What if there was such a situation that, given terrible suffering for everyone, would lead to an eventual pay-off? Is it morally sound because it eventually ends with something good for humanity if it entails large amounts of suffering?
What if the difference in morality lies in the method, not the outcome? Is it morally correct to divert a train into a man working on the tracks if it means saving the lives of a couple of hikers, or is it more correct to not interfere? Or is it better to let someone live in a vegetative state, who feels no sensation be it pain or pleasure, or to pull the plug?
I'm kinda with you, to be honest. Though, "morality" is kind of a stupid word.
Literally jargon, the post.
What if there was such a situation that, given terrible suffering for everyone, would lead to an eventual pay-off? Is it morally sound because it eventually ends with something good for humanity if it entails large amounts of suffering?What if the difference in morality lies in the method, not the outcome? Is it morally correct to divert a train into a man working on the tracks if it means saving the lives of a couple of hikers, or is it more correct to not interfere? Or is it better to let someone live in a vegetative state, who feels no sensation be it pain or pleasure, or to pull the plug?
I'm glad you responded that way, it's exactly what I expected. Morality is, in nearly every application, too complex of a thing to choose a single correct response. You can be objective to a degree, but it can't work on an encompassing scale such as law. It's just too general to say, "x is objectively the moral thing to do" outside of (as you put it) snapshots of mathematical considerations.
So, okay, so you DO believe in an objective morality... on a large scale. Well, I would just argue that there really is no other scale. It's a large scale--but it's also the only scale.
but there's a difference between subjectivity in that sense
Could you describe another scenario? The choice was pretty clear to me on the first one you gave. It may not be for someone else, but there's a difference between subjectivity in that sense and... someone who just doesn't have their priorities straight. In a platitude--"the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few"...
And that is where moral objectivity breaks down; as I said, objective morality cannot exist on a small scale.
Quote from: Prime Meridia on January 06, 2015, 05:21:59 PM And that is where moral objectivity breaks down; as I said, objective morality cannot exist on a small scale.This is the confusion I'm talking about. Don't confuse a shortcoming in human perception with a lack of facts. If moral facts exist, they necessarily exist at all scales of consideration.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on January 06, 2015, 05:25:17 PMQuote from: Prime Meridia on January 06, 2015, 05:21:59 PM And that is where moral objectivity breaks down; as I said, objective morality cannot exist on a small scale.This is the confusion I'm talking about. Don't confuse a shortcoming in human perception with a lack of facts. If moral facts exist, they necessarily exist at all scales of consideration.I think this is a problem of communication. In my previous example, involving genocide, even on the more specific scale the objective view still applies, but only broadly. You can give a general response that is objective, absolutely, but the more specific a subject gets the more subjective it becomes as well.
"Genocide of the chronically handicapped is morally right" is much more subjective because it boils down to your individual approach of the subject in terms of your socioeconomic views. And that is where moral objectivity breaks down; as I said, objective morality cannot exist on a small scale.
In America, cannibalism is morally wrongIn parts of India and various indigenous tribes around the world, cannibalism is seen as acceptable
Quote from: Prime Meridia on January 06, 2015, 05:21:59 PM"Genocide of the chronically handicapped is morally right" is much more subjective because it boils down to your individual approach of the subject in terms of your socioeconomic views. And that is where moral objectivity breaks down; as I said, objective morality cannot exist on a small scale.From my perspective, if you can't demonstrate why genocide of the chronically handicapped is morally right--if you fail to demonstrate why, then you're just wrong, flat-out. If you can demonstrate it, well, now you have yourself an objective argument. Just because something is controversial or difficult to argue doesn't make it subjective.Edit:Basically what Meta said. He's a lot faster than me, so I'll just let him take care for me...
Meta hit it on the nail, actually. It's not that it's "wrong" on a quantum level, it's that the answer becomes more of a gray area the more specific the subject becomes. For the genocide argument-- the fact is that you can demonstrate and support for or against it well all based on your view of it. And because there are such a number of different views that express support or opposition, it would be either incredibly difficult (or impossible) to reach a specific answer to it. It's possible to find a general application to the umbrella it falls under (genocide), but specific scenarios don't have a specific moral response.
But eventually you'll find a decision that is better for society but morally repulsive.
Quote from: Naoto on January 07, 2015, 07:18:16 AMBut eventually you'll find a decision that is better for society but morally repulsive.You're assuming our moral intuitions are correct.
There is such a thing as doing the wrong thing for the right reasons. I didn't make a claim as to which decision would be 'correct' (I'm backing subjectivity after all) since its not difficult to see things from both sides in a lot of hypothetical situations. Or for both sides to each have good enough points (or bad enough points) to have it be a toss up.
Let's say a society decides slavery is fine, and that system results in a more efficient society and their eventual rise to power. For them it is fine, but by our moral standards it would be horrific. Whether their morals prevail over ours is purely up to who comes out on top. Right or wrong there is merely a matter of perspective, and might would inevitably make right (for either side).