Of course, from my own "subjective, rooted existentially in dasein" frame of mind, in the absence of God, there is no transcending font that mere mortals can turn to in order to determine definitively which behaviors are inherently/necessarily moral and which are inherently/necessarily immoral.Nick_A wrote: ↑Sat Mar 12, 2022 12:40 am
Why all the fuss. Abortion is commonplace and considered acceptable. But a seven day old baby is still as helpless as a fetus. Why can't they be killed or abandoned to starve. Isn't it more convenient for the mother and society as a whole?
Society makes subjective laws regarding the security of a baby as opposed to a fetus. But objectively they are the same. So isn't it time our species became more mature and realize the convenience of the mother is the primary consideration so if she wants to kill a baby and the man responsible for creating it all agree that it is better just to kill a seven day old baby; why not as sophisticated human beings just give the mother what she needs?
Morality is instead rooted in ever evolving and changing historical and cultural narratives. And in personal perceptions of reality.
It's just that the more extreme the behavior is the more it seems ---intuitively, viscerally -- immoral to an increasingly larger and larger number of people.
History however is teeming with instances where people were killed because of the color of their skin or their religious faith or their sexual orientation or for simply not being "one of us".
The Holocaust being the most glaring example of this.
And then the sociopaths able to rationalize all manner of behaviors that most of us find grotesque and appalling. They merely start with the assumption that if there is no God -- and no Hell -- it seems reasonable that right and wrong should revolve entirely around what sustains fulfilling their own wants and needs and desires.
What then is the philosophical argument that unequivocally rebuts that?