pappilon wrote:pappilon wrote:And who are you to dictate the morality of the universe?Peregrinator wrote:I don't dictate anything - simply pointing out that morality is objective. Do we debate over whether murder is wrong? That someone thinks it might not be wrong, or not always wrong, or can be justified for some reason, does not in the least bit change the fact that it is wrong.
n7axw wrote:Morality may be objective, but there is no way to avoid the reality that it is subjectively applied.
Don
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Morality is polar. There is only moral and immoral, choosing the good or choosing the bad. The real world is whiter shades of pale. The infamous decalogue sayeth "Thou shalt not Kill." Nowhere doth it proclaim: "Thou shalt not commit murder."
Why is a White cop in Ferguson MO not being charged with murder for shooting an unarmed Black man, yet a Black cop in Mimmeapolis MN being charged for the murder of a White woman? Morality must either be racisr or sexist. Or as a society, we do not have a clear moral compass, or somehow morality is not as clear as we wish it to be.
We I( as a species) have punched all kinds of holes in "Thou shalt not kill." Starting with Moslems do not kill Moslems. Which is not extensed to Christians, Jews, Buddhists or Hindus. Only now it is apparrently, Shi'ites shall not kill shi'ites, but killing Sunni is ok.
We've cut out exemptions for war, capital punishment, abortion, self-defense, accidents ...
So, yeah keep going on about how Morality is objective. It is more a slippery slope called situation ethics.
Your murder examples are really weak. The white cop went through hearings and we found out that the witnesses against him were a long distance away...and the victim was a thug. Killing the guy was still bad since it was not self-defense but there were mitigating circumstances.
For the black cop, it's been a long investigation and the victim was a woman wearing a nightgown who had no criminal record at all and seemed innocent of anything. And he has not been convicted.
But there are a lot of cases and justice is not always perfect. THAT would be a better point. There was recently a guy in Tennessee who spend 31 years in prison wrongfully and got a "big" million dollars in compensation for giving up most of his adult life.
People are flawed. The problem when we deal with morality is that few things are really black and white. Someone who only sees in those shades is usually considered a bit of a nut (except by those who like the particular sentiment).
A better analogy than Christianity would be Bentham's utilitarianism, about good being that which benefits the most people. But even there we have issues. If killing a small number of people (let's say a minority group) would benefit the majority, that could be considered good using that philosophy.
That's how you could defend the Holocaust to use an extreme example).
At any rate, the basic idea of improving mankind is not by itself sociopathic. Using slavery as a front, or actually at all, is evil.
Things are not simple.