Kylie
Defeater of Illogic
- Nov 23, 2013
- 15,069
- 5,309
- Country
- Australia
- Gender
- Female
- Faith
- Atheist
- Marital Status
- Married
The point I was making is that people who claim that morality is a subjective act and react like morality is objective. That's an important distinction. They are behaving contradictory to their professed views on morality. So rhetoric is one thing, it's one thing to sit around a table professing that morality is subjective and everyone gives their opinions which may be different. This is not necessarily what they deeply believe.
But when in life's situations, when they are wronged or when they are confronted with that wrong or injustice they react objectively, condemning and protesting against that wrong. So everything they said around that table like its OK to do this or that or I don't think and moral act is always wrong is contradicted. Because they react like people can't do this and that and that there are certain wrongs that are always wrong despite subjective morality. I would say how they act and react in real-life situations is the true indication of what they really believe.
It is not the popularity of objective morality that gives support that objective morals exist but that people react against their own professed subjectivity that gives empirical support for objective morality. There is something within them that is beyond their personal views that take over them to express the truth of right and wrong.
And why do you think that a person who considers morality to be subjective can't act like that? Why can't I be outraged at child abuse and say, "That is just wrong"?
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