My question is whether a decision based on a moral position can really be considered moral when the consequences on such a large scale are unknowable. — Brett
I don't think a decision based on a moral position can really be considered moral when it forces those morals upon people who disagree with it. — Tzeentch
What do you mean by contrasting “moral” and “right” in your question? Is “right” meant to mean “moral”? Or do you intend it to mean something more like practical towards a goal? — DingoJones
People tend to take this for granted , but it's a very debatable question. — Jean-baptiste
if you want to say that ignoring the practical consideration is immoral — DingoJones
Morality is the natural justice about the law of time. — Qwex
Then we might think that it is moral if the intentions are good, if the decision was taken by people after a very long debate and that they judged that it was more likely that unlikely it would be beneficial. — Jean-baptiste
Then to the question should you lie to the police or no he answers a proud NO, one should never lie, and therefore argues that you should turn your friend down ( or the boy) as this is the moral thing to do and that one should always seek to act in a moral way. This famous episode was to me the evidence that there can't be such thing as moral as it's very easy to come up with those kind of situations that you can't resolve if you believe in moral . — Jean-baptiste
Sorry to persist in asking you to define things, but when you say, "best outcomes," what outcomes do you have in mind? — tomatohorse
I don't think a decision based on a moral position can really be considered moral when it forces those morals upon people who disagree with it. — Tzeentch
Best outcomes for South Africa was an end to apartheid. Best outcomes for women was getting the vote. Best outcomes for gays was legal marriage. Very clear objectives that can be measured when you get there. — Brett
At the end of the day, you have to decide where your loyalties lie, and what your primary moral considerations are. Those give you a compass by which to evaluate all these smaller points. — tomatohorse
Well this might happen More often than you think. Governments often make many moral decisions on behalf of their constituency: gay marriage, voting rights for blacks, for instance. And the pressure applied to South African over apartheid was certainly moral.
If seems to me that if you live in a democratic system then you are also required morally to go along with the decision. Though it might be debatable in those circumstances that a moral is being forced upon someone, because in those circumstances they’re in agreement with the system that applies the moral. — Brett
So Alice is about to kill someone when Bob stops her because Bob thinks killings like that are immoral. Bob is therefore immoral, for forcing his morals upon Alice? — Pfhorrest
A person, or someone on their behalf, has a right to protect themselves when they are physically threatened — Tzeentch
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