Tranquil Bondservant
Nothing without Elohim
This is the main impasse we always reach here. Because of reciprocal altruism you would hold that no harm being done justifies the premise that if the action does no harm then it is moral. Though this might seem like a basis on which to reason and judge behaviours by I think it's not so much because such a reason is inherently subjective. What would be considered harm by one person is considered not to be harm by another and if you were to say that the basis is reciprocal altruism and not what these people think about harm, you have just made an objective standard and made morality not relative (because you believe that this standard is correct & you measure moral claims according to it). Now just because you believe something is true but ultimately it's your opinion about the matter, it doesn't mean that the truth is subjective. It just means you disagree about what the truth is, just like any other truth claim. But in order to weigh evidence about what is true you pressuppose the truth of the thing that makes the evidence, evidence. Or rather what makes it true that x is evidence. Part of my problem (that huge thread I made) is that I believe that there's no justification for the presupposition of what makes something morally true or authoritative within an evolutionary framework, that evolutionary framework which relies upon Naturalism/Materialism/Empiricism to validate truth claims or make things evidence.Because it's my position that if no harm has been done then nothing immoral has occured.
However back to the original point. Ultimately if the basis for moral judgement remains inherently personal opinion on what is harm and what is not then the basis of reciprocal altruism is in the end made redundant or irrelevant because the basis of the judgement between behaviours is what each individual person considers to be harm and not what actions are considered to be reciprocal altruism.
My point of disagreement is that under an evolutionary framework which provides the basis of reciprocal altruism, the description of behaviour or why we do what we do does not necessitate a should. So if this couple wanted to commit incest reciprocal altruism says that we evolved to do x or y but it does not mean that we should or should not do x or y. Because morality is inherently subjective within this paradigm you can do whatever you want and what one person believes is equally as valid because there is no authoritative should provided by any basis that is naturalistic in it's genesis of behaviour. Without a transcendent agent to give a should there's no justification for morality apart from personal preference (what is harmful & what's not). Now we can disagree upon the transcendent agent or the validity of Christianity or Monotheism (anything which doesn't have God as a self existent agent suffers from the infinite regress of causality) and all of that's fine, but the fact remains if we're left with solely biology as the genesis for our behaviour then all behaviour is ultimately equal in it's moral actions, whether they be evil or good. This is because good and evil don't exist within the paradigm, all that exists is descriptions of behaviours or why we do what we do. There is no should.
Now if this is true and it is personal preference that is the arbiter of what is moral or not (what is harmful & what's not) then we reach the problems presented in what I'm calling now: That huge thread I made
Surprisingly not!: Dienekes - Wikipedia The Spartans were a hardcore bunch.I assume the following exchange was pure Hollywood:
"Then we shall fight in the shade!"
P.S Sorry for the essay, don't feel like you have to respond to it all. Or at all. We can always agree to disagree for now, ruminate on it and return later. I'm almost certain the topic will come up again. Besides a new season of Survivor starts tonight! Time to pick 2-3 favourites to win the series and watch them all get voted off immediately
[Edit: Phrasing & the deletion of copious commas]
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