Sculptor wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 5:29 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 4:35 am
Sculptor wrote: ↑Tue Dec 29, 2020 11:10 am
NO.
It depends.
Killing can be positively moral too.
It's about moral choices made by the culture.
Ask the Yanomani!
Ask Ghenghis Khan!
Your barbaric "Killing can be positively moral too" is morally sick especially during our currently moral advancing age.
Morality-proper is typically about promoting good and avoiding evil.
You are in denial about the majority of the human species. All societies mandate the killing of "
others."
Without exception.
As I had stated the mandated of killing of humans is not morality-proper but rather it is related to the political and legal FSK.
How come you are so ignorant of this point?
As I had mentioned, there is a decreasing trend since 10,000 to the present in the mandating of humans killing humans.
What is the reason for this reducing trend?
If you have reasonable moral conscience, you would have realized the decrease above is due to the increasing trend of the moral conscience of humans as driven by the inherent moral facts.
To include 'acceptable killing' within morality is bastardizing the term 'morality'.
Take that up with the US legal system, and many others around the world that have many forms of acceptable killing.
But you can't do that because you'd have to get your head out of your arse first.
You are the one who is having your head in your arse, i.e. having no moral conscience and no moral compass.
As I had stated the US legal system is a political and legal system not a moral system per se.
How come you are so insistence on such a low intelligence thought?
The point is the general public need to increase the average moral competence, and that would influence the government to abolish capital punishment as many countries had done.
'Acceptable killing' by various cultures and the ancient is more towards politics and common laws than related to morality.
This is still happening within politics and laws at present, i.e. capital punishments.
More people are developing higher moral conscience and thus the condemnation of capital punishments.
tututut. An empirical claim. Please cite!!
Here is the empirical evidence;
This is so evident, there is a decreasing trend of punishments by death since 10,000 years ago.
That makes my point very well. Morality is neither objective nor absolute. It is culturally and historically contingent.
Thanks for shooting yourself in the foot.
It does not make your point.
Your insistence only exposed your ignorance of what morality-proper is about.
The point is the decreasing trend in humans killing of humans is driven by the increasing average moral conscience and competence towards the moral facts [no humans ought to kill humans, thus ZERO killings] as a guiding standard.
Can you counter this evidence of decrease in killings of humans and the moral fact?