Originally Posted by
Heartless Angel
Big time moral subjectivist here. I believe that there is no good and evil. Only perspective. And none is superior to any other. We see good as that which is pleasing or benneficial to ourselves, and evil as that which is not. If our perspectives differ, so do our definitions of good and evil. The only reason most of us have an agreement on what is good and what is evil, is because by virtue of being human, we have certan values hard wired into our brains. For example, we see the taking of human life as evil, because we value our own human life, and are threatened by those willing to and capable of taking it away. As a species that naturally hunted and gathered to survive, we have an attachment to the things we gather and work to obtain, and see those that try to rob us of those things as evil. I usually mention Hitler, but Pete beat me to it. In his own eyes, he was doing good, and those trying to stop him were evil. His beliefs differ, and we can't judge him by our rules, because his brain isn't wired to play by them.
For quite some time, I was a cultural relativist, beliving that right and wrong varied by culture, and that no culture could judge another. From there however, I realized that the theory left an extremely important question unanswered. What makes up a cuture? Location? That couldn't be it. Why would an area as large as the US be considered a single culture when two tiny countries somewhere else could be considered two distinct cultures? So it couldn't be as simple as territory or land area. Orgin? No, then we'd all have to have the same rules as monkeys, since we originated from them, that certainly doesn't make sense to me. I continued to go through theories like this, finding a way to shoot each and every one down, until I came to one. That a culture was nothing more than a group of like minded individuals. This made a ton of sense to me. WE could only have rational discourse about what's right or wrong with people who agreed with us on what the terms meant. Assuming we have two critically thinking rational individuals debating the morality of a subject, and both of their logic is sound, the only way they'd arrive at different conclusions of what is right or wrong, would be if their views differed at the most fundamental level. Morality is very much a deductive thing. There must be a set list of what is right and what is wrong with any given set of beliefs. If we're both using sound logic in valid deductive arguments, the only way we can fail to convince each other, is if we disagree on the basics of right and wrong. We agree on the conclusion of a valid deductive argument, if we agree with its premises. The rules of logic are absolute. If we already agreed on premises, and logic dictates what truths are derived from those premises, we would have already agreed on the conclusion, and have no reason to argue about it. In short, we can't convince anyone who doesn't already share our values that our values are correct with logic. After thinking on all of this, I am left with the conclusion that morality is compeltely subjective, and holds absolutely no meaning outside of our own individual values and perspectives.
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