Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 18, 2023 4:01 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Jan 18, 2023 3:46 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 18, 2023 3:42 pm
Irrelevant to this conversation.
No, absolutely germane.
I have nothing whatsoever to do with what YOU think. And I did not create YOUR definition for you.
Answer my question, please: do you stand by your conflation of "action" with "morality"?
My most precious, my most dully precocious child:
listen!
I will f
ill out the definition already provided (and yes I stand by it of course) so that your dullish mind might be able to grasp it. Yet I do not have unrealistic hopes.
And again: your mind and your perceptual system is dominated by Judaic and Christian notions of morality. These inhibit you from seeing
in any other way.
I wrote:
"People have *ideas* and they have *values* and, as a result of defining them, and believing in them, they are then compelled to put their beliefs into action. And there is a special word for that! It's called morality."
There is a famous study of the social life and ethical-moral practices of a Pygmy tribe. They have very strict rules when they hunt in group and if one member breaks the rules -- cheats basically -- and is caught doing so, there are heavy social consequences: the wielding of shame & blame. There is then a morality that was defined, and this is what I meant by 'ideas'.
Those ideas depend on environment, circumstances, and other factors. I am not sure if I'd say that the Pygmy morality in respect to hunting and social custom was 'handed down on stone tablets' so I describe it as their ideas and their values.
When defined, obviously, these are 'put into action' as rule, law, convention, etc.
Morality (from Latin moralitas 'manner, character, proper behavior') is the differentiation of intentions, decisions and actions between those that are distinguished as proper (right) and those that are improper (wrong).
Obviously, moral systems share similarities but they are not all the same. What is licit in one place and among one people may not be licit in another place among other people.
Nevertheless there do seem to be general moral beliefs that seem universal. At least general patterns are recognizable.
Now I hope that you will provide me with the proper way that morality should be understood. Here in the presence of your peers.
C'mon man, give it a shot! It won't kill you . . . and if it did you'd immediately
resurrect as you do everytime you get slaughtered . . .
