I feel compelled to further expound on the Good/Evil duality.
In my first Ruminations post, I briefly touched on the subject, but I wish to go deeper. I believe I left some crucial points unmentioned, so I am going to dissect my first post and expand upon its ideas. I'll start now:
What is Evil? What is Good?
According to moral relativism, good and evil don't exist. That's complete foolishness, because relativism disproves itself. It is simply one's excuse to exempt oneself from responsibility and accountability. It doesn't matter if you don't believe in a right and a wrong, because the country in which you live does. No matter how relativistic your paradigm is, morality is imposed on you by society. You are raised from birth being indoctrinated that morality is a thing, that it exists. Most accept this indoctrination without question. I, ever the Devil's Advocate, will gladly question this notion!
Let me ask you something: do you believe in morality? Why? What justification do you have for believing in morality? By what standards to you base your morals?
If you answer was something along the lines of, "I believe in subjective morality", then you are, in my very humble opinion, making a paramount mistake.
Let me ask you something: do you believe in morality? Why? What justification do you have for believing in morality? By what standards to you base your morals?
If you answer was something along the lines of, "I believe in subjective morality", then you are, in my very humble opinion, making a paramount mistake.
The Illogic of Moral Subjection
Moral subjection is what happens when a person defines their own standards of what is "right" and what is "wrong". It is very similar to moral relativism, and it is just as illogical. To be frank, if you adhere to moral subjection, you have no justification to oppose rape, murder, thievery, dishonesty, or anything else that is popularly deemed "wrong". At this point, you are probably wondering where I found the gall to make such a shocking claim. Forthcoming: my explanation!
A person with a subjective morality has to set their own standards of "right" and "wrong". This is something they must do on their own. It is a personal thing. Therefore, those standards are personal standards, and consequently can only be personal standards. To impose your own arbitrary standards of morality on another person makes no sense!
Where do your morals come from? From where did they first derive? Did you make them up yourself? That's moral subjection. Did you obtain them from someone else? That's moral subjection. Did you acquire them from your parents or your culture? That's moral subjection. These sets of morality are entirely concocted by human beings, who are entirely arbitrary creatures. If your morality is influenced by your opinion, it is subjective an unreliable due to its overwhelming lack of factuality (for opinions can never be nor become facts).
What comes about as a result? Laws and political definitions. Here in America (for I am an American), we have laws that prohibit certain courses of action. Murder is a crime, for example. My government has defined murder as a "wrong". I have a few options, but I shall focus on the two most common: I can use my subjective opinion and agree with this definition of murder as a "wrong", or I can use my subjective opinion and disagree with this definition of murder as "wrong". However, both scenarios do not in any way alter the true nature of murder. The rightness or wrongness of murder (or any other action) is never for me to decide.
A person with a subjective morality has to set their own standards of "right" and "wrong". This is something they must do on their own. It is a personal thing. Therefore, those standards are personal standards, and consequently can only be personal standards. To impose your own arbitrary standards of morality on another person makes no sense!
Where do your morals come from? From where did they first derive? Did you make them up yourself? That's moral subjection. Did you obtain them from someone else? That's moral subjection. Did you acquire them from your parents or your culture? That's moral subjection. These sets of morality are entirely concocted by human beings, who are entirely arbitrary creatures. If your morality is influenced by your opinion, it is subjective an unreliable due to its overwhelming lack of factuality (for opinions can never be nor become facts).
What comes about as a result? Laws and political definitions. Here in America (for I am an American), we have laws that prohibit certain courses of action. Murder is a crime, for example. My government has defined murder as a "wrong". I have a few options, but I shall focus on the two most common: I can use my subjective opinion and agree with this definition of murder as a "wrong", or I can use my subjective opinion and disagree with this definition of murder as "wrong". However, both scenarios do not in any way alter the true nature of murder. The rightness or wrongness of murder (or any other action) is never for me to decide.
Where does morality come from?
Most of the time, it is made up. The government of our respective nations tell us what is wrong and what is right, and we either comply or rebel. Social acceptability tells us what is right and what is wrong, and we either conform or deviate.
There are those among us, though, who derive their sense of morality from higher, objective standards. For Christians, these objective standards are found in the Bible as the Ten Commandments; and as we see in Exodus, the Bible and the government are in agreement that murder is in fact wrong, so subjective morality is certainly superior to total lack of morality. Greater still, though, is objective morality. Muslims find it in the Qur'an, Buddhists find it in The Eightfold Path. Hindus find it through the study of karma. Jews find it in Mosaic Law.
Those who do not affiliate with any religion, perhaps, find federal law to be their objective morality. Even so, one should not define their morality solely by what they feel should be right or wrong. That would make it far to easy to justify any sort of action, no matter how radical it was. Rather, before any action is committed, contemplate it and anticipate the consequences. Determine how your actions will affect yourself and others, and act accordingly.
In conclusion, I have but two questions:
- Do Good and Evil exist?
- Says who?
If you know the answers, then any research conducted will surely agree with you. The truth is only found by those who go looking for it.
Well said! As always.
ReplyDeletegood and evil don't exist in nature they are man made concepts.lions don't feel rage when they kill water buffalo and a meteor is not committing genocide by crashing into the earth
ReplyDeletemorality is objective because we find similar laws in every society. whether the laws are instituted by governments or merely some widely accepted code of conduct does not matter.
so to answer your question morality comes from man and man says so.
The morality is only objective if it applies to everyone in the same way, and only if its standards are not set by those underneath it.
DeleteMan may say so, but what if man is wrong?
I would argue that if morality comes from man, then morality can only be subjective, because humans are subjective creatures.
Good thoughts nonetheless, however. It's clear you've thought things through.