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Morality, is it relative? (Read 8623 times)
Annie Anthrax
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #30 - Feb 22nd, 2010 at 1:28am
 
A friend who was serving in Iraq once asked me while he was there if I thought i could kill someone. My answer was "absolutely and without remorse". And I could, in certain situations.

A couple of nights ago, someone broke into my house while I was sleeping and stole my laptop, mobile phone and a couple of other things. The mobile was next to the bed, so he was actually in the same room as me. I was alone here with 2 small children and when I first realised that someone had broken in, I had a few heart-stopping seconds until I knew the kids were safe. I was a lot luckier than that family at Blacktown whose 8-yr old child was abducted from her bed and raped. If someone was trying to hurt either of my children, I could kill them, no doubt.

But could I kill or condone the killing of the baby that would grow up to be Hitler or someone like him? No.
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Sprintcyclist
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #31 - Feb 22nd, 2010 at 8:57am
 

Annie - the law of the jungle is reasonable.

It's ok to kill if it is to save your own life or if it is for food.
To save anothers innocnet life ........ reasonable.

in the real world, to kill someone would probably be a devistating event i'ld imagine.

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locutius
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #32 - Feb 22nd, 2010 at 3:54pm
 
Annie Anthrax wrote on Feb 22nd, 2010 at 1:28am:
A friend who was serving in Iraq once asked me while he was there if I thought i could kill someone. My answer was "absolutely and without remorse". And I could, in certain situations.

A couple of nights ago, someone broke into my house while I was sleeping and stole my laptop, mobile phone and a couple of other things. The mobile was next to the bed, so he was actually in the same room as me. I was alone here with 2 small children and when I first realised that someone had broken in, I had a few heart-stopping seconds until I knew the kids were safe. I was a lot luckier than that family at Blacktown whose 8-yr old child was abducted from her bed and raped. If someone was trying to hurt either of my children, I could kill them, no doubt.

But could I kill or condone the killing of the baby that would grow up to be Hitler or someone like him? No.


Very scary indeed. I have conditioned myself to jump up at the sound of the house alarm beeping and waiting for the input code. And run to the stairs leading to the top floor bedrooms.

I am with you 100%. Get between me and my children, your dead. And with as little concern or guilt as turning off a light.

I've said it before and I'll say it again...home intruders should be shot. Dead. Period!
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #33 - May 29th, 2010 at 9:53pm
 
I do believe that there are no absolutes in morality and that everything is relative, that's why working out what's moral is pretty hard work.  But I do think accepting that morality is relative is more beneficial to humans than holding that morality can be absolute.
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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #34 - May 30th, 2010 at 9:36pm
 
Naturally, you claim is totally groundless. I just don't know if you realise it.

You cannot speak out of 'nowhere in particular' because there is no such place. Relativism, like every other point of view, must have a stance that is treated as granted, as being past disputation. The peculiar dishonesty (most often unselfconscious) of relativism it that it does not recognise this.


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muso
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #35 - May 31st, 2010 at 11:20am
 
Soren wrote on May 30th, 2010 at 9:36pm:
Naturally, you claim is totally groundless. I just don't know if you realise it.




Soren,

Can you clarify what you mean when you say that morality is absolute?

I suspect that you probably advocate a case by case approach as much as the next person when it comes to determining the morality of a particular action, but that you strongly believe in the concepts of good and evil from some kind  of universal standpoint .

I can see that there are some things that are obviously universally bad or evil, and practically nobody would disagree with them in today's society. Rape is obviously an example, yet in previous millennia it was seen as being a war strategy in some ancient societies.  
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #36 - May 31st, 2010 at 12:54pm
 
muso wrote on May 31st, 2010 at 11:20am:

Rape is obviously an example, yet in previous millennia it was seen as being a war strategy in some ancient societies.  

Not that rape wasn't considered an act of immorality, a violation.... Just a necessary one... A (deemed) necessary demonstration of power differential between the master and the slave, the victor and the vanquished.
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« Last Edit: May 31st, 2010 at 1:10pm by NorthOfNorth »  

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muso
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #37 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 8:25am
 
NorthOfNorth wrote on May 31st, 2010 at 12:54pm:
muso wrote on May 31st, 2010 at 11:20am:

Rape is obviously an example, yet in previous millennia it was seen as being a war strategy in some ancient societies.  

Not that rape wasn't considered an act of immorality, a violation.... Just a necessary one... A (deemed) necessary demonstration of power differential between the master and the slave, the victor and the vanquished.


Or in the case of Australian Aborigines living around Botany Bay in the early 19th Century, it was the accepted nuptial practice,  which generally involved a wooden club.

I'll scan the source material for that if you want. It comes from the Edinburgh Encyclopedia of 1805.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #38 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 8:54am
 
muso wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 8:25am:
I'll scan the source material for that if you want. It comes from the Edinburgh Encyclopedia of 1805.

Ah... The one-stop-shop on Aboriginal culture... 18th century Englishmen... or Scotsmen! Grin
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muso
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #39 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 9:32am
 
NorthOfNorth wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 8:54am:
muso wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 8:25am:
I'll scan the source material for that if you want. It comes from the Edinburgh Encyclopedia of 1805.

Ah... The one-stop-shop on Aboriginal culture... 18th century Englishmen... or Scotsmen! Grin


The accounts were by Englishmen. The Edinburgh Encyclopedia was the precursor for Britannica. There was no equivalent in England. It was only around the 1850's that England caught up to Scotland in terms of universal literacy levels.

I tend to believe a factual observation like that from the time. It makes sense from what we know of many other primitive societies. What's the alternative? There is no recorded Aboriginal history, and there is nobody alive today, Aboriginal or otherwise who would have an inkling of Aboriginal society of the early 19th century.

The only accounts we have are necessarily biased, but we have to look through the bias. It's politically incorrect to say so, but there were many more Europeans killed by Aborigines than the converse, and there are records to bear this out. It was always a violent society.  
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #40 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 10:41am
 
muso wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 9:32am:
The only accounts we have are necessarily biased, but we have to look through the bias. It's politically incorrect to say so, but there were many more Europeans killed by Aborigines than the converse, and there are records to bear this out. It was always a violent society.  

Yairs... yairs... So at odds with European and Middle Eastern history  Roll Eyes

There were exponentially more Europeans killed by other Europeans over land, power and religion.

Anyway the American founding fathers would have agreed with the idea of the savage.

Quote:
He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.


Guess Jefferson and co never sailed on a slave ship nor attended a slave auction.... Or did they?
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mozzaok
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #41 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 11:00am
 
Quote:
http://books.google.com.au/books?hl=en&id=AM4NAAAAQAAJ&dq=%22The+Life+and+Adventures+of+William+Buckley%22+%22John+Morgan%22&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=ZFM54nNZvL&sig=CqZcXgjLZm-6tkOWF4RrgKJcMtg&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#v=onepage&q&f=false


That links to a google book about william buckley, who spent 32 years living amongst the local aboriginals of the south west coast of victoria.

I have visited a few of the ancient sites they used to use along the coast, and used to have a few, unfortunately long gone now, ancient tools, which may have even been used by buckley or his wives.

So while it is an account by a european, of a europeans time amongst aboriginals, it was a time like no other white man ever had, before, or since.
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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #42 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 12:15pm
 
muso wrote on May 31st, 2010 at 11:20am:
Soren wrote on May 30th, 2010 at 9:36pm:
Naturally, you claim is totally groundless. I just don't know if you realise it.




Soren,

Can you clarify what you mean when you say that morality is absolute?  



Can you first clarify when I say that?
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mozzaok
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #43 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 2:47pm
 
I don't know how anyone can discern a lot from what you have written in this thread, Soren.
I just assumed you were a bit pissed a few times, raving against relativism, like a hydrophobic beast, raving at the moon.

Raging against relativism is no different to raging against reality, is it?
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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #44 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 5:14pm
 
mozzaok wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 2:47pm:
I just assumed you were a bit pissed a few times, raving against relativism, like a hydrophobic beast, raving at the moon.



That's called projection, man.

Smiley
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