
Originally Posted by
Askthepizzaguy
First of all, I want to say I find this thread and discussion fascinating. Thank you Sasaki.
My thoughts on the matter:
If morality is simply what our opinion of morality is, then it is merely subjective and there is no way to define anything as moral or immoral unless you take a vote or have a supreme ruler. Which is, of course, how many societies settle the issue. I think something is moral, others think it is immoral, and we have a difference of opinion. Sometimes we feel there needs to be a law against it, or a legal protection for it, and then we settle it by vote (hopefully) or have some person in an official-looking hat tell us it is right or wrong. I, on the other hand, think that it is obviously not the case that morality is a human construct, a figment of our imagination based purely on the popular opinions of the day. If that is the case, then what is our real argument when something is clearly wrong, but society accepts it? If slavery is considered okay by the masses, especially by the slave-owners, and morality is just an opinion with no meaning, then there is no reason they should listen to you when you say it is wrong. They can reply "it is right, that is what I was brought up to believe, and I believe it."
What can be said? How is it settled? Sure, we can vote on it, but if the premise is that morality is subjective, why are we bringing in popular opinion to settle the issue? If my morality is as good as their morality, shouldn't both be allowed to exist? Why must one belief system even trump the other by a vote, or be imposed on others by the sword? If all opinions are equal then why even have laws? If you're simply saying that majority rules define morality, or whoever has the most guns defines morality, then societal progress would never ever have been made. What changes things? Sometimes belief systems are imposed on others. Whenever there are laws, this is the case. Is it just the sword or the vote which gives them the right? To me, that is merely how our civilization settles the dispute. It is not the reason why things are right or wrong. Even if the votes are against you, and the guns are also against you, that does not make the status quo moral. It can be quite terrible, in fact. What makes something moral, if not our little opinions, our votes, or our guns?
If morality does not flow from the belief systems of the individual, or even the opinion of the masses, or the rule of those in power, from where does it flow? If morality is not subjective, but rather something objective, then it is a natural phenomenon inherent to the universe, that we simply have words for and belief systems surrounding. In other words, the universe has morality, and we interpret it. One might even consider this to be a religious stance I'm taking. But consider also that mankind did not invent mathematics. Mathematics is a natural extension of the laws of the universe. We have added words to it, and we have a limited understanding of it, but there are laws that we didn't invent, and truths we did not create. Truth is a thing we do not control by the vote, by our opinion, by the sword. Truth is objective, not subjective, or else it is not truth and there is no truth. If there is no truth, then mathematics would not exist.
Math is a very disciplined, principled, structured understanding of the natural law of the universe. This reality we are in... if we have three points, and the distance between points a and b is 3, and b and c is 4, and the points have an angle of 90 degrees on one side, the the distance between points c and a is 5. (I hope I got that right). This isn't something that we created, it existed before we were aware of it. We have simply named it and begun to understand it. Mathematics is an objective, logical, structured part of the understanding of the laws of this universe. To gain knowledge of x, we can understand everything about x simply by observing the other pertinent facts. And the correct answer is always the same. Logic is another thing. Man did not invent logic, we simply discovered truths and how they relate with one another. Sometimes our understanding of these truths is flawed, but that does not change them. It changes us. We also cannot change what is logical; it either follows logic or it does not. Some concepts are filled with too many unknowns for us to apply our limited understanding of logic. We also do not understand logic itself enough to be infallible when discussing truths.
Morality seems to me to be a very logical thing, or at the very least it should be. Slavery is immoral, but the reason for it is not because it was popular (I guarantee you it is unpopular with the slaves) and not because it was legal (if so, then all laws are moral... but we have laws that contradict other laws) and not because people could use violence to enforce it. There was a non-subjective reason; an objective reason why it was wrong. For it to be so objective, that means the reasons are based on an underlying truth about the universe... a truth that exists whether we are aware of it or agree with it. It is based on those truths that people should be treated equally. But what are those truths? Can we make a logical, scientific argument which explains why slavery is immoral? Why it is immoral even if you don't think it is immoral? That's very difficult. It can be more difficult than explaining why something is logical. Morality is an extremely complicated thing to quantify and define. The only way I know how is to begin with mathematics. A crude, crude beginning, but a beginning nonetheless.
The first principle I can think of when speaking about morality in mathematical terms is the principle that 1=1. One person is worth the same as another person. Why is this so? Again difficult to define. But it would be far more difficult to define why a person is not equal to another person. Perhaps we value an innocent, law-abiding person more than we value say, a terrorist, but that is when you add additional circumstances to the definition of the person. It is no longer a person of equal moral standing compared with another, but people of different moral standings. Instead of comparing apples and apples, you're comparing an apple and a rotten apple, or a better example would be an apple, and an apple filled with poison. Perhaps they both started out the same, they both started out as apples. But they became morally different through their actions. So perhaps 1=1, but not if you add another one. One plus one does not equal one. Now they are different. But we agree, they started out the same. 1 minus 1 does not equal 1. Morality is similar, if you take certain actions they have certain consequences, and the impact of those consequences might determine what makes things moral. What actions have an impact of morality? That's a whole different discussion. Even to begin with I have difficulties quantifying and defining morality. But then again I have difficulty with Calculus as well, that doesn't mean there aren't real answers.
Even harder to explain is that the same actions do not always have the same consequences. If someone were to commit adultery, and no one found out about it, what are the consequences? Other than guilty feelings, maybe nothing. If someone were to commit adultery, and then people found out about it, there are very different consequences. Yet they are both the same action... and they are both equally immoral. So morality is not based on consequences alone, either. If I started shooting random people, and I assassinated the next Adolf Hitler accidentally, the end result might have been a better world than it may have otherwise been. But I have still committed a heinous, evil deed. What if that same next-Adolf-Hitler could have been educated, or persuaded to do something better with their life? What if they become a saint? Then I have assassinated a saint, in addition to other people who didn't "deserve it". Thus, I have committed the same action and it appears to somehow be much worse an action. But we cannot predict the future, we cannot predict all possible consequences. Our own ignorance prevents us from having perfect knowledge about what is or is not moral, because the potential consequences of your actions are part, if not the whole, or what determines if something is moral or not. That is why I feel that morality may be something which is beyond our understanding, at least in the most advanced sense. Like science, we may never know everything about the universe.
But does that mean science is a wasted effort? I think not. Even a limited understanding of the world around us is far superior than none. It is a worthy endeavor. I believe morality is much the same way... a logical field of study and theorizing. There is room for more than "God said it, I believe it, that ends it" because such stances have been used to justify immoral things. There is room for more than "There's no God, no meaning, no purpose... morality doesn't exist". There doesn't have to be religion involved in a logical study of morality. In the end, you will find that most people think murder is wrong, and for many if not most of those people, it is not because God said so. It is because it is a truth that we somehow know and have arrived at naturally.
Our brains understand other fundamental laws of the universe, without knowing exactly why we know them. Even the most basic mind comprehends that one banana is less than two bananas. The brain may not understand mathematics, and may never be able to explain why that is, but perhaps it is simply something that we wouldn't be able to function without. A basic, basic understanding of the fundamental nature of the universe. Perhaps those who didn't understand that were naturally selected against and eventually died off. Morality may be the same way. A species seems to understand, on the whole, that it is not a wise move to wipe out others of your species. Sure, it gets more complicated than that, especially when it pertains to matters of territory or mating rights, but if a species spends most of its time wiping itself out, then sooner or later, there won't be anyone left to procreate with. That's too complicated a concept for some animals to understand, but it is a fundamental aspect of this existence: death is pretty much irreversible. Too much death and what happens is that your species doesn't exist anymore. And so you've exited the universe, in favor of others who understand or at least obey this concept.
But again, morality is not the same as consequences. What defines morality? There are too many factors for me to explain or even totally comprehend. But in my limited capacity, I can still see that some things are moral whether people think they are, or not. And so, what needs to be done is that we need to think about morality, and try to explain why things are moral in a way that is very fact-based, and objective. In a way we can understand. Much like science... man did not start off knowing exactly why certain objects fell to the earth, and some things soared above the clouds. But some people decided to examine it and look for the why. Indeed, we still do not know exactly how, but we do understand a lot of the why. And that understanding has led to great advances in human society. Greater understanding often leads to better application of ourselves. I believe that studying morality would be a great endeavor, and a lot of what is holding us back is the position that morality cannot be quantified or codified or defined in any way besides "That is what I believe" or some appeal to authority, or appeal to popularity, or appeal to violence.
There is room for much improvement, and much understanding here.
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