Recap Post
@durangodawood, if you want to continue with the "
sidebar" when I return in a few weeks we can. If we do I would want you to describe the sidebar in your own words. I will leave off with a recap post which also touches on some aspects of the sidebar.
First, there is a central premise that often grounds everyday theories of moral neutrality:
MNP: There are morally neutral acts.
Obviously if there are morally neutral acts, such as the category 3 acts I described in
post #43, then some form of moral neutrality is possible. Since I believe moral neutrality is not possible, I gave arguments against MNP, including
post #73. I also went a step further:
ZP1: ~MNP -> Moral neutrality is impossible.
Now in general you and partinobodycular took issue with some of the internal reasoning I gave in my arguments against MNP, but you did not object to the conclusion that MNP is false nor did you dispute ZP1. There is a possible objection to ZP1 that I anticipated in a few different posts, but since no one raised it it hasn't been important.
I think MNP is the main reason that common people believe moral neutrality exists, and I think it is founded on a strained idea of morality that doesn't hold up under scrutiny. It is the idea that commonplace acts have no moral quality; that if I steal a pack of gum I am involved in a moral act but if I buy a pack of gum I am not.
@Moral Orel is the poster on CF who has most questioned morality, but he has at the same time denied the distinction between a "moral" act and a commonplace act. Thus in challenging moral realists on whether their morality has any grounding in reality, he has eventually come to the position that no 'oughts' exist--moral or otherwise. In my opinion Orel holds an uncommon variety of moral neutrality insofar as he holds that there are no rationally grounded 'oughts', and that he himself recognizes no normative obligations. I think both of those ideas are false, and this is one possible sidebar since it seems to be based on the same mistaken notion of morality that drives MNP. It seems to me that the only person who
might be morally neutral is the person who does not act at all, which is considered pathological.
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Your sidebar has to do more with questioning the idea that we can make strong inferences about a person's moral beliefs from knowledge of their actions. More generally, it is about the way that we sometimes act contrary to our better judgment. The ancient Greek philosophers called this "
akrasia".