Broderick Sterrett at the University of Utah
On the other hand, moral nihilists of my ilk acknowledge right from the start that their own frame of mind is no less rooted existentially in dasein. And given the assumption [and that's all it can ever really be] that we inhabit a No God universe.No, I’m not an atheist. No, I’m not an existentialist. No, I’m not a humanist. No, I’m not an agnostic. Nihilism is a harsh position to relate to for many people. It’s not like finding similarities between a pastor and rabbi or understanding the doubt of an atheist or agnostic. Nihilism throws everything out the door and rejects the basic concept of morality.
At least until the deontologists among us are able to establish that -- philosophically? scientifically? -- objective morality is attainable. And then, what, moral conflagration after moral conflagration will be obviated?
You want confusion? How about the fact that in regard to morality alone there are many different, conflicting assessments:Some people handle that by labeling us as “confused.” They refuse to dignify our belief in moral absence by properly recognizing it — instead infantilizing our capability to understand nuanced philosophies and maturity to recognize our own beliefs.
1] utilitarianism
2] contractualism
3] deontology/kantian deontology
4] relativism [moral nihilism, situational ethics]
5] virtue ethics
6] consequentialism
7] divine commandments
8] bioethics
9] hedonism
10] social contract theory
11] normative ethics
12] rights theory
13] ethical egoism
14] metaethics
15] buddhist ethical theory
Or explore this: https://sevenpillarsinstitute.org/ethic ... raditions/
So, given a particular moral/political firestorm that has rent the species now for millennia, which "school of thought" are you partial to? Or have you invented/discovered an entirely new moral philosophy?