Now what is the point of reflecting on this further? The point is that I wish to cause more confusion and so deeper thinking. Do you think that judgments may have changed because morality is not really objective, but rather a product of culture? If not, why?
Okay. I gotchya now.
It's funny that you bring this up because earlier today, I received an e-mail with an advertisement from the 1950s...I'm not sure if it was the same in Australia in that decade, but I know women, blacks, Jews, and--well, pretty much anyone who wasn't a white male--was discriminated against for being "different" than the culture that we were raised by here in America. I think, though I may have my facts criss-crossed as American history is pretty vague to me (considering I believe American historty to definitely be a subjective account and therefore take it as seriously as "terror alerts"), that we are a culture not founded "under God," as our currency states, but under white Puritans whose line of ancestry seems one of bigotry and hate--hardly something I would be proud to tie "under God" to if I were a Christian.
The advertisement (and please forgive me for going off on a tangent...it will tie in) was written for women, but it was probably written by a man or a woman who had been brainwashed by the man-in-charge culture. It said things like this: "treat your husband the way he deserves to be treated when he comes home from a long, hard day at work. Make sure you have your kids cleaned up and tell them to be on their best behavior. Always have a meal prepared for him when he comes home...chances are, he's going to be tired. Also, you should let him do the talking. He's going to have a lot to talk about, and you should listen." Those aren't the exact words of the article, but they are pretty close.
The point is, those things that are seen as morally good
do change with culture, time, location, religion/philosophy, and movements by bold--dare I say?--liberals. That's why I cannot ever come to grips with believing in absolute morality or absolute good--it seems to be a perception when it comes to certain things. I think we can agree that things like murder, rape, molestation, or any other heinous act are generally considered to be bad from culture to culture, religion to religion, or time to time. Other things, such as having women, blacks, Jews, Muslims, or any other group not affiliated with the still-dominant white male (in terms of who is in control as opposed to my personal beliefs) being seen in less-than human words and caricatures, have taken a lot of time to become
less of a problem than it was in the 1950s.
I do believe there is a code to live by that is genuinely good, but I think that
everyone feels they are doing good by living up to their own personal code. For example, I know someone who is--unfortunately--quite racist. I try not to judge him because I know he was raised to be a racist by parents who were raised by racists and so on and so forth, but I do try to get him to see from my perspective of good and bad...what good does he expect to come from his behavior? His idea of good is one without crime (that seems to be a consistent "good" view), but his ignorance comes from believing that crime comes from non-whites. It's his skewing of good intentions that make him...I don't really know how to say it nicely, but you can fill in the blanks.
So perhaps there is an absolute standard for "good," but those standards can be skewed to fit individual preferences. I dunno.
You were right about this being confusing! You were also right about causing deeper thinking...I think I lost my original point.
MastermindThe people I discuss with are rarely ignorant. Some people however are so entrenched in illogical convictions that nothing shall move them from it
For example,
It has been brought to our attention that the heathen dogs of the Old World have corrupted the knowledge of a humanity in the most horrendeous way possible. Such tainting of our knowledge is not acceptable. As such, the Empire has launched an investigation led by the honorable Grand Inquisitor Maga Karn. The findings were shocking to all of us: the heathens have violated the purity of Science, given unto us by our LORD God, with their own putrid dogma. By taking a piss on hundreds of years of Scientific Reason, the heathens have entrenched their blasphemous naturalism, an Atheist origins, into a process which has no use of such strawman theories, claiming it is an integral part of it. Based upon our God given reason, LORD be praised, we have deduced that there is no empirical evidence to suggest that naturalism(the idea that mutations are random) has any part in evolution, and as such, education in its matter should be kept where it belongs: Philosophy and Atheism classes.
It sounds to me as though you are a big fan of
Star Wars, but have replaced Yoda with God, Luke Skywalker with yourself, Darth Vadar with naturalism, the evil Empire with 'Atheistic-origin' science, etc. I got a great kick out of this!
However, I will not favor naturalism simply because there are more atheist scientists than theist scientists.
I agree with you. I am not a big fan of the 'majority rules' concept myself, as I know how easy it is to influence the minds of people by scaring them out of the majority. Good on ya! Keep up that attitude and you might be able to develop the mind of a psychologist, which is also--gasp!--a scientist!
colorsthanks for the suggestion...i might just read it!
happy to hear you don't find science boring anymore.
I still find certain aspects boring...I can do without all the math and anything with too much jargon--I get enough of that from the military, let alone something I tend to enjoy!