While you're heading in the right direction, there ares still some things that need adressing.Navvan said:Tell him that moral relativity, while completely valid, is an an idealistic scenario that never addresses the consequences. Everyone assumes that morals exist simply to tell us what is right and wrong. While they do this, they do it for a reason; that is to help support and build social groups. Imagine a world where everyone didn't blink an eye at the idea of murdering, stealing, and so forth if it benefited them. It is unlikely society would have reached the point it has; or if the species would exist at all if this were the case.lionrwal said:I was having a discussion with my friend about his justifications for piracy, and he told me a story about "moral relativity." Basically it went that these two people murdered someone, and they claimed that it was because of moral relativity, and the judge gave them a very short sentence instead of life. If you don't know what it is, it's the belief that you can't impose your own morals on someone because there are no set morals for anyone. This was literally his only justification.
I do believe that people have different sets of morals, but I don't buy that someone could believe murder is good.
So what's your take on moral relativity?
Now he may state something to the effect that piracy isn't nearly as detrimental to society as physical theft or murder and couldn't possibly lead to the downfall of civilization. However that wasn't the argument he made, he made a argument for moral relativism, which is an impractical approach on real world situations. It also makes the assumptions that morals are a construct of the individual, which is arguably wrong and thus the entire argument can be said to be unsound.
I could go on, but I'll leave it with these brief remarks. Philosophical ideas, such as moral relativism, should be used to define, predict, categorize, explain, and so forth. It shouldn't be used as a scapegoat to do whatever you want as it is both meaningless and dangerous (you can use valid, and even sound arguments to justify virtually every action, even conflicting actions). The whole point of moral relativity is to state that morals are inherently meaningless as they are subject to each individuals viewpoint. However this is arguably not the case. Morals can be said to extend beyond an individual and are controlled by and in a sense created on a social group level.
How is this supposed to work? If a social group decides morals ultimately, then one of two things can happen:
1. Everyone who is completely and totally like-minded (and nobody truly is) gravitates toward each other, therefore forming so-called "utopias"... which we know don't exist, and therefore discount that idea.
2. People can't totally agree, and therefore, even if the majority decides on subjective morals, those morals become objective and absolute for the indivdiuals inside the group, and for those that don't totally agree with the morals forced upon them, the whole point of moral relatavism goes out the door cause their morals don't count, but other's do. So while you're idea saves subjective morality on one level, it destroys it on a fundamental level, because all of a sudden an objective moral system is forced onto individuals.(That said, I am not arguing for subjective morals).