Don't we need some sort of agreed social norm by which to gauge and perhaps adjust our individual and very unreliable whims? — Tim3003
From an idealistic viewpoint I think, the appropriate question is not "How much do I give?" but "How much do I need"? — Hermeticus
Well that's never going to work: define 'need'.
Do you 'need' your mobile phone? I'd say 'no'. You might say 'yes'. All you 'need' is oxygen, food, warmth, shelter and human contact. Following that ideal we'd all follow St Francis.. — Tim3003
one-size-fits-all — Tim3003
But why do you care to donate? To seem moral? Doesn't sound very moral at all — InvoluntaryDecorum
1) Morals are individual and differ from person to person.
2) Charity as a moral principle quickly undermines the moral act in itself.
3) Social norms for charity as a moral principle is impossible due to the different ideas and interpretations about morals. — Hermeticus
It's called 'compassion'; a well-known human emotion - maybe it's a sort of altruism, which evolutionary theory will tell you is a vital building block of advanced societies. — Tim3003
If I give a beggar a dollar, I don't worry about whether or not they are going to buy alcohol or drugs with it. Begging seems like a hard way to earn a living. There has to be something wrong with a person who is willing to stand by a freeway exit for hours on end in heat and cold, being ignored much of the time (or jeered at), to collect money. — Bitter Crank
1)Really? Do we not all agree - or more to the point 'feel' that we have a responsibility to act in the face of poverty, mistreatment, disability - ie to help those less fortunate than ourselves? — Tim3003
No. But that's not what I said.2) Why? Because anyone giving must be doing it to seem charitable, rather than because they are? — Tim3003
Yes. But what makes the act count? I mean most states have a social system, which is funded by the money produced from taxes off the people. Is that not charity?Surely it's the act that counts; not how it 'seems'. — Tim3003
3) See 1). As we differ over morals, you could say any attempt to codify law is impossible - you could say murder cannot be penalised because some think it deserves the death penalty, some prison, some community service.. Society has to agree a compromise acceptable to voters. Maybe the same is possible for charitable donations? — Tim3003
Does "evolutionary theory" tell us a moral tale? Evolution just took place. Is compassion a "building block" of an "advanced" society? Seems to me that the advantage of one people is the disadvantage for others so how you determine which is the right moral? By reference to evolution theory, like the holy bible teaches the morals as intended by the creator? — HKpinsky
Don't kid yourself, why do you care? To improve society as to better facilitate your needs? This would be a quite ineffective method — InvoluntaryDecorum
Yes. But what makes the act count? I mean most states have a social system, which is funded by the money produced from taxes off the people. Is that not charity? — Hermeticus
Charity as a moral principle quickly undermines the moral act in itself. — Hermeticus
Why? Because anyone giving must be doing it to seem charitable, rather than because they are? — Tim3003
No. But that's not what I said. — Hermeticus
No. Because you have no choice but to pay it. Charity is given solely at your own discretion. — Tim3003
Charity as a moral principle, as something that is spoken or unspokenly demanded by humans partaking in society. If you make it a rule, it no longer is at "your own discretion". Even if it isn't a law - there is very much such a thing as social pressure.So what did you mean here? — Tim3003
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