What did I do wrong? Nothing. I behaved unethically, for ethical reasons. — Khassoggi
Adnan Khashoggi, pimp, thief, fraudster, international arms salesman, has just died. He said:
What did I do wrong? Nothing. I behaved unethically, for ethical reasons.
— Khassoggi
Is that even possible? — mcdoodle
Doubt and certainty are compatible.Do I know I know, or do I just know, or do I have justified true belief and so I know? — mcdoodle
Good from whose perspective?Do I do good to do good? Or do I do good to look good? — mcdoodle
Nonconformist.What did I do wrong? Nothing. I behaved unethically, for ethical reasons. — Khassoggi
I think that's reasonable, they would have nothing to gain from it.Individuals like this never want to admit unethical behaviour.. — geospiza
Those trick us into assessing the morality of the options they give, instead of helping us distinguish the moral from the immoral. — Noblosh
For me there is no first vs second order distinction. An ethical decision is one that (1) affects other people's feelings in some way and (2) I have considered carefully and (3) the course of action chosen is one that I would not expect, before the event, to regret later on [the word 'expect' is critical there] — andrewk
a Virtue Ethics perspective — andrewk
the course of action chosen is one that I would not expect, before the event, to regret later on [the word 'expect' is critical there] — andrewk
Do you talk to yourself? If yes then you are reflexive, if not then how do you do that? — Cavacava
It is not ethical for me to do so, if I believe the aggressor's actions are harmful. What the aggressor thinks about it has no significance in my moral deliberation.But, is it ethical to provide armament to an aggressor, even though aggressors themselves - such as ISIS - assume themselves to be defending what they believe? — TimeLine
It is not ethical for me to do so, if I believe the aggressor's actions are harmful. What the aggressor thinks about it has no significance in my moral deliberation. — andrewk
But, howsoever thou pursuest this act,
Taint not thy mind,
You make incarceration sound arbitrary.is acting ethically according to their ethics, but not according to mine, which is why I want him incarcerated — andrewk
As indeed it is, if it depends just on the will of only one person. The history of any dictatorship is testament to that.You make incarceration sound arbitrary. — Noblosh
Better public relations, you mean. Yes, you're right, reputation can be gained or can be lost through admission of wrongdoing, but in the case of those individuals, I really think they're better off denying any unethical behaviour. — Noblosh
It seems to me that moral dilemmas direct us to what's convenient and what's favorable for us, not to what's moral. Your example raises the questions: WIll I get away with sacrificing the child? and What's better, a dead child or a doomed train "load of people"?. — Noblosh
But wouldn't that reduce morality to subjectivity? Wouldn't there be just personal ways, no moral ways, then?Whether one action or another is moral is a matter of preferences that individuals have. Moral dilemmas prod you into thinking about your preferences in difficult situations, where the choices are between a rock and a hard place. That can help you clarify just what your preferences are and why. — Terrapin Station
I like Hamlet and his father, the Ghost who I think represents Hamlet's intentionality — Cavacava
I really think we can identify a common moral framework. For example, what's costly and unproductive is definitely immoral, I don't see how that can be argued against. — Noblosh
Then take: wishing for criminals to suffer. Can that be considered immoral on its own? Maybe yes, because it lacks a good motivation. And what would that be? Maybe to add something of value to the world or to preserve what's of value. But I think the effects should act as a necessary reinforcement when judging the morality of something. Still, can anything that is predicted to be costly and unproductive ever be considered moral? That was what I meant.Being costly and unproductive is definitely a utilitarian perspective, so I don't see how you claim it's a meta-ethical one. — mcdoodle
But I don't get why killing an innocent would be an inherently immoral act. I get the feeling but even an innocent person can be in the way. Maybe there are higher priorities than preserving innocent lives, would any such priority also be inherently immoral? Would you kill someone innocent but condemned to death, to save other innocent lives? What about choosing who to live from 2 innocent but condemned to death persons, wouldn't that be indirect murder of the one you didn't choose?because it acknowledges the immorality of killing an innocent person — jamalrob
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