Do you all think that, hypothetically, if a given person with a sufficiently functional human brain that he or she can process information and react in a rational manner, has a full knowledge of all pertinent information relating to a moral issue and a brain that could adequately grasp and deduce all relevant results of any action it (or its user)commits, would by default always make a decision that could be termed morally right? I know it’s a wordy jumbled mess question, but it may imply that all deviant acts that people generally term “wrong” by instinct are only committed bc ppl that do them don’t understand why it’s best for everyone (themselves included) to not do them.
It’s impossible to sensibly debate something when the words involved are only vaguely or indeed poorly defined or understood.
The word ‘morality’ it’s self is an arbitrary and abstract term. Defined essentially as ‘principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong or good and bad behaviour’, and lots of the words in that definition are themselves intangible and vague. Good, bad, right and wrong,...... all clearly subjective rather than objective terms that push the word ‘morality’ deeply into the abstract.
So for me, it’s clear that terms like ‘morally right’ are so steeped in subjectivity and abstract notions that they are more or less meaningless, and are certainly gonna cause dissagreement & arguments!
So, no,.... in answer to your question, I don’t think you can really ever term a decision objectively ‘morally right’, certainly not without a very clear understanding and agreement about all the goals, aims and definitions hidden within the words,....... which of course we can probably never have with different societies and of course gods buggering the rules up!!
Let children go hungry for 3 meals and see how far a parent will go to feed them. The morality of today is not the morality of 100 or 200 years ago. Morality is inborn, it is learned and is a mechanism by which we try to remain at peace with our neighbors. Law enforces this.
I agree laws are in place to enforce stability; and the basis for laws that are enforced should be mutually acknowledged moral standards (really anything that stems from the golden rule). Unfortunately, ppl tend to push for their opinions on morality that fall outside the “treat others as you’d want them to treat u” standard and this leads to political incentives to put laws in place that are rather obviously nonsensical and subjective. My real question was basically is morality only a concept relative to what one prioritizes as most important, or is there some absolute certainty that the universe dictates for what is or isn’t moral, similarly to laws in physics? A further offshoot of this which frankly interests me even more is could the reason for all immoral acts boil down to the individual(s) that do them simply not knowing or understanding why what they are doing is unnecessary and wrong, or bc they don’t see things from the perspective of others they victimize, as in some cases of violence (and possibly perceive as enemies or threats who deserve it)?
@ChaseMcKinley From my perspective, morality is man-made -- a concept that changes as time passes. There is no absolute certainty (except death and taxes In philosophy there are logic statements to prove or disprove something. You could try that -- though I doubt there is anything scientific about morality except measuring it. In the US, 100 years back it was immoral for a proper woman to show her ankle. Now it's not. How did it change from over the ankle to mini skirts? (not that I object to mini skirts)? You could spend years studying the styles of dresses but never fully understand how the morals had changed. No one writes about it.
The word arbitrary is related to something that happens randomly or personal whim. There are many specific behaviors that are collectively considered to be clearly wrong such as rape and laws are created to punish those who arbitrarily decide that rape is okay. I'm not sure arbitrary is the correct word for your thought provoking question. I commented recently that morality is fluid and someone disagreed strongly. There are countless scenarios where people disagree about what is right or wrong. For example, in the story Girl with Dragon Tattoo, a rape victim takes revenge by raping her assailant. Rape is immoral but is it ever justifiable? The same hypothetical can be applied to many other behaviors.
In retrospect I agree the word arbitrary could have been better replaced by the word “relative”. I think maybe I wanted to include arbitrary since it could technically Thacker an arguable presence in the implications from accepting that rather than morals being fundamental truths like a priori arguments in math and logic to serve as a foundation, they (morals) are relative only to what the individual or group who holds and applies them prioritizes as most important tk him/her/them
Doesnt need to be that complicated- Caring parents raise caring children. Early in life most of us move in from the egocentricity of childhood and, with the aid of those caring parents (or without it) become aware of the effect of our actions on others. Morality is really a cognitive aspect of nurturing; nothing more or less- We can learn it from experience or observation.
Think of the notion of "morality" in it's most basic evolutionary building block: Survival. (of the human species). Period.
1:all morality is subjective this includes morality based off of the quote objective instruction of a deity.
2: this is a good thing. As much as the religious right claims that it is a weakness of atheism and other secular movements. No sane person who has honestly looked at the possibilities wants to live in the system of objective morality.
Very true. The only “objective” thing about such a morality is that it would be enforced by armed government service individuals who have the moral rules recorded in a constitution that would act as an “objective” standard by which to impose punishment...kind of like religiously founded governments which inevitably keep raising the bar for numbers of violent punishments over trivial nonsense.
@ChaseMcKinley I do agree that Theocratic governments tend to be very tyrannical and violent, but that's not exactly what I'm pointing to. One of the core problems with the idea of objective morality is it implies that there are any morals that can be applied universally.
Let's start with what is most likely the most universal moral Thou shalt not steal. Some would argue that murder slash killing is a more Universal idea but given how many societies require it of its members it's really not.
Are you prepared to live in a society that believes the idea that you cannot steal anything is an objective moral truth without exception that will treat all instances of violation of this moral principle equally? At base Lance sounds like a pretty easy thing to do until you find yourself lost in a mountain in the middle of the winter with a young child standing outside a house with no one in it. In that moment the morally correct thing to do is to break into that house to keep the child warm and potentially help yourself to some food to keep the Child Alive despite the fact that you are clearly breaking entering destroying property and stealing.
The closest thing to objective moral truth are very vague ideas such as avoid unnecessary suffering and try not to harm others. Even simple ideas like this though start to get very muddy when you start dealing with situations of multiple individuals and what individual people considered to be part of our suffering. The underlying ideas of Morality In The Human Experience are far too complicated to have objective truth that can be applied across the entire population it just doesn't work. Trying to force a system over others and the population merely creates unnecessary suffering.
@Lifestone Very good points. I should probably add that the my theocracy looniness reference was more of a joke along the lines of saying that’s an exaggerated notion of where many ppl that add religious fervor to their political ideologies seem to want us to end up. That being said, while I definitely ageee with you that no given moral set of principles can be applied with black/white, objective precision, I don’t think it’s bc morality has any intrinsic complexity that is too broad in its scope of applicability to be made into something more analytical. I actually think it’s bc morality is a concept that is entirely relative to the individual who constructs it in himself or herself as a result of innumerable factors and influences.
The key thing about this notion of morality is that it is relative solely to the priorities and value systems that the individual or group implementing a moral decision have adopted for themselves.
@Lifestone I’m sorry for the previously mega lengthy reply, but a final note I would like to add is that the intriguing yet somewhat disconcerting implications of this thought process, for me, seem to be that the same action can be considered both highly moral (virtuous) and highly immoral (evil) based on the notions and motivations associated with the person doing the act. An unfortunate example that has occurred far too often over the course of history is when someone suffering from delusions that impede their perception of reality, or that has either deluded themselves or fallen prey to dogmas from others that convince them they are acting for the greater good when in reality we get something like persecution of innocents over religion or race fueled notions; or honor killings...
The concept of morality was created by humans. It's our invention. With that said, in order to coexist, certain behaviors are accepted while others are considered unacceptable in human societies. I would say that more generally speaking, each individual has their own moral code. Judged against a "societal" standard, that code might be considered good or bad. It'd be bad, for example, if a person considered murder to be acceptable in their personal code, yet he or she would be considered immoral by "society" or by individuals who live by a more "normal" code. Although that person's "code" is considered evil, immoral, or whatever you want to call it, they still have a code. That's my take on it, anyway.
So while I wouldn't say all morality is arbitrary, I do think it is somewhat individually subjective.
I hope this makes sense.
Those are my sentiments on the issue exactly. I basically just wanted to assess people’s different takes on the concept that morality actually is a social construct that evolved with ppl to help us survive through group effort. It’s just a very strange notion to consider...especially with AI debates concerning potential future conscious machines...the notion that a self aware robot that’s super smart with motivations I could never understand could justifiably consider its own existence a moral imperative to protect...even if it meant at the expense of a human beings with different goals or priorities
Also: Love the screen name groot reference...best character ever lol
@ChaseMcKinley Yeah, Hollywood loves to play with that AI theme. I just watched a movie called Singularity where an AI is activated (but one, like Skynet <which needs no intro>, that is hooked into every military system on earth) and in a nanosecond, determines that Humans are an infestation on the planet that needs to be eradicated. I don't subscribe to that logic because, for one, I don't think we would ever invest such trust in a "system." Anyway, that's another conversation. LOL!
@IAMGROOT another one entirely! I don’t mind the idea of a dystopia where I battle evil robot overlords as long as I’m successful; and maybe not maimed too badly in any given robot fights
State murder on the other hand ... perfectly acceptable ?.
Sort of
Love the brevity ?
Also “sort of” ironically might sum up the answer to most of philosophy ?’s....?
@ChaseMcKinley
It’s more of a scientific response. Moral systems are predicated on human perspectives. So, there are universal themes across cultures, but that’s not the same thing as analytically dependent. So, sort of.
That's a lot of hypotheticals. I don't know how you would design an experiment to test the hypotheses, because I don't have that expertise. I've struggled with the issue of objective morality m'self. When you start talking in absolute terms, like "always make that decision" or "full knowledge", I can't come up with anything that would clarify, prove, or disprove that in every case.
Lol very true. I used the term hypothetical to stress that it was just something along the lines of a thought experiment that could never actually be done in practice bc it requires an infinite amount of knowledge and processing capacity...but like u said about struggling with moral objectivity...I’m starting to get the impression that while my moral inclinations seem very reasonable and real...they are still just based on norms that entail survival. They’re only enacted by me and by others in society at the most fundamental level bc they help us work together as a group and survive
Morality is a human concept. It is a set of rules a society agrees to live by to protect the group. Individuals will always have to make a choice between self-interest and the needs of the group. Other factors of course come into play. Punitive measures taken by the state if one breaks the rules for example.
No, because terms are not arbitrary. "Apple" does not mean "pear" and so on, so we don't play with the definition of morality.
I agree apples and pears aren’t arbitrary since we can observe and eat them. But while we do have a clear cut definition of fruit, morality and moral standards aren’t very readily agreed upon. That’s why I have to conclude that we unfortunately don’t have the luxury of saying our moral values as ppl that aren’t psychopaths (golden rule for example) are objectively true...since they are actually relative to our prioritizing feelings pleasure above pain, and lives of people above insects...I know arbitrary has a bit more negative of a connotation, so maybe relative could’ve fit better in the posted question...
Yes, but it goes further. In English lexicology, every word and phrase is made of three things: 1. The referrent 2. The visual meaning 3. The concept (everything but the other two), and this is why words have a definite meaning at any expression.
People disagree on morality because they don't have the sources to back up their definitions. Moral philosophy has a definite history, and the first philosopher to define morality defines the word, because it's his expression.
I have a problem with this one because we are not all equally endowed with the same values nor
do we all have the same take on morality or the same education in morality - I was born into a family of rogues who actually didn't accept me as one of their own (because I wasnt born a cockney) So I grew up with a different morality - There are so many variables for this one that I wouldn't know where to start formulating any proposition.
If you go out shopping, get everything you need then return home - as you've done many times before. Are you glad you've not been mugged and robbed?
I think for the most part people understand why something is "wrong". For whatever reason, they just don't care that it's wrong. Or, like the other commenter said, their life experience makes it so they can justify their acts in their heads.
I do not think that people always make the correct moral decision. We're making decisions all day long and we tend to choose the one better for our survival or the option that benefits us the most.
No. You used some subjectivity "full knowledge, all pertinent/relevant" and left out life experience. Morality has an evolutionary purpose or else it would not be so common among humans as a species along a similar development path. Your question has validity but the hypothetical bubble you speak of would need to flex to each and every scenario adjusting a person's history and background.
Morality has to do with maximizing well being and reducing pain and sickness both for you and everyone else. I don't think You can always know what is right. Everyone is always making mistakes and learning from it. Dogmatism keeps us from learning.