You seem to be mixing multiple cultural standards in the same statement. If the Nazi culture cooperates to purify the racial mixture of the members of that culture, then acts to attain that goal are not 'evil' by that standard, only by the standard of those not part of the Nazi culture.Does the fact that people can and do cooperate to do evil, as the Nazis did, — Mark S
What principles underly our intuitive moral judgments and cultural moral norms?
• Behaviors that solve cooperation problems are moral
• Behaviors that create cooperation problems are immoral
These principles define the morality of behaviors and, therefore, moral ‘means’.
The principles are almost silent about moral ends, but not entirely. Moral ends (goals) achieved by creating cooperation problems (as the Nazi’s did by exploiting outgroups) are innately immoral by Morality as Cooperation Strategies underlying principles. Ends achieved by exploitation are innately immoral because they contradict the function of morality – solving the cooperation/exploitation dilemma.
Therefore, the fact that people can and do cooperate to do evil, as the Nazis did, does not reduce the cultural usefulness and philosophical relevance of the empirical observations that underly Morality as Cooperation Strategies. Instead, Morality as Cooperation Strategies explains why the Nazis' evil goals based on exploitation were innately evil - they created cooperation/exploitation dilemma problems rather than solving them. — Mark S
I am not familiar with moral relationalism (moral relationism?).noAxioms — noAxioms
It is not clear what "morality" refers to and it seems that it refers to whatever you want it to quite arbitrarily.
I don't think that moral language can refer to anything concrete unless it refers to some kind of metaphysical moral domain or transcendent god given or quasi religious laws. That is why it seems that what you attach the term to usually is an arbitrary preference but with no inherent metaphysical moral properties. — Andrew4Handel
It is not clear what "morality" refers to and it seems that it refers to whatever you want it to quite arbitrarily. — Andrew4Handel
In the topic of morals, it is usually referred to as moral relativiism. I use the words interchangeably since I take a relational view of almost anything (relational quantum mechanics, time, relational ontology, etc). Morals is part of that. Morals seem relative to a specific society or culture, and members outside the society/I am not familiar with moral relationalism (moral relationism?). — Mark S
Exactly. There seems to be no evidence of a universal (objective) morality, so I'm good with the statement.I can agree with your comment “acts to attain that goal are not 'evil' by that standard” if the subject is what is descriptively moral, but not if the subject is what is universally moral and immoral.
'Within the group' makes it sound relative to the group. 'Human morality' makes it relative to humans. These are all being expressed in relational terms. I see no universal code being violated by any of this. But that's just me.Here, universally moral refers to being moral in the sense of fulfilling the function of human morality, solving cooperation/exploitation dilemmas, and immoral if creating those cooperation problems within the group.
There you go. Like almost every country, they put out false propaganda against a subset of their society. That's probably evil by most codes. I can't think of a country that doesn't do it. Certainly not my own (USA), especially since open-hate of <those that aren't exactly you> was legitimized by the far right.Nazis lies within the group (German society) about the imaginary threat Jews posed to the ingroup and the moral superiority of that “Aryan” ingroup were evil in an objective sense.
Morality refers to minimising harm. — Benj96
There you go. Like almost every country, they put out false propaganda against a subset of their society. That's probably evil by most codes. I can't think of a country that doesn't do it. Certainly not my own (USA), especially since open-hate of <those that aren't exactly you> was legitimized by the far right.
Who supports that movement? The 'moral' church crowd of course. — noAxioms
Some (members) are not open to any alternative ideas, be they concerning morals or something else. I try to always be open to anything, as evidenced by the fact that I've certainly changed views from time to time based on weight of a good argument, especially weight of an argument that drives a certain point of view to contradiction.Do you see any hope that moral relativists might be open to the idea of moral universals? — Mark S
That the hypothesis Morality as Cooperation Strategies is able to explain virtually all the commonalities and differences of such a huge, diverse, contradictory, and strange data set robustly supports this hypothesis' scientific truth. — Mark S
:up:minimising harm — Benj96
Means and endsmust[can] be adjusted to one another so that the latter is not undermined or invalidated by the former while the former is calibrated to enact the latter. A version of reflective equilibrium. — 180 Proof
This is bad news because exploitation discourages future cooperation, destroys those potential benefits, and eventually, everybody loses. — Mark S
Means and ends must be adjusted to one another so that the latter is not undermined or invalidated by the former while the former is calibrated to enact the latter. A version of reflective equilibrium. — 180 Proof
That the hypothesis Morality as Cooperation Strategies is able to explain virtually all the commonalities and differences of such a huge, diverse, contradictory, and strange data set robustly supports this hypothesis' scientific truth.
— Mark S
It doesn't explain my moral values and also my moral skepticism. — Andrew4Handel
Are you suggesting that cooperative murder would be moral if it enhanced future cooperative efforts, or do you refuse to entertain that hypothetical because you think it logically impossible that murder could enhance future cooperation? If so, why? — Hanover
Why? That seems arbitrary and tautologous where the term morality is attached randomly to one set of behaviours or concepts — Andrew4Handel
antinatalism and related positions where extinction is preferable to life because of the inevitability of harms associated with life (I actually support the antinatalist conclusion that life is too harmful to warrant proliferating.) — Andrew4Handel
Morality refers to minimising harm. — Benj96
So long as I and people like me exist, Anti-natalism is reduced to a hypocritical state of constant cynicism and complaint. A cult of mass suicide idealists. — Benj96
Morality arbitrary? — Benj96
Maybe ad absurdum (e.g. "destroying the village in order to save the village" :roll:) but it's not an ethical conclusion because moral utility only applies to either 'how to minimize the suffering' or 'how to maximize the happiness' of actual persons and not how to avoid – eliminate – 'the problem' of moral utility itself.Antinatalism is a logical conclusion of a harm based morality and otherextreme[absurd] utilitarian calculations ... — Andrew4Handel
Do you believe, Andrew, that there are not any sound reasons for morality and that it's only a matter of personal 'sentiments' or arbitrary (relative) customs? — 180 Proof
Semantics without substance. Non sequitur, Andrew. Don't be evasive.What does the term moral add to a description of normal altruistic and cooperative behaviour? — Andrew4Handel
Well, since I haven't referred "to all cooperative and altruistic acts as moral", this statement is another non sequitur. Apparently you cannot directly answer my questions.We do not tend to refer to all cooperative and altruistic acts as moral ...
Okay, we're talking past each other. I understand ethics as a form of reflective thinking of which moral behaviors are normative / habitual enactments and not "calculations" (i.e. instrumental problem solving) as you apparently believe.I believe that the outcome of a thorough moral calculation ... Are we assuming a moral calculation ... — Andrew4Handel
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