One has moral views such as that a man beating his wife is "cowardly", that "incest is disgusting", or that "a man should provide for his family" or whatever else — Judaka
Personal moral beliefs, though seemingly individualistic, ultimately align with the core features of morality, including social control, emotional responses, and the application of moral principles to oneself and others. — Judaka
I guess morality is social behavior and probably only significant where there are other conscious creatures. — Tom Storm
Are they moral reasons or aesthetic? Beating anyone may or may not be cowardly, the salient moral issue is it is causing suffering to another conscious creature. Incest being disgusting is an aesthetic response, isn't it? It may be a moral transgression, where it doesn't involve consent and results in significant birth defects and suffering. — Tom Storm
d guess that you weren't able to follow the OP due to reading it using your understanding of morality rather than mine. As I don't understand your critique either, unless I just think of it as a critique of my explanation of morality. — Judaka
Though, by the way, what do you mean by "aesthetic"? — Judaka
Some claim to approach morality, not with the goal of social control, or even any interest in telling anyone else what to do. That one follows their own moral code or principles and will remain steadfast in that their aims are only personal. One only has these rules for just themselves, with the only purpose being to live a good or honourable life, with no interest in being told or telling others what to do. — Judaka
To me, this is a distortion of the truth of both what morality is, and what is being done by this individual. Personal morality is not separate or distinct from social morality but rather a part of it. — Judaka
One has moral views such as that a man beating his wife is "cowardly", that "incest is disgusting", or that "a man should provide for his family" or whatever else. Then frames them as a personal code or conceptual idea, representing only one's opinions and guiding how this individual should live.
The intention & motivation are distorted but are the same in every way it matters. Moral views can't involve cold practicality & indifference, they have an emotional weight behind them that characterises moral thinking. It is not an emotional feeling triggered only when involving oneself but in general. — Judaka
One will still feel anger towards and lose respect for those who act immorally and they will still argue against rules or conventions that go against their principles. The role their moral beliefs still plays is identical to normal. Encouraging moral behaviour and discouraging immoral behaviour in others, and applying one's moral beliefs in every context as one would normally. — Judaka
The separation seems most useful to someone who resents the attempts of others to influence their behaviour, despite approving of the practice overall. "I follow my own moral code" as in, "don't preach to me", but nonetheless in following that moral code, one will still do the same to others. I believe this is the attraction of the distinction, but it could also be inspired by a resentment of social control in general, and a wide range of possibilities are valid. — Judaka
Personal moral beliefs, though seemingly individualistic, ultimately align with the core features of morality, including social control, emotional responses, and the application of moral principles to oneself and others. I would argue there are very few, if any, notable differences between either approach. — Judaka
A non-personalised approach to morality, which may explicitly demand the compliance of others, isn't distinct in how an individual experiences it from a personal one. — Judaka
Morality doesn't vary all that much across cultures - not stealing, killing or causing suffering within communities of concern are the classic themes. — Tom Storm
These descriptions are just redefinitions of immorality as willful disregard of what is right. They come down to saying that wrongful behavior is a failure to do what is right. Looked at through this vapid lens , it’s no wonder morality doesn’t vary all that much across cultures. — Joshs
They come down to saying that wrongful behavior is a failure to do what is right. — Joshs
These descriptions are just redefinitions of immorality as willful disregard of what is right. — Joshs
Does what you say change the fact that stealing (which may have various definitions) is generally considered wrong across cultures? (And I am not saying all cultures, or all people in all cultures and I'm not talking about situational exemptions, etc)
How do you understand morality? — Tom Storm
Morality comes into play when the intention behind the actions of a person runs afoul of previously established expectations and trust between that person and others. That person knowingly disappoints a standard of conduct for no good reason. — Joshs
Isn't a personal morality that doesn't seek to influence others no different to personal aesthetic preference?
— ChrisH
I think they are the same in that they are expressions of personal values and feelings as opposed to reason. Is that what you mean? — T Clark
What I was attempting to say was that a personal morality that doesn't seek to influence others is not, in my view, really a morality - it's aesthetic preference. My understanding is that it's the intention to influence others which distinguishes moral values and aesthetic preferences — ChrisH
I see them as different, although certainly related, things. Personal morality is the path I follow when acting from my heart - empathy, fellow-feeling, friendship. I act in accordance with social morality out of fear or duty. Clearly they overlap a lot. — T Clark
You don't have to judge people or their behavior, call them cowardly or disgusting, in order to hold those people responsible for their actions. The important thing about beating people or incest is the harm they cause to the victims, not the acts themselves. — T Clark
In those cases my personal morality does not match social morality. — T Clark
I don't necessarily feel angry at people who behave in a manner inconsistent with my personal morality or social morality, although I might. My feelings are not what's important, it is the safety and integrity of those who are harmed that matters. — T Clark
This is an uncharitable, and mistaken, interpretation, at least for me. — T Clark
I am arguing that morality is always both personal & social, and never just personal. What you've said doesn't indicate whether or not you agree with that. — Judaka
What I was attempting to say was that a personal morality that doesn't seek to influence others is not, in my view, really a morality - it's aesthetic preference. My understanding is that it's the intention to influence others which distinguishes moral values and aesthetic preferences — ChrisH
What I was attempting to say was that a personal morality that doesn't seek to influence others is not, in my view, really a morality - it's aesthetic preference. My understanding is that it's the intention to influence others which distinguishes moral values and aesthetic preferences
— ChrisH
Assuming a moral relativist view, any and all notions of morality are nothing but personal fancy (aesthetic preference), and the only question is who gets to impose their personal fancies on other people; "might makes right." — Tzeentch
For me, the crucial distinction is that moral values are those values we wish to see adopted by others. — ChrisH
Is what they are doing moral? — Tzeentch
Personally, I'm not a moral relativist. I think morality loses all its meaning when it is viewed through moral relativism and you simply end up with morality being whatever the strongest group manages to impose on the rest of the people — Tzeentch
"might makes right." — Tzeentch
The first describes any value/opinion/preference broadly encompassed by what is generally agreed to be the human activity, morality.
The second (the usage you're using I think), is "moral" as shorthand for morally good/permitted. — ChrisH
It simply doesn't make sense to ask if their values are moral in the second sense without specifics. — ChrisH
Isn't that what happens now? — ChrisH
Only if you believe that what ever is imposed is "right". I don't. — ChrisH
The first describes any value/opinion/preference broadly encompassed by what is generally agreed to be the human activity, morality.
The second (the usage you're using I think), is "moral" as shorthand for morally good/permitted.
— ChrisH
If morality is "opinions that one believes ought to be adopted by everyone", then having such opinions is moral in and of itself, no? — Tzeentch
It simply doesn't make sense to ask if their values are moral in the second sense without specifics.
— ChrisH
Indeed, but if one holds a moral relativist view, the specifics cannot matter.
The reason all of this might sound confusing, is because moral relativism makes the term 'morality' become meaningless (and therefore it makes little sense, in my view). That's the point I'm trying to get across. — Tzeentch
But then it makes no sense to believe morality, personal or collective, are aesthetic preferences. — Tzeentch
I thought I'd clearly said I didn't think they were the same? — ChrisH
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