Immanuel Can wrote:Your syllogism looks like this:
Ethics and morals vary.
Therefore, there can be no authority to decide which are right.
No, it look like this,
Ethics and morals vary.
Therefore, there can be no absolute authority to decide which are right.
If we supply the missing premise, it's got to be something like this:
Ethics and morals vary.
If something varies, then there must be no right answer.
Therefore, there can be no authority to decide which are right.
Or more like this,
Ethics and morals vary.
If something varies, then there must be no absolutely right answer.
Therefore, there can be no absolute authority to decide which are right.
I think you can easily see now that your suppressed premise is unnecessary to believe, if not fully irrational.
Good job I didn't hold it then.
The fact that people disagree about an issue says nothing about whether or not an authoritative answer can exist. There have been many views of the shape of the world. Many people said it's flat. Others said it was a plateau. Others said it was on the curved back of a turtle. And others said it was a sphere.
It's a fair point so I await your absolutely authoritative answer to the fact that ethics have and do vary over time and cultures?
So according to your syllogism, the Earth can have no particular shape? That would follow, but would be bizarre. You would not be willing to accept so preposterous a conclusion, would you?
Depends if you are talking about physical facts or not as I don't consider ethics and morals to lie in the world of empirical solutions, although I understand the irony in me pointing out the facts.
I also think the Earth, whilst being sphere is also pretty flat from where I look.
So why do we treat the question of the existence of an authority for ethics in a way we would treat no other question?
Point me to this authority in the way you can point me to showing the shape of the world then?
Yet this is highly problematic, as you'll soon see.
Someone has to define "reasonable" and "pragmatically acceptable."
Now, you and I might have an accidental agreement about what those terms mean; but it would be likely to happen only because we come from a similar cultural situation and perhaps some similarity of disposition, etc. So if you and I were allowed to define those terms, perhaps the results would be what you and I would both happily call "good."
But what if we aren't the authority that decides what's "reasonable"? What if the "pragmatics" are defined by someone who believes something different from what we do? What if they want to define "reasonable" as "minimizing the number of infidels," and "pragmatic" as meaning "practical for achieving maximal efficiency in executing people?" Or what if "reasonable" means, minimizing dissent, and "pragmatic" means "useful for creating obedient drones?"
Then one discovers how ethical or moral one is, i.e. one discovers what one is willing to accept or not accept and what one is willing to do about the situation.
Then the words "reasonable" and "pragmatic" do not provide us with moral high ground, or with any semantic content to empower resistance. In fact, they capitulate entirely to totalitarian uses, just as easily as they yielded themselves up to the uses defined by you and me.
Moral high grounds have long been the place where the totalitarians live.
They provide one with the grounds upon which one decides if they can live with what is being proposed.
That's why "authority" is not an ethical issue that is just going to go away. We might wish it would, or would solve itself; but it will not. And inattention to it is very dangerous to freedom.
For sure one has to stand up for one's ethical and moral beliefs but I think what is more dangerous to freedom is the idea of an absolute ethical authority. I prefer the mish-mash that deals with the cases as they occur and that uses all the approaches to come to an equitable solution that most can live with.
Oh, I agree. Grand ethical theorizing will get us all killed. But so will "pragmatics" if we don't have any way of defining it. What we need is some source-of-reliable-information (an "authority," if we can use that word in a non-pejorative, neutral way) to establish the territory for us.
Why? Surely it's best if we decide the territory for ourselves and act if we can't live with the decision and accept the consequences either way.
And yes, capitulation to the WRONG authority even more of a disaster than having no authority.
But we do have authorities upon such matters, its just that they have to judge in a way that most would find acceptable or at least reasonably understandable enough to allow at least grudging acceptance of the decision.