Unless you want us to pretend that we can, for the purposes of the scenario. <_<
Saving a baby from drowning is easy, because you are taking direct action to save an infant's life. Charity is very, very murky water. You don't know what's being done with your money. So unless there's some charity out there that is guaranteed to be the ultimate paragon of virtue (which there isn't), it's not really a fair comparison.
Then you'd be similarly obligated to investigate the matter
am I being unethical right now by sitting at my computer instead of volunteering at a soup kitchen?
The point is, is there any reliable empirical method for determining what is ethical and what isn't?
And how might one go about this?
At this point the students raise various practical difficulties. Can we be sure that our donation will really get to the people who need it? Doesn’t most aid get swallowed up in administrative costs, or waste, or downright corruption? Isn’t the real problem the growing world population, and is there any point in saving lives until the problem has been solved? These questions can all be answered: but I also point out that even if a substantial proportion of our donations were wasted, the cost to us of making the donation is so small, compared to the benefits that it provides when it, or some of it, does get through to those who need our help, that we would still be saving lives at a small cost to ourselves – even if aid organizations were much less efficient than they actually are.
"Being unethical" may as well just be a bodily function of ours. An involuntary one, like breathing, but one nonetheless.
If everyone in the world decided that they were gonna be purely charitable for the rest of their lives, those charitable people would all die. Because to nourish yourself would mean not nourishing somebody else.
To me, that sounds like a mockery of ethics, and we shouldn't really play with it like that.
Not sure what you mean by involuntary; I think this relates to the "action vs inaction" I mentioned in the OP. Are we being involuntarily unethical if we can volunteer not to be?
Not really, because it wouldn't be a case of removing your own wellbeing from the equation
And the current attitude is geared more toward "as long as you're not doing such and such, you're not a bad person" instead of "as long as you are doing such ans such you're not a bad person". That seems pretty dangerous to me.
Well, yes, it would. Part of ethics is removing your own personal welfare from the equation entirely.
Anything that you do for yourself is selfish, and selfishness should be absolutely nonexistent in ethics. In my opinion.
i mean, give me some more examples, i guess
what's your opinion on the matter?
Quote from: Jocephalopod on July 09, 2015, 05:03:14 AMwhat's your opinion on the matter?On whether there's an objective line? I'd say there isn't; some actions are just more or less ethical than others.
but I really can't see any logic to get around it.
Humans have evolved to have this bias of immediacy towards themselves and people in the general vicinity, and that's good. It allows for generally efficient moral reasoning; everybody would be brought to an effectual stand-still if they had to make global considerations constantly, and that of course would be a negative on net.
If I so cared about the world as I would care for the drowning infant, I would find myself with not even my own time and forever indebted to a sense of duty and responsibility.If inaction in indirect situations is unethical on my part, then it it necessary to be a bit unethical.
You're using the benefits of how things are as an argument for how they should continue to be
we aren't living as ethically as we (easily) could be.
The question I'm most interested in is how we make a distinction between ethical and unethical actions.
Not quite, I'm saying that how we are facilitates good moral reasoning, which is good definitionally. I'm not using the nature of humans as a metric for what is good; simply realising the constraints we have which impede perfect moral efficiency.
I just don't buy the whole "proximity isn't important" argument.
That said, I think we have a fairly solid understanding of what concepts like evil must mean if they are to make any moral sense and it can be quite clearly extrapolated that anything which unambiguously and actively contributes to net suffering is absolutely immoral. You raise an interesting point as to whether passive, or inactive, contributions to suffering are equal; but it boils down to the age-old question over whether sins of omission are as bad as sins of commission. And I don't have an answer for that.
That's a rather deficient conception of ethics, then. Acting as though your wellbeing is exempt from the moral sphere makes very little sense, logically; the point is not to overvalue it alongside the wellbeing of others.
I'm going to have to ask you to defend that opinion
I don't know.
the general attitude toward "moral obligations" is highly spurious and doesn't really account for the consequences of our inaction
How can you be ethical to yourself? That makes... no sense.
Quote from: Verbatim on July 09, 2015, 11:05:24 AMHow can you be ethical to yourself? That makes... no sense.This reminds me of the trolley problem. A lot of people wouldn't push the fat guy themselves, which is fine ,even if it results in a net positive lives saved. If pushing the fat man is going to traumatise you, give you PTSD and ensure you never sleep soundly again. . . You'd be justified in not pushing the guy.
You ought to be willing to sacrifice your own sanity for others
Not to mention there's a whole host of issues surrounding the idea inherent in your claim that you should sacrifice a future ability to perform ethical actions just so you can perform one substantial ethical action today.
On whether there's an objective line? I'd say there isn't; some actions are just more or less ethical than others.
Name a single thing we do for ourselves that isn't selfish.
that's two "i don't know"s you've given to two rather important questionsi can tell you didn't give this topic very much thought
if you save the baby from drowning, you are also not letting the baby drown--it's an inactionand the consequences of that inaction are... demonstrably ethical
which kind of nullifies the entire thread, if you ask me--i meant to bring it up earlier
how you can say that some actions are more ethical than others, but then say that there's no objective line thereif we can define what's ethical and unethical, that to me sounds like some kind of line you're drawing
If there are better and worse ways to increase the wellbeing of others, there are better and worse ways to increase your own wellbeing.
I'm not saying that, I'm saying that selfishness isn't necessarily unethical.
If your conception of ethics is based on some divide between altruism and self-interest then I'm not sure how tenable it is, because there's the argument that all seemingly selfless acts are done for selfish reasons
And it doesn't address my problem of how we define moral obligations, much less distinguish them from things that are moral yet not obligatory. That seems really wobbly to me.
I don't see how. It's an interesting question; and it's all well and good to say that we should strive to be more ethical, but it's rather meaningless if we don't discuss how we can go about it.
It's about doing the right thing.
I can't objectively claim that donating $100 to charity is ethical because there's no objective threshold where an action crosses from one into the other. Why did I not donate more?
Admittedly a lot of actions are ethically indefensible, but that doesn't mean a divide exists objectively, because there are still unethical elements to nearly every action. Or, if one does exist, I'm interested in the metric for defining it.