I will point out right now, that we never established that prelinguistic thought/belief is moral in kind. I've considered the the entire discussion that they aren't. Based on that, everything I've said is spot on and mostly coherent. Just reread everything and you'll see. — Merkwurdichliebe
That conclusion is at odds with our criterion for what counts as being "moral", which was arrived at by virtue of what all things moral, and/or called "moral" have in common.
— creativesoul
And what is that. A common mode of belief, that I say has a common function: judgement. — Merkwurdichliebe
Moral thought/belief is an entirely different mode of nonmoral thought/belief. Its primary function is judgement. Moral thought/belief requires the faculties of conceptualization and abstraction, which only come after language acquisition and linguistic thought/belief. — Merkwurdichliebe
I was just positing the authority of the ethical authority to be absolute in relation to the pupil. That is due to the fact that he judges the ethical pupil, not the other way around. It's not a democracy — Merkwurdichliebe
We could say, that early on in the development process of ethical indoctrination the roles are distinct. But as the ethical pupil matures, the roles become equivocal. — Merkwurdichliebe
The question becomes, when does the individual cease to respond to the judgement of the ethical authority, and come to rely on his own judgement of himself? — Merkwurdichliebe
We need this new reporting to dovetail with the previously established groundwork.
— creativesoul
Not yet... but we are examining internalization and ethical authority, which are variables of societal conditioning — Merkwurdichliebe
One can know that they do not accept another's behaviour without judging their behaviour in any robust sense of moral judgment.
— creativesoul
That is prejudice - prejudgement... — Merkwurdichliebe
It is time to review our previous talk on morality and prelinguistic thought/belief. I thought we had come to enough agreement to move on to sociological factors, but apparently not. — Merkwurdichliebe
If all moral thought/belief is about acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour, then it necessarily is about judgement. — Merkwurdichliebe
If intellectual assessment is a primary function of linguistic thought/belief, I don't see how moral thought/belief cannot be founded upon it. — Merkwurdichliebe
The adoption of moral principle can happen during language acquisition. Intellectual assessment cannot.
— creativesoul
I would go so far as to say the adoption of moral principle depends upon language acquisition, whereas assessment does not. All language that is acquired contains preexisting assessments of the world. — Merkwurdichliebe
Internalizing morality means appropriating it in thought/belief as one's personal morality. It results in moral thought/belief not feeling/intuition. I would say moral feeling/intuition only comes into play when one witnesses an ethically charged situation. And, feeling/intuition becomes most pertinent in certain ethically charged situations that directly involve me - when I become the decisive factor.
(speaking extemporaneously) — Merkwurdichliebe
All sorts of different thought/belief can become internalized. They become operative in the sense that they themselves have efficacy. — creativesoul
What is commonly called a conscience is the manifestation of past internalizations. Thought/belief is being internalized. It can be about one's self and/or about others. Internalizing a pre-existing morality results in one's moral 'feelings'. These are involuntarily experienced during certain situations that are morally relevant to that particular person's worldview(morality). — creativesoul
There's nothing new here though. Everyone internalizes all sorts of other people's thought/belief. — creativesoul
The collective conscience is the product of the collective group of people all internalizing the same moral(s) and/or sharing the same moral thought/belie — creativesoul
As a side, what does it mean when moral feeling/intuition results in behavior that contradicts one's moral thought/belief?
The adoption of moral principle is founded on intellectual assessment. Appropriation implies that moral thought/belief is founded upon a pre-existing framework of thought/belief about the world. How one appropriates morality is uniquely affected by one's world view. — Merkwurdichliebe
Wouldn't the ethical authority, who believed in relative morality, talk to the ethical pupil about the relativism of morality as though it were absolute? Or, would they say that relative morality is relative too, and as viable as absolute morality? — Merkwurdichliebe
I'm hypothesizing that, in a given relation, it is impossible to be both ethical authority and ethical pupil at the same time. Or am I overlooking the possibility that we are both ethical pupil and ethical authority at all times? — Merkwurdichliebe
The ethical authority has a specific role of exposing the pupil to moral thought/belief. Other than indoctrinating, and then judging the pupil, the work of ethical authority is done. Ethical authority represents absolute right - it has nothing else to prove. — Merkwurdichliebe
I feel there is an unequivocal distinction between ethical authority ethical pupil. — Merkwurdichliebe
The term "moral agent" has not been used to differentiate between different kinds of moral agents; those beset with an ethical task and those not.
— creativesoul
I don't understand.. What would constitute a different kind of moral agent, for example, one not beset with the ethical task? — Merkwurdichliebe
Is it appropriate to say the the ethical authority stands in relation to the ethical pupil? Can we call it the "moral agent", as in the one beset with the ethical task? — Merkwurdichliebe
Is it appropriate to say the the ethical authority stands in relation to the ethical pupil? Can we call it the "moral agent", as in the one beset with the ethical task? — Merkwurdichliebe
The task is in forming right thought/belief, and then integrating that right understanding into one's behavior - responsibility. — Merkwurdichliebe
Deception is possible in respect to ethical authority, but not with moral principle (excluding self-delusion, moral dumbfounding?). In relation to ethical authority, the moral agent is only right/wrong insofar as he appears to be. But as he is to himself, his morality depends upon his commitment to principle. — Merkwurdichliebe
I'm wondering why you think that you can't know that I'm picturing something if you think that you can know that I'm thinking something then. — Terrapin Station
I would concur. Parents are part of the community. Usually it is the parents who are the authority, however, it is well worth noting that some cases it is not and in all cases, the morality being implemented is adopted(mostly).
— creativesoul
The notion of "absentee parental figure" is not too much of an issue. In such cases, ethical conditioning bypasses the parental figure, and begins with other societal influences (friends/enemies, teachers, acquaintances, &c.). Everyone is eventually confronted by these influences, and they are all, more or less, quantitatively identical in respect to being an ethical authority. They provide the substantive material which the individual appropriates into a personal morality.
Morality becomes adopted through a complex process of appropriation, in which the ethical authority serves as the primary influence. — Merkwurdichliebe
...is it possible to view the morals of a community as a sort of 'strongly recommended advice' to people who might wish to join that community without causing significant internal agitation or potentially upsetting another community? — Couchyam
I would like to know what others here think/believe to be the difference between what counts as being moral and what counts as being ethical in terms of kinds of belief.
— creativesoul
I've said this before, not sure whether on this thread or not, but I count ethical thought as being a broader category than moral thought; moral thought is concerned with others within the community, that is people and perhaps domestic animals, whereas ethical thought also involves that and additionally, involves oneself as oneself and all of nature. — Janus
I must say, I enjoyed your theatricality. :cheer: — Merkwurdichliebe
It is either granted or usurped.
— creativesoul
The result of this struggle to the death is "consensus". — Merkwurdichliebe
The first relation between follower and usurper is found between the child and parental figure. I would surmise that in all ordinary cases, the parental figure factors as the first ethical authority for everyone. — Merkwurdichliebe