Moderator: EMG
If morals were just opinions then us arguing on if murder is right or wrong would get us nowhere
Even desks need cognitive interpretations. I think what you meant to say is that morals do not exist in any objective sense(as in there is no physical item which can be pointed to as an example of a "moral").
For me it seems obvios that God is a human creation,like Santa but for adults
SubmissMe wrote:I hate to be a downer but I don't actually believe in ANYTHING metaphysical.
For me it seems obvious that God is a human creation, like Santa but for adults.
I agree that for people who choose to follow such religiously instituted laws(or otherwise) and still choose to follow laws other than those there are conflicts and as such immoral actions in one or more systems can and will occur.FlightoftheCosmicHippo wrote:Question,you say morals come from God & the reason morals differ is cause of people/groups veiws of god differ.Ok I get that God/Morals it's said that if you commit suicide you will not goto to heaven,ok.So why would people that believe in God allow a law to be passed allowing one man to help another man kill himself.Didn't God say thou shoult not kill.
Morally it's an immoral situation woundn't you say.
SubmissMe wrote:There's a term in medicine called diagnosing a zebra. It referrs to when a doctor diagnoses a patient for a disease nobody's heard of in years when its far more likely that it's a common disease displaying uncommon symptoms.
Basically If ya press your ear to their chest and heer hooves then go ahead and say horsey, not zebra. In other words the most simple explaination is probably the best.
aeroue wrote:If God exists by definition God is necessary for anything to happen.
No God, no creation, no nail to stand on.
Assuming it is a creator God as I assume you meant the classical theistic God.
aeroue wrote:How could you take God out of the equation?
If God exists by definition he is necessary for anything to happen.
No God, no creation, no nail to stand on.
Assuming it is a creator God as I assume you meant the classical theistic God.
-It sounds like you are saying whether or not god exists is irrelevant, or did I misinterpret...
charon2187 wrote::evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: Repeat after me: THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS ABSOLUTE MORALITY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil:
Thinking otherwise is shortsighted and dangerous
goldragon_70 wrote:charon2187 wrote::evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: Repeat after me: THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS ABSOLUTE MORALITY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil:
Thinking otherwise is shortsighted and dangerous
agreed
SubmissMe wrote:Calling all philosophers, I need some help.
I am doing an important essay on AJ Ayer and his views on morality in the book Language Truth and Logic, see chapter 6.
Basically Ayer argues that the statement "stealing is wrong" means no more than saying "stealing, BOO! " in other words morality is just a reflection of feelings towards a particular subject.
Is he right? Or do our morals come from more than just feelings? Any views or analogies would be much appreciated and probably used in my Thesis.
Looking forward to all views.
sarnoga wrote:
Morality is simply a means by which some people try to control others.
Morality is nothing but a mere fantasy that people have invented to try to artificially create in others the belief that they have obligations to do or not do certain things.
Any discussion of morality that does not recognize this is simply one more attempt at the use of "morality" for manipulation of others.
Sarngoa
Dog wrote:
That is the most arrogant form of utter bull put forth by a person born to climb the gallows.
Dog wrote:
Control would not be necessary if all would live in respect for others (MORALLY)
Dog wrote:
The ones sneering at morality have lies, murders, and treasons in their hearts. They are the ones for whom all must be on guard. They will slay you in your sleep if not locked out of your house. There are no human beings alive that can be left without control.
Dog wrote:To be so shallow as to dismiss morality as artificial is to be of poor character. You might want to decry others as "Imposing their moralty upon you." but in reality it is you imposing your immorality upon others.
Dog wrote:Save your bull sir, I have no need of it, I sold all my sacred cows.
Dog wrote:hot air
If your quote of him is correct he is capable of being worse than Hitler, Stalin, and Mao.
Dog wrote:Sir:
Your tedious maunderings about control and morality are the hot air of an empty soul. You espouse a philosophy meant only to allow you complete freedom sans responsibility. The load of crap you have dumped here is the underpinning of the Nazi and Communist Holocausts.
Dog wrote:
Neither of the sophomores realize that by arguing as they do they promote the idea that all morals are man made and thus all may be changed to fit anyone’s agenda.
Dog wrote:
No action showing hatred for you neighbor is ever morally correct.
Dog wrote:
The one primary reason men seek to make morality mutable is to have sex. Once the over inflated organ deflates and he has his relief he finds all manner of other behavior allowed as well. (I have not a clue as to why women go along with this).
Dog wrote:
Man is not capable of promulgating morality except to serve himself.
Dog wrote:
The persistent notion that any superior man exists is vanity. Therefore only deitisticly supplied morals are allowable.
Dog wrote:
The persistent notion that any superior man exists is vanity. Therefore only deitisticly supplied morals are allowable.
Jack wrote:
willingsub&sarnoga: I have some better questions for you.. Where does my freedom end and yours begin? What are freedom, and liberty? What is control? What is it's purpose, it's function?
Jack wrote:
I have argued that my freedom, my liberty, my right to choose ends where yours begins. What does that mean? It means that if I choose I should be morally and legally free to do whatever I want wherever I want so long as no other beings' freedom, liberty, and right to choose are violated. If I want to walk around naked in public, I should be free to do so wherever I want. Even if it offends you. Especially if it offends you. You have the right to be offended by my nudity as I have the right to be offended by your choice in clothing whatever it may be. What I don't have the right, freedom, liberty, or choice to do is walk around naked in your house(violation of the right/freedom to own property), to force you to stay and watch me walk around naked(freedom of choice in location/mobility), to touch you or force you to touch me if it is your choice that physical contact doesn't occur(freedom of person and in effects).
Dog wrote:The first sophomore wrote
So we see the opposition to moral relativism somehow become an example of an obtuse “Law” proposed by a Usenet poster. The existence of two examples of state defined morality would guarantee the mention of those states in a discussion of morality. When academic argument centers upon morality and whether it is from man or from a deity, those opting for atheistic morality jump to government supplied definitions, and as states devolve from republics to democracies to tyrannies, morality devolves with them.
the opposition to moral relativis
those opting for atheistic morality
jump to government supplied definitions, and as states devolve from republics to democracies to tyrannies, morality devolves with them.
Neither of the sophomores realize that by arguing as they do they promote the idea that all morals are man made and thus all may be changed to fit anyone’s agenda. From such spring killing fields and burned vacation homes, spiked trees and bombs in abortion clinics.
Which is why arguing that morality is man made is a part and parcel of evil. If you allow for atheistic man made morality you allow for mob rule morality.
No action showing hatred for you neighbor is ever morally correct.
The one primary reason men seek to make morality mutable is to have sex. Once the over inflated organ deflates and he has his relief he finds all manner of other behavior allowed as well. (I have not a clue as to why women go along with this).
The persistent notion that any superior man exists is vanity.
yaar wrote:I'm guessing that your paper has long since been written and turned in, but I feel like giving my views on the subject. I steadfastly deny that there is any sort of "absolute" truth or morality. I believe that ultimately, right and wrong are completely relative concepts, differing from person to person. These personal beliefs, however, are greatly influenced by our surrounding: namely your parents/upbringing and the society/culture you live in. While your parents and our culture may set right and wrong boundaries, but the individual is free to tweak these throughout his life. A mix of cultural and individual relativism, if you will.
stephiebaby wrote:Morality is a consequence, and necessity, of social living. We say stealing is wrong because we do not want our things stolen.
[ . . . ]
The proof that there is no actual human morality is in cross cultural studies. Morality is defined by the individual culture, and there has been a wide variety of cultures throughout history.
[ . . . ]
Morals are quite useless in society, and often harmful. Knowledge based law is a much better idea. Morality gives us slavery, knowledge gives us equality. Morality gives us homophobia, knowledge gives us acceptence. Morality tries to supress knowledge in schools, law stands on the side of reason and stops religious oppression.
stephiebaby wrote:"Also that morality seems to be built into us "
The wide variety in social morality disproves this, and so does the existence of socipaths who lack any "normal" sense of morality. Their "morality" is, anything they do is right, anyone who tries to stop them is wrong. Morality is something we agree to, it is not built into us.
stephiebaby wrote:Really? How did we get to the comtempory moral judgement? And where from? We got here from the religious morality, and through social evolution, part of which was replacing susperstition with knowledge. Because laws are fluid and changed with knowledge, we have improved upon the basic social agreements of don't kill, don't steal, and included things like, black people are people, women are people, homosexuality is not evil, slavery is wrong, everyone deserves the right of freedom of choice. These things are both part of the social agreement and the development of knowledge.
Do you really think paying free people is more practical and efficient? If so how do you explain sweat shops, foreign child labour and the sex slave industry? Slavery is much more efficent and practical. As for the industrial changes, at which point did actual slavery stop? Was it when people got paid next to nothing for long hours? Or was it when people got fixed hours, decent pay, health benefits, superannuation?
Elective homosexuality? There is no such thing, and there wasn't pre christianity. Also homosexuality was widely practiced in pre industrial societies.
Guilt is subjective and we don't all feel it. You need to include the entire species, not just yourself, or even the majority.
Begging, shaking, sitting, rolling over, fetching, these are all just actions a dog is trained to perform, they have no attached morality. A dog which is trained to fetch is not more moral than a dog which is trained to beg. But you are right, we do not inherit a species specific morality, there is not such thing.
You can't exclude some segments of the population because they don't fit an idea. These people exist and must be included. Also while many sociopaths may have experienced trauma or moral ambiguity as children, there is no evidence that this is the case for all. The religiously inspired idea that all children are born innocent straight from god does not match observations in the real world any more than the old idea that mothers cannot kill their children. And think about it, if we were all born with the same basic morality, why would there be so many different ideas of morality, or any need for morality or laws? It is the social agreements which bind us, which we instill in our children, that gives us a shared morality. Some choose to live outside those agreements, some are pushed in that direction through circumstances, and some just ignore the concept altogether because they have no idea what it is as they are born sociopaths.
stephiebaby wrote:"What I think you're overlooking, though, is that moral needs also change as society evolves. For example, safe and effective birth control and abortion make possible a different moral framework for premarital and extramarital sex, as, properly used, unwanted pregnancies can be avoided."
Yes the moral needs change as a society evolves, that is what knowledge does. You are also forgetting feminism as a major influence in more sexual freedom, the male ego was no longer in charge of virginity.
stephiebaby wrote:
"If slavery is more economically efficient, why was the North so much wealthier than the South?"
You might want to consider the world outside the US, slavery is quite common, it's not an American thing. As to the economic difference, I'm not that informed on US history, but I would guess there were many reasons for the discrepency.
stephiebaby wrote:"Arguably too, slavery in prostitution is a consequence of the illegality of prostitution rather than efficiency."
It's legal here, and it doesn't stop the slave trade. Legalisation may help, but it won't stop it. Slaves are cheap. You don't have to pay them, there are no benefits or health plan. Efficient.
stephiebaby wrote:"Sure there's such a thing as elective homosexuality. It's practiced in prison, aboard ship, in all-male boarding schools, and when guys get drunk. We're a fairly bisexual species"
Make up your mind, is it bisexuality or elective homosexuality? "elective" homosexuality looks like the idea that homosexuality is a choice not biology. Also the examples you mentioned quite often relied on rape, which is not elective.
stephiebaby wrote:Emotions/psychological states can be cultural. There are tribal communities with no concept of depression. (sorry I can't give an example, it's from an old psych lecturer who specialised in cross cultural psychological studies). But there are people who lack certain emotions, and not just from upbringing. Brain structure/damage can have all kinds of effects. And people aren't stamp out in a factory, we are not all made to spec. Humanity has a wide range and in all areas there are those who are outside the "normal" range. Height, IQ, emotional capacity,etc.
stephiebaby wrote:"It seems to me entirely possible that it's a combination of nature and nurture, and that that combination varies from person to person."
It is probably all nature, all nurture, or a combination of the two.
stephiebaby wrote:"But the fact that some lack a given mechanism doesn't mean we as a species don't inherit such a mechanism."
Yes it does. It means only a certain percentage of the species will have that capacity, but it would not be a species specific trait. You can't say people are shorter than 2 metres by ignoring all the tall people, and you can't say people inherit morality or emotions or empathy by ignoring those who don't have those traits.
stephiebaby wrote:
"I think we can say that there may be human alleles that code for basic moral mechanisms, even if some individuals don't inherit functional copies"
No, we can't. Individuals and cultures indicate the opposite to me. But no one said we have to agree.
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