For those of you who are familiar with law, does the legal system ever explain why murder and other crimes have been criminalised?
Okay, lets say I know that the right thing to do is to help a starving child. Why should I do the right thing? Is the answer as easy as 'because it's the right thing to do'?
Without resorting to objective morality or an ultimate moral arbiter, how would you convince another person that your morality or the morality of your society is preferable to their own? For example, how would you convince a murderer who thinks murder is good that they shouldn't murder?
If morality is about what one should or shouldn't do, is the question 'should I play Left for Dead 2 or Modern Warfare' a moral one? Is there any qualitative difference between this moral quandry and other ones like 'should I steal'? In other words, are they both equally important?
Okay, lets say I know that the right thing to do is to help a starving child. Why should I do the right thing? Is the answer as easy as 'because it's the right thing to do'?
Without resorting to objective morality or an ultimate moral arbiter, how would you convince another person that your morality or the morality of your society is preferable to their own? For example, how would you convince a murderer who thinks murder is good that they shouldn't murder?
If morality is about what one should or shouldn't do, is the question 'should I play Left for Dead 2 or Modern Warfare' a moral one? Is there any qualitative difference between this moral quandry and other ones like 'should I steal'? In other words, are they both equally important?
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