home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.callahans
- Path: sparky!uunet!uchinews!quads!mss2
- From: mss2@quads.uchicago.edu (Michael S. Schiffer)
- Subject: Re: God and Science: The Ramblings of The Nightstalker
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.205017.12655@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Reply-To: mss2@midway.uchicago.edu
- Organization: University of Chicago Computing Organizations
- References: <1ea09rINNolh@gap.caltech.edu> <1992Nov19.171539.18292@onetouch.COM> <1ej8hiINNh45@gap.caltech.edu>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 20:50:17 GMT
- Lines: 98
-
- In article <1ej8hiINNh45@gap.caltech.edu> lydick@SOL1.GPS.CALTECH.EDU writes:
- >In article <1992Nov19.171539.18292@onetouch.COM>, jpalmer@onetouch.COM (John Palmer) writes:
-
-
- >> If you say, however, that injecting 22 units of insulin might be bad for a
- >>person living under different circumstances, you have changed the whole 'moral'
- >>point of the question.
-
- >How so? The question of relative vs. absolute morality is that according to
- >relative morality, under different circumstances, different actions might be
- >moral, while absolute morality claims that that's not the case.
-
- "Interesting... that's not how I'd view absolute morality at
- all. Circumstances _define_ the moral scope of a problem. Waving a
- knife around is morally neutral-- unless you have reason to believe
- someone's within striking range (or perhaps if you haven't taken
- enough precautions to see that no one is-- say swinging it in a dark
- room). Pushing a button is morally neutral-- but it isn't if it's
- connected to a nuclear bomb buried beneath a city. When I speak of an
- absolute standard of morals, at least, what I mean is that different
- actions cannot have different moral values for two different people in
- identical circumstances, not that differing circumstances can't affect
- an action's morality."
-
- >> If killing a person is wrong, it is wrong, regardless of who does it.
- >>Whether the PERSON is evil or not depends on their motivation.
-
- >How about WHY the person does it? Please answer the following two questions.
- >If your answers aren't "No" and "Yes" respectively, please explain your
- >rationale for the answers:
-
- > Is it evil to kill somebody who's about to take an action that would
- > kill dozens of innocent people in order to prevent those murders, if
- > that's the only way to stop him?
-
- "Personally, I'm a firm believer in the `lesser evil'
- analysis. I don't think it's ever a positive _good_ to kill a human
- being, even Adolf Hitler or Josef Stalin. But to prevent the greater
- evil of their mass murders I would consider killing them to be
- justified. Similarly, I believe war is a great evil, but I don't believe the
- appropriate response is surrender to aggressors, as that simply
- facilitates more evil. But I would be very wary of an idea that a war
- is _good_ because it prevents a greater evil, and I feel the same way
- about a single killing in self-defense or defense of others.
-
- > Would it have been evil to kill the same person because you didn't like
- > the way he was dressed, and preventing the mass murder was an
- > unanticipated consequence?
-
- "Yes, it would have been evil. The morality of an issue,
- IMHO, lies in intent. In the previous case, the actor _intended_ the
- death of the murderer, with the further intent of saving lives.
- _Both_ intents count, and there are some means which may just be too
- horrible to use regardless of one's intended end (i.e. Hitler and
- Stalin both used the mass murder of millions as a means towards an
- essentially perfect world; even assuming the honesty of their
- intentions, the fact that they intentionally murdered millions, and
- that they intentionally created circumstances deliberately designed to
- humliate and degrade those millions before killing them,
- counterbalances any utopia they could imagine). And in answer to your
- next moral puzzle the answer may well be, "I don't know". Believing
- in an absolute moral framework does _not_ mean believing _I_ know all
- the rules, nor does it mean I have to. I only have to face the moral
- choices that _I_ have to make-- and if someone asks me advice on their
- problems I may give them a suggestion or I may say that I have no
- clue. Fortunately for the world, no one's made me its moral arbiter.
- There are answers I think I know with a fair degree of confidence, and
- there are _lots_ of day to day moral choices that aren't even hard,
- but even in the case of the hard choices I think that there's a better
- and a worse answer-- and choosing the worse answer may be forgivable,
- but it's still morally worse (e.g. helping cover up a murder because
- the killers threaten your life).
-
- >Now, tell me how you reconcile that with absolute morality.
-
- "Well, I've explained my take on it as well as I'm able: that
- moral situations only exist within a context, that sometimes the only
- choice may be between two evils, that intent is important with respect
- to both means and ends, and that belief in a standard is not the same
- as belief that one knows the standard inside and out. Conversely, my
- problem with relativism is that it implies that an identical action,
- under identical circumstances, with identical intent, may be right for
- Jane and wrong for Joe-- or, as one rather extreme relativist put it
- with regard to applying morals on a cultural scale, `Maybe the
- Holocaust was right for that culture.' I don't know of many
- relativists who would go to that extreme, but conversely I don't know
- how one defines a relative morality which doesn't imply that mass
- torture and mass murder might be right for one person or group if they
- adopt a moral structure which considers it permissible or
- praiseworthy."
-
- Michael
-
- --
- Michael S. Schiffer, LHN, FCS "Indeed I tremble for my country
- mss2@midway.uchicago.edu when I reflect that God is just."
- mike.schiffer@um.cc.umich.edu -- Thomas Jefferson, Notes on
- mschiffer@aal.itd.umich.edu Virginia (1784)
-