The spiritual values advocated by Buddhism are directed, not towards a new life in some higher world, but towards a state utterly transcending the world, namely, Nibbana. In making this statement, however, we must point out that Buddhist spiritual values do not draw an absolute separation between the beyond and the here and now. They have firm roots in the world itself for they aim at the highest realization in this present existence. Along with such spiritual aspirations, Buddhism encourages earnest endeavor to make this world a better place to live in.
Under socially constructed norms, then slavery would have been moral in its time?
Essentially morality or ethics becomes absolute moral relativism, a result that many would reject.
rational autonomy — Brian A
This is an ontological, not an epistemological question about ethics. I am aware atheists can be very moral beings. — Modern Conviviality
This is a question for non-theists who hold to objectivity in ethics (moral realists) - e.g. it is always true that murdering someone for no reason is morally wrong, etc. — Modern Conviviality
Grounding morality in: evolution (naturalistic fallacy), sentiment (subjectivity), or human reason (ultimately subjective, for whose reason are we speaking of? And human reason, limited as it is, cannot construct moral laws) - seems incoherent. — Modern Conviviality
But I think intuition by itself does not constitute an argument for the reality of an objective moral realm. — Modern Conviviality
Buddhist morality is grounded in the original Buddhist teachings — Wayfarer
Says you. No argument here, only bald assertion. — Wayfarer
This does not in any way broach the question of the ground of moral truths. — Modern Conviviality
But ultimately Buddhist ethics are grounded in the reality of karma — Wayfarer
how does the Buddhist know that 'all intentional actions have consequences'? — Modern Conviviality
I appreciate this criticism. But I'm not rejecting the authority of reason, reason is all we have to fall back on as philosophers. I'm making the point that placing the building of moral objectivity on the foundations of human reason is constructivist, because surely the moral realm existed before humans did. If morality came into existence with man, how can it be objectively binding (i.e. law-like).trying to rationally justify divine command while rejecting the authority of reason is incoherent. — Πετροκότσυφας
Excellent question. I don't think anyone else in this thread has an answer to it.if morality came into existence with man, how can it be objectively binding (i.e. law-like). — Modern Conviviality
Short of Platonism, are these all the options a non-theist has at his disposal? — Modern Conviviality
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