Moral relativity
Or E = Whatever the hell you want
Quick question (and yes this is a trap) |
Re: Moral relativity
I'll go with no.
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Re: Moral relativity
i'll go for no too. And that is because most (not all) christian systems are strongly biased in favor of a tyrannical approach to life.
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Re: Moral relativity
Moral relativity is academic dogma. Good luck bucking a propaganda trend of that magnitude.
As foundational operating principles go, this one is the ultimate poison for western society as currently configured. |
Re: Moral relativity
If you chose no could you please post the objective external standard you use to tell if a system of morality is valid or not.
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Re: Moral relativity
[ QUOTE ]
If you chose no could you please post the objective external standard you use to tell if a system of morality is valid or not. [/ QUOTE ] What if there isn't one? |
Re: Moral relativity
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] If you chose no could you please post the objective external standard you use to tell if a system of morality is valid or not. [/ QUOTE ] What if there isn't one? [/ QUOTE ] Ding ding. |
Re: Moral relativity
[ QUOTE ]
If you chose no could you please post the objective external standard you use to tell if a system of morality is valid or not. [/ QUOTE ] There are multiple overlapping objective external standards which are to some extent weighed subjectively. There isn't just one. |
Re: Moral relativity
[ QUOTE ]
If you chose no could you please post the objective external standard you use to tell if a system of morality is valid or not. [/ QUOTE ] I chose no, but I never claimed I could tell if a system is morally valid or not. The only things I have to build my standard on is reason, logic and at the core the feelings about morality I have as a human being. When I chose no, it was because I think these feelings are not completely determined by culture. |
Re: Moral relativity
Don't you have to define "system of morality" for us here? If you define "system of morality" as "what you believe is right and wrong", then I do in fact think that they are all equally "valid". If you define "system of morality" as "what you believe you have the right to do to others on the basis of what you believe is right and wrong" then I do not think they are all equally "valid". This distinction is, I think, the most powerful and compelling argument that anarchists on this board make regularly.
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