Finally able to respond:
 Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
Why is the survival of our species important?
Objectively speaking, it's not. Subjectively speaking, it's because I'm a human, and so is everyone I care about. Makes it pretty important to me.
 Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
So do you relate morality on a scale of working toward health of the society and staying in line with it as opposed to working toward yourself and being disruptive to society?
I'm not sure I understand the question. How moral something is, for me, usually hinges on it's impact to other people, or whether it premotes wrong-doing to other people.
 Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
You can choose to be responsible because it's beneficial to maintain your network, habitat and reputation in working order. Being a member of society has benefits that being ostracized does not. The layers go deep, it's not just about getting medicare, it's about how people receive you and the way they treat you. All in all, taking care of yourself and being polite and responsible goes a long way in finding success.
So if you desire success, if you desire to be a well received member of society, then you can consider other people and receive their consideration in return. But is that good or ethical? Are ethics just a social establishment, or do they go further?
That has much less to do with morality than it does a strive for success/reputation. The methods may be the same, but the motivation is different. What brings it into the realm of morality is "exactly what is this person willing to do to be received as a respected member of society?" If the means to which he achieves this end are centered around respect to and consideration of others, then yes. I would say it is an ethical way of acheiving that status.
 Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
But the masochism question can't be answered specifically because it's about how other people's needs are different from your own and the things that make you happy don't necessarily make them happy.
I'm not sure I understand what you mean, if it's any different from what I'd said.
 Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
Society is essentially a bunch of people forming an institution together, or inheriting one. It's done to make life easier, because there's strength in numbers. Everyone contributes to the security of everybody else in some way or another. They create principles based on maintaining it, so that everyone can make adjustments according these principles in order to live together. While they help, not all problems can be solved by principles alone. Not only that, but people use principles to justify brutal means to accomplish their goals.
Very true. In my opinion, the ends don't always justify the means. For example: There was an episode of Smallville that came on the other night, where this guy was going around kidnapping engaged couples. He would hook them up to electric chairs run through a polygraph machine. His whole M.O. was that he's sick of people disgracing the sanctity of marriage and keeping secrets from each other. So, to be the sort of "hand of fate" that helps decide if people should be together, he plays a game where he asks questions to each man and woman. If they tell a lie, their partner gets electrocuted.
In such a case: the motive is just, the method is not (IMHO of course).
 Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
Is being a good person the same thing as staying in line with society? Most people seem to think it's enough that they're good a person, so it's not so important if they help an injured man on the street or not. Most people also seem to think that men in lab coats are good people, and we can just do whatever they say.
You seem to be looking for objective answers to questions that just don't have them. In the end, it all depends on your own philosophy. I don't believe that being a good person is the same thing as staying in line with society. I also don't believe that everyone who strays away from societal norms is a bad person, even when breaking many laws. I also don't believe that men in lab coats are inherently good people. I believe that, in life, everything should be taken on a case-by-case basis. There are people who are enrolled in the same activities, but with very different motives and ethics.
 Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
When most people have to choose between being lying about something or being ostracized, they choose lying. When most people have to choose between torturing someone and saying no to an authority figure, they choose to torture someone.
Lying is often easier than dealing with ostracism (word?). It takes a certain kind of fortitude to deal with feeling outcast, so, naturally, many people just choose to lie to try to circumvent it. As far as saying no to an authority, I don't know many people who would choose to torture someone over saying no to an authority figure (given that's the only reason they are doing it, and it's not just embedded into their psyche as something that's "just"). Depending on the situation, though, it's hard to say what I would or wouldn't do. The word "torture" encompasses a lot. If an authority tells me that I either have to put out a lit cigarette on someone's arm every hour for a whole day, or I will be hung from a tree, that person is going home with an arm full of cigarette holes.
 Originally Posted by Omnius Deus
So if morality is just a social construct, then what is "bad" about exterminating jews? If morality transcends society, then where does it come from, and what is it about? What is the greater good? What constitutes 500 lives being more important than one person?
If morality is just a social construct, what is "bad" about some dirty old man sneaking into your house at night, raping and butchering your 10 year old daughter? When looking at questions like this, it is important to realize that all is relative and, even if you don't think there is anything wrong with something like that happening to your daughter, the majority of parents would. Taking this into consideration and not putting someone through that heartache (not to mention the victim) would be an act of morality.
It doesn't really "come from" anywhere, except as a cognizance of your fellow man and his/her most probably values, and a desire not to infringe upon them. Exterminating anyone who hasn't wronged someone else would be the opposite of this. Even if exterminating the Jews would save the rest of the world, one would have to face a moral problem that no one can actually offer an objective answer to.
The "Greater Good" depends on the situation and your interests. Anyone who says they are doing something for "The Greater Good," is basing that label off of their own interests. True, they may be speaking for many, but not everyone.
That last question is the hardest to answer. What is at stake if 1 person dies? What is at stake if those 500 die? Do you have the right to kill 500 people, even if it means saving 1,000? I don't even like to answer hypothetical questions like my last one. I reserve opinion for things of that nature until I'm actually in the situation. Out of context, I would say it's not right, but if I was in such a dire situation to where I felt it must be done...I don't know. I could probably do it, but I would hate myself for it.
|
|
Bookmarks