Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Posted: Tue Sep 12, 2023 2:38 am
Well, you haven't really given an answer that suits the situation. That's the problem. I'm just wanting to know where you get your morals from. They're not all from a particular society, if you can criticize society. And there's nothing obviously moral or even obviously right about feelings like empathy.Harbal wrote: βMon Sep 11, 2023 9:52 pmI don't know what I can add to my above account to make you understand if it still leaves you feeling you need to ask these questions.Immanuel Can wrote: βMon Sep 11, 2023 7:53 pmNo. But how do we know that empathy is the right principle? I mean, all empathy really means is imagining that whatever I think somebody else should be feeling is what they are feeling, and then (presumably) feeling some duty (derived from nothing more than that feeling, presumably) to...to do what?Harbal wrote: βMon Sep 11, 2023 5:19 pm
In short, it comes down to a combination of empathy and sympathy, I suppose. If you are able to intuit how others might be affected by your actions, or the actions of others -including those of society in general- and it causes you concern if you think they will suffer in some way because of them, then you have a basis on which to make moral judgements. As you have already said, empathy can be misleading sometimes, but morality is not a science, is it?![]()
I don't see anything in any of that that tells us we have a moral duty towards others. There's certainly no self-evident argument there.
Of course. As an Atheist, you're "free" to do anything at all. You're free to be nice to folks or to cut their heads off...anything you can get away with. Nothing in an Atheist worldview says you are immoral or moral, no matter what you do.As an atheist, I am free to follow my own instincts and feelings.
Like I said: you're "free" to do whatever you feel you want to. But you're not, from an Atheist perspective, "good" for doing the right thing, nor "bad" for doing the wrong one. These terms have no objective referent at all.What if I am a very poorly educated atheist and know nothing about evolutionary principles? Is it okay to help the poor sap then?That poor sap I feel sorry for is one of the "unfit." I am one of the "fit." If I help him, I'm working against basic evolutionary principles.
Well, if at one time, when I was a child, I saw ghosts in the curtains in my window, and I felt anxiety, then the feeling was childish, delusory and without actual basis. I needed to grow up and get over it, if that's what I felt.Empathy is just a sense of being able to imagine yourself in someone else's position, and we don't usually demand an explanation before we allow ourselves to sense something.Even empathy needs an explanation,
Empathy could plausibly be just like that...especially if it bears no resemblance to what I, as an Atheist, believe to be the basic dynamic of life itself, "survival of the fittest." How do you know, then, that your feeling isn't just something you should get past? Nietzsche said it was: why was he wrong?
Well, now that you've got time to think, you might want to take Nietzsche more seriously, and think through what he said.It may be remiss of me, but I have never stopped to think about Nietzsche before rushing to the aid of someone in distress.I'm not saying I believe Nietzsche about that. But I am saying that an Atheist would need a reason not to believe that Nietzsche was actually right in the logical consequences he mapped out from his own Atheism.
You might not like it. But that doesn't prove you're worth anything at all. All it shows is you're not happy with the things you're experiencing.When you are being badly mistreated, you more tend to think, "I don't like this", than, "I'm worth more than this"."Social injustice" isn't a self-evident thing. There are cultures where there are castes and levels of society...and not a few such cultures, either. In these, women do not deserve the same rights as men, or children the rights of adults, or people born at a worker level the same as those born to the elites, and so on. In all these cultures, "justice" means that the ditch diggers stay ditch diggers, the women stay in the kitchen, the children can be killed or traded, slaves can be owned and exchanged, rape is what an offending family deserves to get, the tribe next door deserves death...and so on. Mandela's own culture was an Aparteid one. He was taught to understand himself as part of a deservedly-lower minority; and everything in his society tended to that.
How did he know he was worth more? How do you know he was, if you think he was?
Justice requires more: it requires you to know that what's being done to you is actually wrong. If it's right, then as much as you may not like it, there's nothing more to be said.
I believe that. But then, I believe that conscience is more than just a feeling. What I can't tell is why you suppose your "sense" of a quality that is merely subjective ("right and wrong") entitles anybody to anything. From a purely Atheistic perspective, it surely doesn't.I only have my own sense of right and wrong. Sorry.The more important point is that whether the perps believed they were wrong for what they did, we believe they were. And we need reason to say so. Because there are still things in our societies that we deem "unjust." And if we do, we must be accessing some outside-of-culture frame of reference for our saying so.
Otherwise, Hitler was right to kill Jews, homosexuals, gypsies, etc. in Germany. And Stalin was right to murder Kulaks in Russia. And Mandela was wrong to contradict his South African society. So social morality of that kind has to be judged by something that transcends the merely social.
What have you got for that?![]()
Not even that much. For the standpoint itself can't be justified, in an Atheist world. So there's no guarantee that any standpoint tells us anything at all about objective right and wrong, which they Atheist has to believe doesn't exist at all, anyway.Exactly, there is nothing magical, or mystical, about morality. Nothing objectively right or wrong about it; it is only right or wrong according to a given moral standpoint.That won't make it right. How many "opinions" of contradictory kinds get thrown up here? There's nothing magical about the having of an opinion that makes it a true or right opinion.
But we're not speaking of colour-choice, but of moral precepts. My colour-choice does not make any demands of me, or of my society, or of anyone else. But morality always does.No, they are opinions. When you come to redecorate, I'm sure you don't say, "well, I would prefer the bedroom in blue, but I know I'm only deluding myself". Or perhaps you do say that.Lacking any objective referent, opinions about a thing are a delusion.
Would you really say that Nelson Mandela's actions were equivalent to his colour-choice? He happened to like black, maybe?
There's actually no "you" to be aware at all...so one is not "winning"; one is not anything.To not exist is total freedom from pain and suffering, and as for the good things in life, you are completely unaware of what you are missing. Win, win.How is not existing a "freedom"? It's the complete absence of any options at all, really. It would rather seem to be the ultimate in...nothing.
But we all know that existence, even with its present pains, is better than non-existence. That's why we're not all instant suicides. It seems there are things we value in the experience of existing, and are at great pains not to give up. And rightly so.
Right. Will do.Don't try to explain it; just accept it.IC wrote:I happen to like you. That's a bit inexplicable, maybe![]()
But I may check with my therapist, just to see if I'm alright.