Fruitless
define morality - because I argue we are all immoral. I don't think we can even definitely state whether someone is moral or immoral. Actually, I think free will is the daughter of wishful thinking. — Fruitless
I’ve been through all this before on here I believe. I found it useful to return to a more delineated approach toward the terms ‘ethical’ and ‘moral’: the former being attuned to public agreement and the latter to the individual orientation toward what is deemed ‘good’ in spite of ‘ethical’ rules — I like sushi
One thing to quickly point out (as you mention in your post things like murder and rape) is that while there are strict punishments for violating the legal prohibitions against murder and rape, people still commit these crimes in spades. Some people seem to not be afraid of these laws, or at least not as afraid of them as they are attracted by the potential reward for their actions — philrelstudent
Altruism is found in nature — philrelstudent
Many of us feel guilt — philrelstudent
Good is Unnecessary. — TheMadFool
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