I would like to know what is un-relative(absolute moral?)moral?And what is relative moral theories?I am a Christian then I need to know those to practice the absolute moral. — nguyen dung
Moral absolutism is the belief that all actions are intrinsically right or wrong, there being no circumstances that could put that into doubt. In other words, something like stealing or murder is wrong anywhere and everytime as per this definition. — TheMadFool
Just a small point of clarification for now:
The opposite of moral relativism is moral objectivism or universalism, not necessarily "absolutism".
Moral absolutism is the opposite of things like consequentialism, such as (for a Christian example for you) "situationism".
You can be a non-absolutist, like a consequentialist, while still being an objectivist or universalist, not a relativist. — Pfhorrest
Moral universalism (also called moral objectivism) is the meta-ethical position that some system of ethics, or a universal ethic, applies universally, that is, for "all similarly situated individuals",[1] regardless of culture, race, sex, religion, nationality, sexual orientation, or any other distinguishing feature. — Wikpedia
This is possible only if moral absolutism is true, right? — TheMadFool
Other way around: moral absolutism can only be true if moral universalism is true. But universalism can be true — every particular event can be non-relatively good or bad or permissible or impermissible etc — without moral absolutism being true — without every instance of a general kind of action always being good or bad etc regardless of circumstances. — Pfhorrest
I would like to know what is un-relative(absolute moral?)moral?And what is relative moral theories?I am a Christian then I need to know those to practice the absolute moral. — nguyen dung
St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that there is only one unchanging moral principle: "Do good and avoid evil." — Dfpolis
A vacuous truism Kant's (rationalistic) 'categorical imperative'. — 180 Proof
It looks like if moral absolutes are real, it would serve as the best justification for moral universalism. Am I correct? — TheMadFool
Moral absolutism would necessitate that moral universalism be true, yes, but proving some moral principle is absolute is a bigger task than proving that whatever is moral is moral to everyone. So to prove moral absolutism you would pretty much have to prove moral universalism along the way... which is why absolutism necessitates universalism. — Pfhorrest
Disputing it? No. As I've already stated, your "precept" is a vacuous truism akin to 'Eat well and avoid starvation'. :roll:↪180 Proof Are you disputing the precept "Do good and avoid evil"? — Dfpolis
If charitably read as 'hateful = harmful', that is, 'harmful to oneself' and not merely 'undesireable' or 'upsetting' ... but 'damaging' (physically, psychologically), then - whether or not you call it "evil" - Rabbi Hillel's golden rule is both instructive and informative with respect to how we ought to treat and dignify each other.What is hateful to a personneed not be evil.
"Nazis" - individual human beings - violated Hillel's maxim by deliberately harming "Jews" - also individual human beings - in ways, which "Nazis" could not have not known, would have harmed them had what they did to others been done to them as well. Your trite example, Dfpolis, exposes a profound failure to comprehend this. Canonical fortune cookie "precepts" such as yours were clearly of no help with moral judgments or conduct for Catholic 'brown shirts' (or Italian & Spanish Papist 'black shirts').The Nazis found the just treatment of Jews hateful.
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