How do you define bad? The claim just passes the explanatory burden. — Mark S
What if we define a moral ought as something like “What all well informed, rational, people would advocate”? — Mark S
All well-informed, rational people will have shared goals and ideas about how to morally accomplish them. — Mark S
I propose that all past and present moral norms can be explained as parts of cooperation strategy explanations.
Your ideal of well-informed, rational people with shared goals and ideas is nowhere to be found. The standards that might apply to science and technology do not apply to ethics and politics because there is nothing resembling an objective standpoint. — Fooloso4
Well-informed rational people agree that an embryo is a fertilized egg, but there is no information, no evidence, and no reason that leads to general agreement as to the moral status of an embryo. — Fooloso4
The "cooperative strategy" more often than not has always been and continues to be that those in power make the rules and those who are not "cooperate" by submitting to their power or suffer the consequences. — Fooloso4
The idea that what is normative is what all rational people would advocate is Bernard Gert’s (see SEP’s morality entry of the last 20 years or so), not mine. I leave it to Gert to defend. — Mark S
My main point has been that there is an objective standpoint about the function of human morality. The evidence is that past and present cultural moral norms and the judgments of our moral sense are all parts of cooperation strategies. — Mark S
Neither of your counterexamples contradicts the function of human morality being to solve cooperation problems. Both are more about the morality of 'ends', a subject the function of human morality is largely silent on. — Mark S
I understand why thinking of human morality in terms of its function (the principal reason it exists) rather than in terms of its imperative oughts (the traditional perspective) can be initially confusing. — Mark S
... how the idea that morality is about solving cooperative problems can actually help in addressing the moral case for supporting or denying support to the Ukrainians against the Russians. — neomac
Your ideal of well-informed, rational people with shared goals and ideas is nowhere to be found. — Fooloso4
What is the relationship between morality and cooperative strategies? They are not, as you assume, one and the same. Cooperative strategies to achieve immoral goals are immoral cooperative strategies.
Deontology is not "the traditional perspective" but one traditional perspective. There are others. — Fooloso4
↪Mark S I'd be interested briefly to understand why you are exploring this subject? Are you hoping to change how humans understand morality, or is this an academic exercise, a hobby?
In other words, what's your end game? — Tom Storm
What does your claim that "well-informed and rational are normative” mean to you? I can make no sense of it. — Mark S
But from your response it seems to have fallen flat. I don't think I'll try explaining it.Are well informed rational people better than ill-informed irrational people? — unenlightened
That I can make a small contribution to making moral philosophy more culturally useful based on understanding human morality’s function is solving cooperation problems. — Mark S
Due to our evolutionary origins, we share some needs and preferences that are generated by our genes. To the extent we share genes, we share at least some needs and preferences. Assumed shared needs and preferences are the basis of the ideas that the goals of moral behavior should be increasing "well-being" or flourishing. — Mark S
I have read Sam Harris and was disappointed. — Mark S
This contradicts Sam Harris’ claim that, as a matter of science, the goal of moral behavior is fixed as well-being.
In addition an appeal to cultural moral norms is an appeal to moral relativism. The exact opposite of an objective standpoint. — Fooloso4
Knowing the function of cultural moral norms is to solve cooperation problems enables us to predict when those moral norms will fail. — Mark S
We ought (conditional) not follow the Golden Rule when “tastes differ” and in certain times of war and when dealing with criminals in order to not decrease the benefits of cooperation. — Mark S
And we perhaps ought not (conditional) follow marker moral norms such as eating shrimp and masturbation are abominations once we understand their arbitrariness as markers of membership and commitment to ingroups. And understanding “women must be submissive to men” and “homosexuality is immoral” are norms about cooperating to exploit outgroups gives us reasons we ought not (conditional) follow them in order to achieve the goal of moral coherence. — Mark S
Knowing the function of cultural moral norms is to solve cooperation problems enables us to predict when those moral norms will fail.
— Mark S
How do you know that? — neomac
Cooperation being a stepping stone to a goal (wellbeing or flourishing), not the goal itself.
— Tom Storm
:up: — 180 Proof
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