It's selfish, selfish is bad, so therefore it is indeed bad.
This seems to be the centerpiece of your moral code, so I'll address it in detail here, rather than in pieces elsewhere. So, to break it down, there are two premises at work:
- "It's selfish"
- "Selfish is bad"
I disagree with both, but first we need to clear up just what you mean. You label a load of things as 'selfish', when I would not. This suggests to me that your operating definition of 'selfish' is different to mine (not a great leap in deduction, but bear with me).
Given that you're arguing for an objective morality based on these two moral precepts, you undermine your conclusion (that this morality is objective) by having an entirely subjective factor - the definition of 'selfish'.
So there seems to be a disconnect between the word 'selfish' and the word 'immoral' - you can redefine one to marry up with the other, but then your moral code becomes either contrived or useless, you end up putting the cart before the horse.
Examples:
- Selfish
- The urge to lash out when hurt
- The urge to be violent over petty grievances
- Sexual fetishes, except sex with a spouse
- Not selfish
- The urge to not feel pain
- The urge to eat when hungry
- 'Vanity'
According to this labelling system, your definition of 'selfish' differs wildly from my own, and from any standard dictionary definition I can find.
Take the example of sexual fetishes. Finding something sexually arousing is not something we control - no one wakes up one morning, flicks a switch, and decides to be turned on by breasts, or pectorals, or a house. So to call such urges 'selfish', or to call the acting on such urges as 'selfish', especially when no suffering is caused, seems to me to completely miss the point - how can something be selfish, if it's not done for selfish reasons? How can something be deemed immoral, if it's not selfish?
And, of course, the central question of, why is selfishness the root definition of immorality? You allude to the suffering it causes - so isn't suffering the operative part of immorality, not selfishness?
Because harm was done to the baby, and harm is suffering and not desired by humanity. Some argue that babies in the womb are not alive, but they are alive, this is a fact.
No one argues that they're not alive. What people argue is that what makes the growing foetus a human person has not come into being after 1 week of gestation. Before then, aborting a pregnancy is as moral or immoral as masturbation - that is to say, it's neither.
By human standards. The only way I would ever hurt someone is if I get some sadistic pleasure from their suffering (selfish) , or I have something to gain (selfish) from killing, wrongly imprisoning, or defending my personal honor by killing them before they can spead rumors ect ect (all selfish) The only way suffering enters the world by other men is selfishness.
I can think of far more ways that suffering enters the world than through selfishness, most prominent of which are those things which aren't actually caused by any being. Famine, drought, earthquakes, plague, cancer, etc, all cause massive suffering, but aren't actually caused by any selfishness on anyone's part.
That's what I mean by your moral code being contrived. These are things which cause suffering, yet your moral code only acknowleges those things which are selfish. So you either redefine the suffering caused by these things into meaninglessness (you wouldn't consider the suffering caused by cancer to be of any consequence), or you redefine these acts to be 'selfish' because that's the only way to fit them in your moral code. The latter, besides being contrived, also begs the question as to why they must be forced at all.
Again, it all comes back to what you mean by 'selfish'.
No sir. Suffering because of selfishness is pretty much all of the evil in the world.
That seems to be a gross oversimplification of the complexities of human behaviour. To enforce such a definition, one must label the simple urge to survive as a selfish and, therefore, immoral act - African farmers eking out a living become immoral despots under your scheme. Something about that doesn't strike me as right.
Nobody likes to be manipulated, lied to,
Ever been to a magic show? People pay big money to experience
exactly that - manipulation and lies. Why isn't it immoral? Because no one gets harmed.
Those seeking the right to die would beg to differ.
All of those things happen to people because of somebody else's selfishness. This is not subjective, it exist universally outside of everyone.
You can get all weird and say "But there may be that one dude who just loves all that stuff to happen to him." But that is not a realistic argument, evil is clearly defined by those rules.
Maybe, but the rules are contrived and arbitrary. The example of the fetishist absolutely is a realistic argument - it serves as a counter-example that highlights the inadequacy of your definition. Someone having a fetish for being mocked (say) is peculiar, but it's neither selfish nor immoral.
Selfishness causes it, and all those crappy things that everyone hates happens because of selfishness.
I don't know, cancer seems pretty crappy to me, wouldn't you say?