'The behaviour IS the morality'? Incoherent codswallop.Advocate wrote: ↑Mon Dec 14, 2020 4:35 pmMorality is not an external thing to be referenced, the behavior IS the morality. If a type of behaviour tends to lead to acceptable results for all involved, it's moral behaviour.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Dec 14, 2020 11:15 amYou keep making the same mistake. There's no such thing as a 'moral behaviour'. There's only behaviour that we judge morally rignt or wrong, proper or improper. The expression 'moral behaviour' is a grammatical misattribution. And the expression 'moral goal' just means a goal adopted because it's believed to be morally right. It's another, though more disguised, misattribution. Your confusion is linguistic.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon Dec 14, 2020 7:28 am
I am not into arguing re abortion in this case but on the principle in general.
Re your last statement,
'this behaviour won't achieve this goal'.
Within a moral framework and system, in principle it meant,
'this moral behavior won't achieve the moral goal'.
For the above to be effective, we will need to establish a Moral Framework and System.
The moral goal must be supported by Justified True Moral Facts within the moral framework and system.
In itself, the claim 'this behaviour won't achieve this goal' may be empirically verifiable. But it has no moral implication - it makes no moral claim. For example, the claim 'elective abortion is inconsistent with the goal of maximum population increase' says nothing about morality.
The assertion 'maximum population increase is morally right' is completely separate and, anyway, non-factual - like all moral assertions, such as 'elective abortion is morally wrong'. Those assertions don't magically become factual just because 'elective abortion is inconsistent with the goal of maximum population increase'.
Moral realists and objectivists obtusely miss out a step, how ever clearly and repeatedly the step is explained to them.
The expression 'moral behaviour' just means 'behaviour judged to be morally acceptable by {me/us}. The words 'moral' and 'immoral' express judgements about the behaviour. Propriety and impropriety aren't objectively independent properties. That's why an action can rationally be judged moral and immoral by different judges.