Lagayscienza wrote: ↑December 3rd, 2023, 6:40 am
Good_Egg wrote: ↑December 3rd, 2023, 5:31 am
is it our own moral "sentiments" that you think we are bound by, or our society's ? You've suggested that they could be different.
Our moral sentiments are binding (in most cases) because they are so strongly felt.
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑December 5th, 2023, 10:33 pm
Bad is what most of us think it is. Murder, rape, etcectera. Most of us abhor these acts and those who do such things we call bad.
You seem to be inconsistent here, switching at will between morality based on individual feeling and morality based on social consensus.
Given that there can be conflict between an individual and their society, do you locate morality:
- in the individual's subjective feeling, so that the individual is always right to do what they feel they should, regardless of society ?
- in the (inter-subjective) social consensus, so that the individual is always right to act as society dictates, regardless of their feelings ?
- somewhere external, so that the individual may be right and society may be right, depending on how their views align with something beyond themselves ?
- or in your own infallible wisdom ?
If an example would help, consider slavery. Is slavery morally wrong ?
We learn in history that social attitudes towards slavery have changed, and that individuals such as the Earl of Shaftesbury were instrumental in bringing about this change in the social consensus.
Under the social consensus theory of morality, slavery was morally permissible and then became morally impermissible,
Under a theory based on individual feeling, Shaftesbury did what he felt was right and his opponents did what they felt was right and so everybody acted morally. The question "is slavery wrong" is meaningless; the only meaningful question is whether the act of endorsing or opposing slavery is wrong for some individual at some particular point in time, and the answer depends on their feelings at that point.
Under a theory of objective morality, society made moral progress when it came to realize that slavery was wrong.
Under an idiosyncratic non-theory, I am infallible, and everyone who disagrees with me is wrong because I say so, regardless of their feelings.
Which is it ?
"Opinions are fiercest.. ..when the evidence to support or refute them is weakest" - Druin Burch