Harbal wrote: ↑Thu Jun 29, 2023 9:17 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 29, 2023 4:57 am
Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 8:28 pm
I have said that the concepts of right and wrong only exist in the minds of human beings,
Yes, I know: but if that's so, then the logical result is that there is no such thing as right and wrong, so morally thinking is firstly irrational and absurd (since it has no correspondence to anything in reality) and secondly inexplicable, since there's no obvious reason why creatures that have appeared in an objective reality as mere products of impersonal forces should mysteriously manage to generate "concepts" that have neither basis nor cause in reality.
Moreover, nobody is obligated to pay any attention to any such concepts, and smart people would disregard them entirely, recognizing them for what they are: the entirely arbitrary constructs of other louts and fools who are trying to tyrannize them by imposing rules that have no justification or basis in reality.
You keep bringing up rationality as an argument against subjective morality, and I keep saying that our moral responses are emotional, not logical.
That's not my argument there, H. My point is that IF what you were saying is true, then "morality" is nothing more than an empty delusion, and we'd be better to drop the concept completely. We're too old to knowingly delude ourselves, are we not?
You might not agree, but I am certain that you understand what I mean. It isn't logical to say please and thank you, but most of us do it frequently. If someone hurts you, your natural response is to hurt them back, but what is rational about revenge?
Revenge can actually be perfectly rational. If I hurt you, then by hurting me back you not only restore your own feeling of vindication but give me fair warning I'd better not do it again. That's very rational, proportional and strategically effective.
But it's also wrong to take vengeance.
Our conscience obligates us
It cannot. A feeling cannot create an obligation. Feelings are often unwarranted, confused, misplaced and errant. But even were they not, they don't issue in duties.
I can't say to you, "You owe me £10
because I feel you do."
It's more a case of empathy motivating our actions than adjudicating wrongness.
Oh, nobody doubts that feelings can be motivators. But we all have feelings we should obey, and also feelings we just need to get over. If I have a feeling that a bogeyman is trying to kill me, I may be motivated not to leave the house, ever. That doesn't mean I'm obligated, and it doesn't mean that leaving the house becomes morally wrong. All it means is I have a misguided feeling.
IC wrote: Will you tell me how you would determine something to be wrong?
Do you mean, "how you, personally, would determine" it, or "what would actually make it" right or wrong?
I mean how would/do you, IC, determine the wrongness of something?
By the Word of God, and according to my relationship with Him. But I'm pretty sure that answer's too short for what you have in mind...I'm just not sure what more you'd like me to say. It seems a rather obvious answer for a moral objectivist to give, doesn't it?
I mean one ought not to do them, because they are contrary for the divine purposes for which such women were created. It's an insult to, and assault against, a person created by God, in the image and likeness of his own personhood.
But they are not contrary to your purpose, you didn't create them in your own image, so what rational reason do you have to care?
I have reason to care because I love and respect God; and it's not loving and respectful to abuse His property...which is what we ultimately all are.
John Locke made the same case when he laid down the groundwork for all human rights. His argument was very simple: people are the creations of God, and rightfully belong to God; to hurt one is to offend not merely against a person, but against God Himself.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote: Whichever society we happen to belong to. All societies that have morality significantly different to our own are false gods. You know, the same principle as actual religion.
No, that's not actually the same. At least when religions compete, they each appeal to the issue of truth. But your view relies instead on cultural imperialism...on the possibly-gratutious claim that one's own society is better, and even definitive of the right kind of society, for no other reason than that one happens to belong to it oneself.

I don't want to trivialise morality, but our preferences regarding moral values come to us in much the same way as our preferences for the clothes we wear, and the food we eat. We take on the prevailing ones of our own society. That's much how it works with religion, too.
If that were true, then how do people ever convert? If what you're saying were true, then a Muslim could never become an Atheist, a Jew could never become a Buddhist, or an agnostic could not decide to become a Christian. But if these things happen (and we know they do, and rather often) it must also be obvious that something not socially-deterministic is involved.
Well I suppose it's a case of whether we are realistic and see morality as the biological artifact that it is,...
Wait.

You said at first that morality is a product of socialization. Then you said it is an artifact of biology. Those are very different claims. If the former is true, morality will vary by society; but if it's the latter, then morality will be as uniform as biology.
Which one do you think is correct, or neither?