http://www.rationalia.com/forum/viewtop ... 50#p560918 Plugging my own post.Coito ergo sum wrote:All morality is within a society, unless a person lives on their own in the wilderness. I'm not sure what you mean.

http://www.rationalia.com/forum/viewtop ... 50#p560918 Plugging my own post.Coito ergo sum wrote:All morality is within a society, unless a person lives on their own in the wilderness. I'm not sure what you mean.
It tells you that things that increase happiness are moral, meaning there is an objective source to morality, which is what we're talking about. I'm not advocating a value or act based moral system, so I don't think the first part of your post applies to me.Coito ergo sum wrote: Except that what makes one person suffer and one person happy can be the same thing. Some people are made happy by murder and rape, others aren't. Some people suffer, others don't. Suffering and happiness are just judgments or reactions to what exists or happens. Saying that things that increase happiness are moral doesn't really tell us anything for certain. It only tells us that based on the assumption that X is good, then it's moral. Well, that's basically just saying that if it's moral it's moral.
A utilitarian would say it may well be moral. How is it not objective? How is it limited?Coito ergo sum wrote: Many people have derived great pleasure from harming other people. Someone may rape and murder a guy's wife, and that guy might derive immense pleasure from vengeance against he perpetrator, enjoying watching the perpetrator die a slow and painful punishment. Is it moral?
Pain and pleasure as a source of morality is limited and not objective.
by Seraph »
Accusations of 'closed minds' are a thinly disguised and passive-aggressive way of special pleading: "You are disagreeing with me because you have a closed mind." I'm not buying that.
Seraph wrote:Nice try, Parrot Face, but I bet not even you can outdo this in the "utter nonsense and new-age-type wankery" department:
And are you disagreeing with the 'gold ring' video,?by Seraph »
Accusations of 'closed minds' are a thinly disguised and passive-aggressive way of special pleading: "You are disagreeing with me because you have a closed mind." I'm not buying that.
I was working off of the assumption (which I asked you to criticize) that negative emotion is morally bad and happiness good. Is there a problem with the assumption?The Mad Hatter wrote:Things that increase happines aren't moral. Things that increase happiness are things that increase happiness.
In fact, I can already list off the top of my head a number of things which increase happiness that are considered immoral.
Secondly, you can't redefine suffering to suit your aim. Suffering is specifically acute physical pain or extreme psychological discomfort and some people enjoy experiencing these extreme states.
Thirdly, an objective cause doesn't make it an objective fact. It's a naturalistic universe, everything has an objective cause, but if morality were objective we would expect to see it uniformly applied across our species - and we do not.
Psychoserenity wrote:http://www.rationalia.com/forum/viewtop ... 50#p560918 Plugging my own post.Coito ergo sum wrote:All morality is within a society, unless a person lives on their own in the wilderness. I'm not sure what you mean.
I don't think this statement is true: "there are absolute limits on what can be held as morally right or wrong."Psychoserenity wrote:http://www.rationalia.com/forum/viewtop ... 50#p560918 Plugging my own post.Coito ergo sum wrote:All morality is within a society, unless a person lives on their own in the wilderness. I'm not sure what you mean.
Agreed. I am absolutely wrong if my assumptions aren't correct. Which is why I posted this:The Mad Hatter wrote:Let's explain this slowly.
Any level of objectiviely applicable morality needs a uniform conditioning. 'Negative feelings' aren't tied to immoral actions, and 'positive feelings' aren't tied to moral actions. There is no level upon which there can be reasoned 'objectively moral' acts and 'objectively immoral' acts based on 'positive or negative' feelings unless you can establish a uniform link between the two.
So what is wrong with my assumption?Feral_Punctuation wrote:The one thing stopping me agreeing with the relativists is that suffering/happiness seem intrinsically morally bad and good respectively. It seems almost axiomatic (is that a word?). I'm sure there's something wrong with this idea, but I can't put my finger on it. Would you kindly put your finger on it?
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