Gertie wrote: ↑January 2nd, 2024, 2:21 pm Otherwise how do you combat such issues, even murder, being down to the happenstance of your or my opinions/intuitions?
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑January 3rd, 2024, 10:07 am I'm not sure. For a start, is it morally correct to seek to "combat such issues"? And if it is, as many of us believe, then is it really only a matter of opinion? I think yes and no. Individually-held opinions are sometimes shared, sometimes not. The group consensus is as important here as any individual opinion, I think. For we create and implement morality as groups, in the main. Of course individuals have their own moral code, but the most noticeable effect is that of the group's averaged-out POV.
Given that there are no 'objective' justifications for any practical morality, group consensus seems to be the dominant factor. And as I think about that, I wonder if that could be otherwise, never mind whether it *should*?
Gertie wrote: ↑January 4th, 2024, 3:57 pm I think it can and should be.I can't see an alternative to consensus, to majority rule. It isn't ideal, as you point out, but it's easily the best we have. When it comes down to it, the tribe can always over-rule the individual, by simple force of numbers, when/if that becomes necessary. This is, I think, something that is unavoidable, in practice. And so I see a balancing (moral) requirement placed upon the tribe — only to use this 'veto' when necessary, never for any lesser reason. This goes as far as is practically possible to solving the shortcomings that you correctly (IMO) identify.
Otherwise we have the tyranny of the majority for whom (collectively) anything is permissable. And there's no justification for Rights to protect minorities - Might is Right.
You're right tho that without some morality we can justify as 'objective', it's a challenge to our usual ways of achieving moral consensus which is more than majority opinion, it requires a different approach to what morality is, and what it's for.
If we think about how Hume starkly challenges us- how do you get an Ought from an Is (how do you justify a moral duty from the objective state of affairs/how things just are), then the way that makes sense to me is to acknowledge that conscious beings have a stake in how things are. It matters to us. Because we're experiencing subjects with a quality of life we value. (Unlike a rock or a tree or a toaster).
It's the 'mattering to us' which brings meaning and value into the equation when we're judging whether an action is good or bad. It's not 'objective', because it's all about what matters to conscious subjects, our wellbeing - but that doesn't mean it's not the reason why we Ought to treat each other with consideration. Including minorities, even other species. It's the obvious reason to. Imo
This is far from perfect, but I wonder if it's as close to perfect as we can get, in practice?
"Who cares, wins"