Atla wrote: ↑Tue Jul 11, 2023 5:48 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jul 11, 2023 5:42 pm
That's a real danger, of course. Somebody could believe in objective morality, but get it wrong. But subjectivism offers no cure to that situation at all; for subjectivism does not conduce to humility or reluctance to act in bad ways; rather, it removes any impediment between the desiring self and the object he/she desires...whatever it may be...be it good, or be it evil.
And it has, historically, often been things like slavery, rape, murder and genocide. It's not hard to realize that all the great genocides of the last century, that killed more human beings than all of previous history put together, were not impeded by the increasing secularization of the century. Rather, they accelerated very quickly. That shouldn't have happened, if subjectivism offered us any bulwark against genocide.
Objective morality - which one?

The objective one. None of the ones that claim to be the objective truth, but are not.
As things stand, there is only subjective morality,
Were that true, then there's no morality at all, anywhere. Just the delusion of it.
...humanity won't have a good possibility of unifying.
Well, since the desire to unify is only a subjective preference on your part, allegedly, how serious a concern can that be? It begins and ends with your personal preference for it, not with any duty of anybody else to agree, apparently...if subjectivism is true.
Increasing the chance of armageddon.
I've got bad news for you. That's not a "chance." That's a certainty.
But consider how subjectivism feeds into that. Firstly, it creates moral bewilderment on the part of everybody who is wooed by it...there are no morals upon which any society or even consensus between people can be structured. Social chaos breaks out -- as we are seeing it do around the world today -- and eventually, people desperate for security surrender all their autonomy to the first authoritarian who will provide the illusion of security.
That's exactly the moral cycle that happened in the Weimar Republic, I think, with the cabarets, corrupt politics and Communist uprisings in Germany. Moral decay and relativism advanced, along with social disintegration, conflict, misery and rage. Eventually, a man appeared who promised security, and the Germans flooded to his cause...because he offered an artificial certainty, and even an artificial one was better than none.
With subjective morality, there would at least be a somewhat higher chance for unification.
That seems implausible. If, as you would have me think, both your morality and mine, and everybody else's is simply "subjective," then why do we need to "agree"? We don't. Nobody's going to be "right" or "wrong" in any real sense if we don't agree. In fact, we can't even show that getting along is, in any objective sense, "better" than killing each other. It's all up to what the individual wants to do.