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Morality, is it relative? (Read 8636 times)
NorthOfNorth
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #45 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 8:37pm
 
More like perspicacity... man Wink
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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #46 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 9:21pm
 
mozzaok wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 2:47pm:
Raging against relativism is no different to raging against reality, is it?


You are suggesting that reality is relative. That would also suggest that physics and mathematics are relative. I don't think you really mean to say that. But go ahead, surprise me....

It is not possible for you to make value judgements unless you are speaking from a point of view WITHIN an agreed value system. In other words, you cannnot be absolutely relative because that would be not only incomprehensible but unthinkable and therefore unutterable.

And so my point is that relativists who dispute any particular moral system must be speaking out of another moral system (another agreed value system). Speaking as if one didn't have such a value system out of which one makes value claims is dishonest - or drunken raving.

You can criticise any moral system you like but you can only do so either out the selfsame moral system or out of another moral system. You cannot make statements about morals out of no moral system. Some sort of ethical  framework has to be present (agreed upon, accepted, shared etc) and then you can be relative to that. You cannot be relative to nothing in particular.

See if you can really  think that you can speak of values 'out of no particular system of values'' or as you put it, out of the relativity of reality.

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muso
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #47 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 9:37pm
 
Soren wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 9:21pm:
[quote author=mozzaok link=1264378137/30#43 date=1275367643]

You are suggesting that reality is relative. That would also suggest that physics and mathematics are relative. I don't think you really mean to say that. But go ahead, surprise me....



So are you saying that Einstein was wrong?
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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #48 - Jun 1st, 2010 at 9:46pm
 
muso wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 9:37pm:
Soren wrote on Jun 1st, 2010 at 9:21pm:
[quote author=mozzaok link=1264378137/30#43 date=1275367643]

You are suggesting that reality is relative. That would also suggest that physics and mathematics are relative. I don't think you really mean to say that. But go ahead, surprise me....



So are you saying that Einstein was wrong?



Even Einstein had a fixed point, the speed of light from memory, from which to be relative. There must be something in every system that is not relative. ARchimedes was already looking for a fixed point from which to lever the earth.



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muso
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #49 - Jun 2nd, 2010 at 8:08am
 
Human DNA is a pretty reasonable fixed point of reference. Our DNA, our social environment and our history together determine the make up of our working morality.  

The complexity of society nowadays means that we've progressed beyond simple morality, and we're now in the realms of risk assessment.

The old basic morality, as reflected in the Wiccan  "An it harm none, do as you will" (and you'll find this basic assumption in every major religion known to man) is a basic attribute of human society regardless of where you go in the world.  Added to this are the various laws of the myriad of religious and cultural traditions throughout the world.

Taken as the core of morality everywhere, it's all about minimising the risk of harm to individuals and to society on a local and global scale.

As soon as we introduced machinery that took actions thousands of times quicker than we could think, it rang the death knell for traditional absolute moralities.

A broker,  while selling shares can accidentally enter too many zeros on a computer and cause events that will cause the financial demise, and possibly death of thousands of people, but he can quite happily go to church afterwards, and believe that his actions did not break any moral code, and go on living a wholesome family life for all we know.  

If you want a pathway to modern morality, it's called risk management.  
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« Last Edit: Jun 2nd, 2010 at 8:56am by muso »  

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muso
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #50 - Jun 2nd, 2010 at 9:00am
 
mozzaok wrote on 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.


I've read that book. It comes down to the fact that if you give people a fair go, they will do the right thing by you. It's a pity there were not more "Buckleys".

I've no doubt that there was a great deal of cultural variation between Aboriginal tribes, just as there is between different businesses today. It just takes a real bastard leader to mess things up for a generation or more.

If you read European history,  the personality of individual monarchs had a lot of influence on the society and prosperity of the day.
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Amadd
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #51 - Jun 4th, 2010 at 11:04am
 
Quote:
You are suggesting that reality is relative. That would also suggest that physics and mathematics are relative. I don't think you really mean to say that. But go ahead, surprise me....

It is not possible for you to make value judgements unless you are speaking from a point of view WITHIN an agreed value system. In other words, you cannnot be absolutely relative because that would be not only incomprehensible but unthinkable and therefore unutterable.

And so my point is that relativists who dispute any particular moral system must be speaking out of another moral system (another agreed value system). Speaking as if one didn't have such a value system out of which one makes value claims is dishonest - or drunken raving.


Gee, I hope that you aren't forgetting Soren that you have NO fixed point to your argument yourself?

Oh, so it is the God that you follow that decides all is it?
Let's face it, your fixed point is just a supposed 2000 yr. old idea of morality.
Don't go pretending that you understand the cosmos, becasue you know as well as everybody else that you are talking total bs.
Bring up another lie ansd tell it to that goon, whatever his name was.

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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #52 - Jun 4th, 2010 at 11:11am
 
Amadd wrote on Jun 4th, 2010 at 11:04am:
Quote:
You are suggesting that reality is relative. That would also suggest that physics and mathematics are relative. I don't think you really mean to say that. But go ahead, surprise me....

It is not possible for you to make value judgements unless you are speaking from a point of view WITHIN an agreed value system. In other words, you cannnot be absolutely relative because that would be not only incomprehensible but unthinkable and therefore unutterable.

And so my point is that relativists who dispute any particular moral system must be speaking out of another moral system (another agreed value system). Speaking as if one didn't have such a value system out of which one makes value claims is dishonest - or drunken raving.


Gee, I hope that you aren't forgetting Soren that you have NO fixed point to your argument yourself?

Oh, so it is the God that you follow that decides all is it?
Let's face it, your fixed point is just a supposed 2000 yr. old idea of morality.
Don't go pretending that you understand the cosmos, becasue you know as well as everybody else that you are talking total bs.
Bring up another lie ansd tell it to that goon, whatever his name was.




Relevance?
See http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1264378137/46#46
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Amadd
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #53 - Jun 4th, 2010 at 11:55am
 
Quote:
Relevance?


Nope, didn't see anytihng there , did you?

What was it?

Was it something outside the cosmos of understanding?






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« Last Edit: Jun 4th, 2010 at 6:17pm by Amadd »  
 
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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #54 - Jun 4th, 2010 at 9:06pm
 
Amadd wrote on Jun 4th, 2010 at 11:55am:
Quote:
Relevance?


Was it something outside the cosmos of understanding?




Yep. Your stream of consciousness may be comprehensible to you but I didn't detect any relevance to what I had posted - and re-posted.




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« Last Edit: Jun 4th, 2010 at 10:17pm by Soren »  
 
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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #55 - Jun 4th, 2010 at 10:45pm
 
Amadd wrote on Jun 4th, 2010 at 11:04am:
Don't go pretending that you understand the cosmos, becasue you know as well as everybody else that you are talking total bs.




Here's a robust 'criticism' of not accepting a particular prescribed system of values:

On Tuesday, the Associated Free Press reported that Abdul Sattar Khawasi, deputy secretary of the Afghan lower house in parliament, called for the execution of Christian converts from Islam

The bit about 'christian converts' is scarcely relevant. What matters is the 'from Islam'.  Everyone is clear about what moral system the deputy is speaking out of.

Now go and equivocate between the deputy and the convert and tell us that since they are both religious, there is no discernible difference between them, as far as you are concerned.

If so, what moral system makes you treat both of them as equivocal? Just because they are both 'deluded', ie religious - is that enough for you to say that there is no difference between them?

And if you do differentiate - what is the ground on which you can make a distrinction? What makes you grant one of them  freedom of concience but not the other? If you do chose one, on what grounds? .

What is the source of your moral system that makes you think them either interchangable or distinguishable?

You just have to make a moral judgement. Can you? On what ground?i

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muso
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #56 - Jun 7th, 2010 at 2:15pm
 
We make up our minds on whether something is morally right or wrong based on our conscience, and I'd argue that everybody else does the same.  

The execution of a person because of their religion is totally immoral.

Those people with religions will usually be influenced by their religious views. For the rest of us, our natural conscience is unpolluted.

However if you think that all Christians  or even all church leaders will have the same views on what is or is not moral, then you're barking up the wrong tree. Even within Roman Catholicism you'll find a spread of views. So don't kid yourself.

When it comes to more controversial subjects, you'll find a continuum of positions regardless of religion. Even strictly within one broad religion, such as Christianity, you will find different positions taken by different branches of the religion. (For example blood transfusions)
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« Last Edit: Jun 7th, 2010 at 2:26pm by muso »  

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Soren
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Re: Morality, is it relative?
Reply #57 - Jun 7th, 2010 at 10:46pm
 
muso wrote on Jun 7th, 2010 at 2:15pm:
We make up our minds on whether something is morally right or wrong based on our conscience, and I'd argue that everybody else does the same.  

The execution of a person because of their religion is totally immoral.





That second sentence is a mere personal opinion, according to the first. The 'totally' is just  bit of rhetorical flourish, not be given any weight.



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