Londoner wrote: ↑Sat Aug 05, 2017 1:47 pm
OK, then if they have a relationship they must be two seperate things.
Okay, so what?
Me: Suppose my feelings change; does the 'right thing' change too?
Very often it does, yes.
If our feelings were the
only thing that determined if something was 'the right thing', then it would be 'always'. If it is only 'very often', that means there must be some occasions when that isn't the case, so if we say 'very often' we must think there is some criteria apart from our feelings.
Your feelings about something can change over time, consequently, what you feel is the right thing may also change. I didn't say our feelings were the only thing that determined if something was right.
I can only act contrary to my conscience if I think my conscience represents a set of values that may conflict with my feelings at any particular moment i.e. to talk of 'conscience' is to apply a standard.
I suppose you could say that your conscience informs your feelings. I'm not particularly interested in untangling the conscience from the feelings we have about things or what we intuitively seem to know as right and wrong. The only point I want to make is that our sense of morality, whether you be atheist, theist or whatever, is instilled in us through the same process, the source is irrelevant to that.
And it must be an external standard
I don't know if we are born with any specific moral precepts, I tend to think probably not. For the most part we assimilate our morality from the culture we are from, if that's what you mean by external. I have already said this.
otherwise it would be like Wittgenstein's 'private language' argument. If conscience was just a feeling, I could not use that feeling to judge my other feelings, since my conscience would change along with those feelings. If I was acting out of anger I would have a conscience that was OK with acting out of anger, and so on.
I don't think I've said conscience is just a feeling, although it may be, I don't know. What are you trying to make it sound like I'm saying?
Suppose instead I take the opportunity to steal her handbag. It is an instinctive act on my part, so is that OK?
It's not okay with me but I'm not the one nicking her handbag so I don't have to justify it. I assume it is okay with you, or you wouldn't do it.
Would you agree it was therefore just as moral as your going to her assistance?
The act has moral implications, if that's what you're asking.
So which is it? Either morality is simply conforming to the society we are in, or morality is us each responding spontaneously to our own feelings. It can't be both.
Can't it? And there was me thinking it could.
We could go for either. I could adopt a moral code of conformism. Or I could try to be true to my feelings. Either would then be the basis of a moral code. If I think morality is meaningful I will have to choose something, but I cannot put up any reasons to say why one choice is better than the other.
I don't think I've explained myself badly enough to justify you interpreting it in such a silly way.