CIN wrote: ↑February 19th, 2022, 7:28 pmPerfect, we agree on that for sure.PhilosophersStoned wrote: ↑February 19th, 2022, 7:06 amYou say, "The idea of good and bad, of pain and of good reasons are all individual states of mind." That is merely your belief. You need to provide good arguments to support it.CIN wrote: ↑February 18th, 2022, 8:34 pm I think there are absolute moral truths. I would suggest that 'it's wrong to deliberately cause pain without good reason' is such a truth. Of course we then have to ask what counts as a good reason, but the fact that we haven't yet established that doesn't prevent the statement being true.But that is the whole point of my statement.
Let's take for example the proposition you used. "It's wrong to deliberately cause pain without good reason" i agree it is a morally acceptable statement but it is not, in my opinion, a statement that would define enough moral guidance. The idea of good and bad, of pain and of good reasons are all individual states of mind. That the sentence loses value if analysed. Unless we only consider the extremes.
Is it morally right to torture an alleged terrorist to find out if there is an attack planned?
And if it is right how much pain can we inflict him?
Is his pain threshold higher than our so should we torture him harder to make sure he does feel enough pain to break?
And what if he doesn't know of any plan and he told us so after the first 10 minutes of interrogation?
Good reason would suggest we can torture him until he breaks in order to save hundreds of lives if we can avoid an attack.
But does it make it morally right?
If you had good reason to believe that the terrorist know about the attack, and you have no other way of finding out when it is planned, then yes, it is morally right to torture him. The reason is that the total pain of the attack is likely to be greater than the pain inflicted on the terrorist. Since pain is an evil, the attack is likely to be more evil than torturing the terorrist, so it's morally right to torture him.
Now let's put the case the terrorist is an american soldier and we are vietnamese from Saigon.
Would it be right to torture the american soldier to avoid the death of all the innocent people in Saigon? Or would it be right for the american troops to invade Saigon to "free" the innocent people of Saigon from the dictatorship of communist China, killing many of them in the process?
One as to be good and one as to be bad. Unfortunately depending if you are american or if you are from Saigon what's good for one is bad for the other. So they are both right. And they are both wrong. Depending from which side of the river you are look at.
And in regarding of pain threshold neural terminations respond to stimulation at different degree for different people. Pain is not objective. What hurts me physically might not hurt you as much. Even more so for psychological pain. Different people have different level of resilience.