The Morality Machine
Phil Badger considers what it would take to make truly justifiable moral decisions.
Let us assume, however, that progress can be made. This requires that morality is a puzzle that, regardless of its difficulty, does have principles that are amenable to discovery. So the Morality Machine entails a particular kind of what is called ‘moral realism’: it means that there are such things as moral truths. Finding valid moral principles will involve a shared search for truth; but of a kind that might be unfamiliar to some readers.
Moral realism again:
Moral realism is the view that there are mind-independent moral facts in the universe, and people can make statements about them that are true or false. For instance, a moral realist might claim that 'killing a defenseless person is wrong' is a fact in the same way that 'two plus two sums to four' is a fact. study.com
Moral facts? Note one. Note one in regard to a moral conflagration that has beset humankind now for centuries.
If, in a No God world, you are able to convince yourself that killing a defenseless person is inherently, necessarily wrong, I won't pretend that I can demonstrate otherwise. But beyond just believing it "in your head", how would you go about demonstrating it to, say, sociopaths? or the amoral "show me the money" capitalists?
Also, don't many anti-abortion folks insist that unborn babies are themselves utterly defenseless. And thus, that abortion is [or certainly should be] prohibited. What are the moral facts here?
In the ordinary course of things, we tend to think that we can establish the veracity of propositions by empirical means – we look for evidence for our propositions in our experience. This approach seems fairly straightforward if we are talking about the claim that ‘the cat is on the mat’, but becomes more awkward for claims like ‘murder is wrong’.
And why is that? Because it either is a fact that cat is on the mat or it's false. And murder of course is a legal term and not a moral term. So, it would certainly be wrong for you to murder someone if he wished to stay out of prison.
Indeed, some moral realist theories involve the idea that knowing the moral truth involves some kind of special ‘moral perception’.
In other words, if you have one, cue your Intrinsic Self. That mysterious deep down inside you Intuitive Self that allows some to transcend dasein altogether, permitting them to "just know" certain things about the very nature of moral judgments.
This was the thought behind the ‘Intuitionism’ of the twentieth century Cambridge philosopher G. E. Moore. However, most of us don’t hold out much hope for the detection of what Ronald Dworkin, in his 2010 book Justice for Hedgehogs, called ‘moral particles’, or, in satirical mode, ‘morons’.
Ouch?
From my frame of mind, intuition is no less a manifestation of dasein.
Intuition: the ability to understand something immediately, without the need for conscious reasoning.
Or
A thing that one knows or considers likely from instinctive feeling rather than conscious reasoning.
And
Intuition is intimately linked to our emotions, arising from complex neural circuits dedicated to the information processing of our feelings. Key brain regions like the amygdala, insula, and ventromedial prefrontal cortex play crucial roles. psychology today
In my view, while we come into the world hard-wired to embody emotions and psychological states, they are no less rooted existentially in dasein.
If someone says, "my gut tells me that homosexuality is wrong", where does that come from? Well, over the course of your life you come to be predisposed to think and to feel about it as you do.
After all, how many people will say, "I think homosexuality is wrong. I feel homosexuality is wrong. But intuitively I 'just know'"i t is right."