Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Apr 25, 2020 11:03 am
A society is individuals purposively organised.
I'm not sure you and I mean the same thing by society. I'm sure there are groups of people, even very large ones, who choose to cooperate or work together on things they consider a common goal or purpose, and you could call those societies, like the crew of a ship, members of a band, an underworld organization, or the Amish, for example.
In general, however, a society is any number of individuals who happen to relate to each other geographically, where each pursuing their own interests will find others whose own individual interests compliment (trade and business) or coincide (social and personal) with their to their mutual benefit. The kind of people who make up a society, and their individual interests, values, beliefs, choices, and behavior are what determine the character and nature of any society. There is no way to make a society what one might like it to be.
Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Apr 25, 2020 11:03 am
Human nature. Humans will probably always be anatomically recognisable, but even this is uncertain the way scientific advances seem to be heading. Human psychology is and has always been too plastic to be pinned down like some preserved butterfly.
As far as I can determine there has been very little change in human nature in 7000 years of recorded history, and I see little to convince me it is going to change in any way in the future. Of course, if it changed substantially it would no longer be human.
I do not agree that human psychology is, "plastic," in the sense of being moldable from the outside, but do believe the psychology of every individual is unique and determined solely and entirely by what that individual chooses to learn, think, and do, and that there is, therefore, no predetermined, "natural pattern of behavior," usually attributed to human beings.
Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Apr 25, 2020 11:03 am
Criteria. No choice including a moral choice is made without a criterion.
That is no exactly true, because many choices are strictly either/or. A criterion only applies where there is a scale or range of possibilities, like one criterion for being a policeman is being over 5'11' tall, or a criterion for being a lawyer is passing the bar.
Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Apr 25, 2020 11:03 am
Criteria include an immediate need: some notion instilled by a significant other: a wooden metre stick: what one team of oxen can plough in one day: what Jesus said: what logic dictates: a legally or morally binding promise: a definition of ideal proportion: and so forth.
A criterion for value claims may be a value revealed by God: the preservation of the human species as we know it: relief of suffering: life after death: putting food on the family table: personal safety and pleasure at all times : cleansing one's immortal soul: saving others' souls: and so forth.
I think what you are really asking is what is the ultimate objective, goal, or ideal relative to which all other values must be determined. If that is what you are asking, my answer is, the ultimate goal or purpose relative to which all other values are proximate, is the life of the individual.
This is something I wrote in a very old article (when I was still using the term, "moral.")
Recalling the reason human beings need knowledge is because without it they have no way of making choices or ever knowing what is right to do, moral principles are that knowledge that pertain to the ultimate objective or purpose of life. There are two possible choices: 1. the ultimate objective or purpose of a human life is one's own life, or 2. the ultimate objective or purpose of a human life is something other than one's own life.
Nothing dictates which course any individual must choose as their ultimate objective or purpose. Many do not choose either extreme and are willing to settle for something less than success and real happiness. There is nothing immoral in choosing thus. Morality only provides the principles for success and happiness, it does determine what one must choose, especially if they are willing to settle for less than true human success and happiness.