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luns101 wrote:heavycola wrote:the UN is an interesting thing to consider. I mean thinking about it, even the holocaust was perpetuated (presumably) by people who thought they were acting for some greater good. So in that case the values being espoused at that level - the declaration of human rights, i guess - are based on overwhelming consensus and not universally held opinions.
There is a kind of convention/stereotype in the UK of the churchgoer who doesn't really believe in the miraculous stuff but agrees with the moral messages within christianity. I mean we have had plenty of arguments on here about how bloodthirsty/compassionate/whatever the bible is, but i wouldn't argue that modern christianity is, as far as my liberal-with-a-small-L xian acquaintances go, a morally bad way to live one's life.
Well, even taking Christianity or atheism out of the equation - doesn't the unending striving for world peace speak to the attempt that there is some ultimate universal good that mankind is trying to achieve? It seems to me that, regardless of nationality, there are basic rules of civil conduct by mankind.
How can you say that following a law is "wrong" if you have no universal morality to base it on?Lord_Paul wrote:There are so many ways to argue it, but the answer to the question would be no. In some situations, (see post above) the "right thing" is "wrong" in some way. Even following some of the laws are "wrong", from s moral standpoint.
heavycola wrote:Maybe that's what morality is - the sum total of human emotion about one issue or another. MLK had to change a lot of minds, as did ghandi.
AAFitz wrote:There will always be cheaters, abusive players, terrible players, and worse. But we have every right to crush them.
MeDeFe wrote:This is a forum on the internet, what do you expect?
Pico wrote:Now by all means, I'm not saying this man was ok to kill someone, I'm not arguing the corporal punishment system, I'm arguing that as a society now, we are nowhere NEAR having universal right and wrong.
Pico wrote:If he won, him and everyone who followed him would think so, yes.
Nate it seems your not asking, "if someone does something would it be ok?"
Your asking each of us, "if someone does something would it be ok 'to us'?"
Your taking a blanket question about an abstract, and asking everyone to apply it to a single event(s).
AAFitz wrote:There will always be cheaters, abusive players, terrible players, and worse. But we have every right to crush them.
MeDeFe wrote:This is a forum on the internet, what do you expect?
luns101 wrote:I just took this moral sense test conducted by Harvard. You can take as many sets as they offer, or just take one set. It's up to you and it was interesting. Anyway, it relates to this thread...hope others find it universally good.
http://moral.wjh.harvard.edu/index.html
Riao wrote:luns101 wrote:I just took this moral sense test conducted by Harvard. You can take as many sets as they offer, or just take one set. It's up to you and it was interesting. Anyway, it relates to this thread...hope others find it universally good.
http://moral.wjh.harvard.edu/index.html
The test had some interesting questions, but I didn't like the way they were presented... "what should bruce do?" I found myself answering in the middle mostly because I always felt that Bruce should do what he's comfortable with. Who am I to say what bruce should do? I only answered one way or the other if I felt that the answer could affect other people in a negative way.
MR. Nate wrote:heavycola wrote:Maybe that's what morality is - the sum total of human emotion about one issue or another. MLK had to change a lot of minds, as did ghandi.
So as long as you convince enough people, anything goes? What about Hitler? He had consensus and it took a war (which most people broadly agree is bad) to change that public perception. If he had won the war, would that have made the holocaust OK?
heavycola wrote:We have hindsight. Like I said, i believe we are feelign our way towards a greater morality all the time. There is no death sentence in the UK, for example. We also don't burn witches anymore, call immigrants awful names or keep slaves. For much of the past these things were all acceptable, and none of us can say for sure that had we been living in those times we would have been able to apply 21st century values to those things.
AAFitz wrote:There will always be cheaters, abusive players, terrible players, and worse. But we have every right to crush them.
MeDeFe wrote:This is a forum on the internet, what do you expect?
luns101 wrote:I just took this moral sense test conducted by Harvard. You can take as many sets as they offer, or just take one set. It's up to you and it was interesting. Anyway, it relates to this thread...hope others find it universally good.
http://moral.wjh.harvard.edu/index.html
MR. Nate wrote:Updated list of those that feel that torturing innocent children and skeet shooting newborns is not only justifiable, but they can be fun pastimes as well.
Riao
Pico
vtmarik
Rocky Horror
heavycola
n8freeman*
*denotes those who want a 51% of the population to agree prior to actually pulling the trigger.
MR. Nate wrote:By the allowing culture to dictate morality, you should agree that:
1. Ghandi was wrong for rebelling against his culture to help the poor achieve equal rights.
2. Hitler was correct in ordering the Holocaust because the majority of culture agreed with him.
3. Martin Luther King Jr. was wrong for fighting against racism because it was a cultural norm.
4. William Wilberforce was wrong for battling slavery because it was a cultural norm.
Is that correct?
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
vtmarik wrote:I like how you assume that my belief that human morals/ethics don't extend to the entirety of the cosmos means that I like the idea of dead babies. Now, while dead baby jokes are funny, I don't personally enjoy the concept of skeet shooting them.
Need I remind you the difference between ubiquitous and universal?
Rocky Horror wrote:I only said it was justifiable by someone who truly believed that there was no Universal Good and Evil, I did not say I enjoyed doing it.
Guiscard wrote:Yes. That is correct if you take a hard-line approach to cultural relativism.
However, we come to a crossroads in this argument if we start to believe in cultural relativism. If every culture has its morality then, effectively, there is no morality. Martin Luther King was not wrong for fighting racism because there IS no wrong... there was no right or wrong in Ghandi's struggle, nor Wilberforce's. There is no point in defining it if we don't believe in it. Who said that we had be comforted by our philosophical views? I'm certainly not...
We are what we are. Morality is a concept inside our brains which helps us psychologically deal with situations and decisions. Nothing more. I still obey it, of course, because I believe that is the best, happiest and most successful way to live my life, but I don't believe it exists as a universal constant.
AAFitz wrote:There will always be cheaters, abusive players, terrible players, and worse. But we have every right to crush them.
MeDeFe wrote:This is a forum on the internet, what do you expect?
Rocky Horror wrote:Just because something's justifiable doesn't mean you should enjoy it.
AAFitz wrote:There will always be cheaters, abusive players, terrible players, and worse. But we have every right to crush them.
MeDeFe wrote:This is a forum on the internet, what do you expect?
MR. Nate wrote:If they don't apply to the entirety of the cosmos, where do they end? If they have an ending point then they are by default, relative. I think it's been made clear that if they are relative, then under the right circumstances, anything could be moral. If anything can be right given the appropriate circumstances than nothing is wrong, and you could, conceivably, come to a point where things you currently consider horrific are acceptable under your moral code.
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