Because when it is acted on it *always* amounts to negative consequences and harm. And this is a claim that I would challenge anyone to falsify.michabo said:Why? What makes you think that this is "an absolutely higher moral standard"?
No michabo...the act of murder and torture are always wrong...I am simply trying to paint a picture of something that is universally contemptable...for anyone who had any sense at all (thats not a shot at you BTW...it is a comment about the lunatics who actually seem to have deplorable morality).As a side point: what does "pleasure" have to do with anything? Are you saying there are cases where turture and murder is justified? Does that mean that if we take two different people doing the very same act, one may be considered immoral if he enjoys it, and one might be considered moral if he does not?
Human experience, while not transferrable, must be symmetrical to some degree. When a child is bullied, it has consequences that cannot be described as completely relative. While there is certainly some variation in experience, there is surely a common ground to it as well. Otherwise it would be scarcely possible to even have a simple conversation with another being...each one having a totally alien experience.What general principle are you using to make your decisions? Why do you think this general principle is universal and absolute?
Obviously, I draw from the Bible as a general principle for my moral conduct (and no, not in the superficial sense that is often pushed by some fundamentalists). And I have found that good moral conduct bears good fruit, while bad moral conduct does not. That fruit is described in some detail in the Bible...my experience tells me that it is true. I submit that most of the world would agree with it, whether they are Christian or not. I, for one, do not believe that such things are merely coincidental.
Since when is popularity a measure of truth? It doesn't matter if most people agree and some do not. That does not prove the case either way, right?I would agree that I consider torture to be wrong, but I can certainly see cases where torture would not be considered immoral. Just because you and I, or even some significant majority of the world's population agrees, still does not make it absolute.
My point is this: we all agree that serial killers are cracked. IOW, there is something wrong with their moral conduct...and we should correct it or lock them away. Certainly, I would agree with you if you say well he doesn't see it as wrong...so we have moral relativism. However, I would disagree with you if you say that what was done by this individual was not wrong...or it did not cause harm. I would say it IS wrong, period.
Of course, the idea is that things would function *much better* with better moral conduct. That is why we continue to update our moral standards...allowing women freedom to vote and work, creating a charter of rights and binding the members of society to its tenets in a fair legal system. IOW, we continually seek a higher standard than the one we have. But how do we judge what makes a better standard, were we not drawing from some kind of ideal that we are getting closer and closer to approximating as our society moves forward. (not that we don't take steps back at times)While I would like it if all of the world agreed that torture was wrong, that clearly is not the case. Many people function quite well with a moral system which does not prohibit torture. How can this be if absolute morals exist?
Obviously people have different moral standards. What I am saying is that some are better than others. And *we all judge the actions of others by our own moral standards*. That has been my point all along: no-one practices moral relativism.Are you saying that people have different morals (you relativist, you) but you wish they didn't, and you are going to judge their actions by your moral standards?
So you are the equivelent of a 'moral relativist' hippocrite...claiming that everyone has a valid claim to his own moral code, but not allowing everyone to stake their claim to their own moral code, believing your own is, in fact, better than the others.No, I would do as you say. I would acknowledge that my neighbour has different morals (not absolute, see?) and try to convince him that his morals could use some shifting. Maybe take a board and try some normative adjustment upside his head...![]()
IOW, something is wrong with someone like that.I suspect that the only people who could be satisfied with everyone having different moral systems and make no attempt to correct anyone else's behavior to bring it in line with their morals would have to be sociopathic or profoundly anarchistic.
See? Not a practicing moral relativist...just a preacher.I am egotistical enough to think that my moral system is far superior to most everyone else's! I just can't think of any reason for it...
Not exactly. He is saying that some human moral systems appoximate more closely an *ideal* system than others. He is simply saying that there is a moral ideal...and some moral codes are clearly far from it, while others are closer to it. So not everyone must share the same moral code (that is simply stating the obvious). But some moral codes are better than others (and, to me, that is also simply stating the obvious).Contrast this with CS Lewis who believes in absolute morality. He says that Nazis, child molestors, and professional torturers all share the same underlying morals (absolute, see?)
So the Nazis might have thought they had a pretty good moral code. CS Lewis is saying this: that they would have found their lives much more fruitful and peaceful and abundant had they chosen a better moral code. (and so would many others whose lives they had touched with their poisonous mentality).
I am quite certain that more than a few Nazi's felt more than just a twinge when they carried out some of the more deplorable orders that were handed to them. But lets put that aside...Whenever these people act against these absolute morals, their conscience gives them a twinge and they feel bad and regret their actions. Do you think this characterizes your beliefs?
Again, CS Lewis is not claiming that everyone will feel bad. What he is saying is that when we get it right, life would be much better...and everyone would agree about that given the experience of getting it right. IOW, were a Nazi to live a life according to a higher standard, he would realize that his life is, in fact, much better than it used to be.
I am saying that I believe there is a moral ideal...and that ideal would lead to a better existence for mankind than those systems that are less ideal. And when we live according to a morality that is closer to that ideal, our expereince of life is greatly improved.Do you think that that everyone shares a common understanding of what is right and wrong, or are you just saying that everyone should?
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