pgm1985 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 18, 2024 5:30 pm
Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Thu Jul 18, 2024 3:51 pm
Yes. Any interpretation is subjective.
Constitutions and laws are the rules of the road that allow people to function in groups without killing each other. Do you want anybody who has more guns than you to be able to take your property? Me neither. Do you want to be able to for a walk without fear of being kidnapped and tortured? Me too. Every individual has conflicting desires for both autonomy and security. Laws are how a society mediates that contradiction by creating rules that provide some mix of autonomy and security. No objective morality required. Just a negotiation based on rational or irrational self interest.
That doesn’t mean that morality is irrelevant to law. People will appeal to morality as a basis for enacting or not enacting any given law. But that doesn’t that mean that objective morality is a necessary condition for enacting laws.
I’m not claiming that murder is not murder. I’m saying that the word murder is just marks on a page until you give it meaning. And, as soon as you do that, you’ve moved into subjectivity. Now, we may have widespread agreement on some application of the word murder to real life situations, but agreement does not mean objective.
Can you quote me the definition of murder from the Bible that will allow me, without any need to interpret the language, to apply the world in all cases and reach a result that we would agree is moral?
Which premise of my argument are you claiming that our disagreement violates?
Why is murder in any context morally wrong? Either you have competing views of subjectivity, as the murderer does not think his actions was morally wrong, or an objective standard must be applied.
You tell me. I am an atheist and I believe causing a fellow human's death is moral under some circumstances and not moral in others. Nothing in the Bible tells me when causing the death of another human being is moral or immoral. The word "murder" gives me no clue as to when causing the death of another human being is " murder" and thus not moral or when causing the death of another human being is not murder, and therefore moral. I have to decide for myself whether a death is a "murder" or not. I may consult any number of sources to help me decide. But, except in the most simple or extreme cases, I have to decide. And the moment I have to exercise my own judgement, the conclusion I reach is subjective.
Why do you keep telling me that I can't do things that I do dozens of times every day? Just as billions of other people do every day?
Yes, we have competing, subjective views of morality that vary from person to person. People draw from all kinds of sources, which can include the Bible, to construct their own moral system. That moral codes differ from person to person does not mean that we cannot formed reasoned arguments that one moral code, or aspect of a moral code, is better than another. The subjective nature of morality does not logically imply that all moral codes must be equally accepted. A community constructs the moral code that it chooses to apply to all members of the community.
I think that claiming to follow an objective moral code is itself immoral. It relieves the person from any responsibility for even horrific results of enforcing their code. There's a built in excuse -- hey, don't look at me. It's God's objective moral code. That's why I refer to what you are claiming as a false consciousness. If you choose to force a woman against her will to suffer and risk her life for a nonviable pregnancy, you are responsible for her suffering and perhaps her death. It's your choice -- you own the consequences. The pretense that you are following an objective code lets you off the moral hook for the consequences of your own choices. Hey, don't look at me. It's God's objective moral code. I'm just following orders.
As soon as you introduce any subjectivity in how you apply the words that appear in the Bible, you are making a subjective choice. It is immoral not to own your own choices and take responsibility for any pain, suffering or death that your choices cause to others.