Exploring the Limits of Human Morals

In summary, the conversation discusses various moral stands such as Absolutism, Objectivism, and Realism and whether there is a side that believes humans have no morals at all and simply act according to what others want. The individual also brings up the concept of existentialism and moral nihilism. Ultimately, the conversation concludes that while our beliefs and behavior may be influenced by others, we still have the freedom to make our own moral choices.
  • #1
JCCol
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I understand the moral stands of Absolutism, Objectivism and Realism now what i am wondering, is their a stand that says humans have no morals at all and we just fool ourselves into thinking what is right and wrong, or is this in one of the ones i named above and I should just learn them better.
I wonder this because I want to know is their a side that says we have no true morals and what that side is. Any help would be appriciated.
 
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  • #2
JCCol said:
I understand the moral stands of Absolutism, Objectivism and Realism now what i am wondering, is their a stand that says humans have no morals at all and we just fool ourselves into thinking what is right and wrong, or is this in one of the ones i named above and I should just learn them better.
I wonder this because I want to know is their a side that says we have no true morals and what that side is. Any help would be appriciated.
The question doesn't make sense to me.
A moral is simply a belief concerning whether a particular type of action or behaviour is right (good) or wrong (bad). A belief is just that - a belief. Belief does not entail truth - thus the mere fact that I believe proposition P is true does not mean that P is true.
How can one "fool oneself" into thinking that one has a particular belief if one does in fact not have that belief?

Yes, it is possible that an individual could have no morals (ie no beliefs about whether particular types of action or behaviour is right or wrong), but such an individual would be an aberration and a social misfit.

Best Regards
 
  • #3
JCCol said:
I understand the moral stands of Absolutism, Objectivism and Realism now what i am wondering, is their a stand that says humans have no morals at all and we just fool ourselves into thinking what is right and wrong, or is this in one of the ones i named above and I should just learn them better.
I wonder this because I want to know is their a side that says we have no true morals and what that side is. Any help would be appriciated.

Existentialism states that each of us has no prior essential nature and we are free at every moment to make choices which cannot be limited by fixed concerns. So this philosophy teaches that there is no moral background to our actions. In fact Sartre called the recourse to traditional standards mauvais foix (bad faith), meaning you have betrayed your own freedom.
 
  • #4
JCCol said:
is their a stand that says humans have no morals at all and we just fool ourselves into thinking what is right and wrong
Moral nihilism states that there is no morality, or that morality does not matter. Is this what you were looking for?

Human ideas of morals emerged from basic ideas that can be deterministically linked with game theory and genetic evolution. It is easy to show that the optimum strategy for survival (as well as for reward) in a social context is usually one that tends towards being mainly cooperative and ethical. The intuitive ideas we have about ethics and morals in small social groups follows quite naturally from this.

What is more difficult to explain, however, is the belief in "higher morals". Why should it be the case, for example, that we believe all humans have equal rights? This certainly does not necessarily follow from the "small social group" behaviour above. Even more difficult to understand is the notion that animal rights are equivalent to human rights.

These higher morals are neither objective nor absolute, they are subjective intellectual exercises. For the higher morals, there seems to be no rational or logical explanatory reason, except that we simply accept the notion “all humans have equal rights” as an article of faith.

A higher moral is a premise. It is simply a proposition which is assumed true. I might assume all humans have equal rights, or I might assume all conscious beings have equal rights. Or I might assume other moral premises. To me, that's simply moral subjectivity.

Best Regards
 
  • #5
Basically I wanted to know if their was an idea that morals don't exist in people and individuals have no morals but we just do what we think other people want us to do as not to look like a bad person. We don't actually have a bases for thinking something is right or wrong but we just act and think like what other people want us to think and act about what is wrong and right.
 
  • #6
JCCol said:
Basically I wanted to know if their was an idea that morals don't exist in people and individuals have no morals but we just do what we think other people want us to do as not to look like a bad person. We don't actually have a bases for thinking something is right or wrong but we just act and think like what other people want us to think and act about what is wrong and right.
It is true that our beliefs and behaviour are influenced by our upbringing, our peers and other people with whom we come in contact, but
I don't think any self-respecting person would claim that they "just act and think like what other people want us to think and act".

At the end of the day, each of us (if we claim to be free) must take a stand on what we believe to be "right". Although our beliefs will indeed be influenced by others, it is not simply a case of doing what others want us to do. (If we are in a group of people with bad morals, they may want us to behave as badly as they do - this is a case where our own moarl values should tell us not to do what they want us to do)

Best Regards
 
  • #7
moving finger said:
It is true that our beliefs and behaviour are influenced by our upbringing, our peers and other people with whom we come in contact, but
I don't think any self-respecting person would claim that they "just act and think like what other people want us to think and act".

At the end of the day, each of us (if we claim to be free) must take a stand on what we believe to be "right". Although our beliefs will indeed be influenced by others, it is not simply a case of doing what others want us to do. (If we are in a group of people with bad morals, they may want us to behave as badly as they do - this is a case where our own moarl values should tell us not to do what they want us to do)

Best Regards


But in protecting your method you've contradicted your statement. Who is to say that those with "bad morals" have said negative attributes if there was not dogmatic theory to say that they do? If we were from a group that had those previously stated bad morals then we would think of them as proper ideals, and in turn our own moral values would be one in the same with theirs. I agree with the thought that the claim of morality is completely subjective, and with it being completely subjective, it is inherently nonexistant naturally.
 
  • #8
There are days when I am amazed that the cars go down the freeway, and there is not mass chaos, that we can walk down a sidewalk, in relative safety, and we can hold multitudes of attitudes regarding multitudes of issues, and still draw a relaxed breath. I do not think that we have to take a stand, on most days, I think we have to be ourselves on most days, and consider the rights of others, to do the same. I don't think that the "morals" of others, have much to do with how I act, and I pay little attention to the acts of others, outside my immediate sphere. I consider that my life, is mine, and all the other 7 billion or so humans don't have to do what I want, or feel as I do, or worship as I do, or behave as I do. I would defend myself if I had to, and sometimes taking a stand about an issue pertinent to me is self defense. I think that if parents behave responsibly around their children, and care for their children, then people as a whole would be better behaved toward each other in general, and a lot of this intellectual chest thumping, moralizing, posturing, judging, and human misbehaving would be decreased in the face of the good life.
 
  • #9
JCCol said:
I understand the moral stands of Absolutism, Objectivism and Realism now what i am wondering, is their a stand that says humans have no morals at all and we just fool ourselves into thinking what is right and wrong, or is this in one of the ones i named above and I should just learn them better.
I wonder this because I want to know is their a side that says we have no true morals and what that side is. Any help would be appriciated.

Actually, there's a couple of different views which state that no ethical facts exist (technically, it's more appropriate to say that no facts exist which could make a person's ethical convictions about a particular event/circumstance true, but you get the idea).

Nihilism, and perhaps the more interesting "non-cognitivism" (which is heavily related to logical positivism) come to mind.
 
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  • #10
JCCol asks: "is there a stand that says [1] humans have no morals at all, and [2] we just fool ourselves into thinking what is right and wrong."

Well, I think that [2] is a True statement in most systems.
Out of the Billions of people on this earth, how many of them agree with what I think is Right and Wrong? (I mean, agree with everything that I think.)
So far in my Life, I have found exactly ZERO people who agree with me on everything.

Therefore, I make up my own Right and Wrong. Then I decide (or fool myself into thinking) that all of the things I think are Right are ACTUALLY Right. Heck, they are ONLY Right because I think they are.
When you disagree with me, I know you are Wrong, because I fooled myself into believing that the opposite of your view is Right.

As far as believing that people have NO Morals, I would look into a very narrow Church.
This is very close to what your issue is.
There are 100 people at this Church.
THEY are the people with Morals; the rest of the World is im-moral.
So THEY will go to Heaven, and the rest of the World will rot in Hell.
To them, the whole World is im-moral (and they believe it deeply).

In fact, they will say that even THEY were im-moral, until they arrived at the Church.
So they can hold-on-to their perfect view: All people are im-moral.
They are moral, only because God (personally) picked them out and POOF! made them moral beings in this totally im-moral world.
 
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  • #11
Anything that comes out of a human being's mouth is just make up.
 
  • #12
raolduke said:
Anything that comes out of a human being's mouth is just make up.

I'm very glad that you backed this overly simplified/general statement up with valid support.
 
  • #13
You obviously agree with me?
 
  • #14
Why don't you offer some support for your claim so I can decide if I agree with you.
 
  • #15
Can you conceive non-existence? Can you remember if this was the first time you were alive or not? - I agree with you, of course. I find it kind of funny actually. I am getting to a really weird point in my life - I get these bursts of apathy and sensations of not being able to feel, almost physically numb. I also become very sad but shortly stop caring even about the questions and feelings that oppress me. I believe that I carry a "noble" or "good natured" attitude towards anything I encounter in life but life seems more and more like a dying party and everyone is looking for any drug to make them crazy. The only way I can describe how I view life now is "We are all just dancing on top of such an interesting dimension but I am not sure if its even real"
 
  • #16
Your personal experience isn't valid support. You through out the proposition "Anything that comes from a human being's mouth is just made up". Please offer support for this, or don't expect us to adopt your position.
 
  • #17
If human beings didn't happen, then human ideas wouldn't and couldn't have been created. Ideas like concrete and street cars wouldn't exist. I can't conceive concrete not existing.
 
  • #18
First of all that isn't http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logical-consequence/" support. Secondly you are confusing "ideas" and "abstract concepts". Abstract concepts very well might exist without sentient beings to think about them. Your last statement is ambiguous.
 
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  • #19
First of all you claiming that my support isn't valid, isn't valid. I am only supporting the notion that when man dies so does his ideas. I wasn't aware that this was an abstract concept. I agree that the subject may be abstract but discipline can always be applied.
 
  • #20
And Raolduke represents the Relativist school of thought, another-morality-doesn't-exist philosophy. The general idea behind this is that because morality is a human concept it only applies to humanity. From that you equate moral ideas with any other human concept, and because human thought is fallible you can pretty much conclude that morality is objectively meaningless, and relative to every individual (or every culture, etc, depending on the brand of thought).
 
  • #21
raolduke said:
If human beings didn't happen, then human ideas wouldn't and couldn't have been created. Ideas like concrete and street cars wouldn't exist. I can't conceive concrete not existing.
Would gravity exist if Newton hadn't been around to theorize it?
 
  • #22
Smurf said:
And Raolduke represents the Relativist school of thought, another-morality-doesn't-exist philosophy. The general idea behind this is that because morality is a human concept it only applies to humanity.
Well, no, not quite. Raolduke is saying that because morality is a human concept, it doesn't exist without humans. The justification was that no human concept actually exists unless we create it. But that clearly is not valid at face value, since gravity still exists regardless of whether or not we are here to theorize it. Applicability is a separate issue, but you're just as wrong about that as Raolduke is about the existence of concepts outside the human mind: The concept of ethics can and is often applied to animals and if we weren't here, the animals would still behave in roughly the same way.

So we'll need a better justification for why morality can't exist outside the human mind...
From that you equate moral ideas with any other human concept, and because human thought is fallible you can pretty much conclude that morality is objectively meaningless, and relative to every individual (or every culture, etc, depending on the brand of thought).
Again, gravity. Humans are fallible and Newton's theory of gravity was flawed. Does that mean gravity doesn't exist outside the human mind? Of course not: just because we don't know the laws of physics completely, doesn't mean gravity doesn't exist.

So fallibility is also not a valid reason why morality/ethics isn't "real".
 
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  • #23
raolduke said:
First of all you claiming that my support isn't valid, isn't valid. I am only supporting the notion that when man dies so does his ideas. I wasn't aware that this was an abstract concept. I agree that the subject may be abstract but discipline can always be applied.
This still doesn't relate to your claim that "anything that comes out a human being's mouth is just made up". Did you read my article on logical validity? If you did i think you would know why your support isn't valid.
 
  • #24
Is it that hard for you to understand the point I am trying to get across? Perhaps you don't have a very strong imagination? Or maybe its because I lack some "intelligent" form? If Newton didn't give a name to gravity I am sure another human being may have. Of course gravity would still exist even if human beings didn't. I believe that the human race should be farther along in problem solving but we're not.

You can contemplate non-existing?

Everything would still exist but we would have no idea that it does because we wouldn't be able to observe any of it. If we aren't able to receive information, then how could we make any kind of judgment about information that we're not receiving?

I can see the problem that someone may have with discussing anything spiritual and I agree this isn't the place but even if it was it would take a rare type of individual to feel satisfied with this as a substitute to concepts like meditation or praying.
 
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  • #25
ZackQuantum said:
But in protecting your method you've contradicted your statement. Who is to say that those with "bad morals" have said negative attributes if there was not dogmatic theory to say that they do? If we were from a group that had those previously stated bad morals then we would think of them as proper ideals, and in turn our own moral values would be one in the same with theirs. I agree with the thought that the claim of morality is completely subjective, and with it being completely subjective, it is inherently nonexistant naturally.
Not sure what statement of mine you think I have contradicted?
 
  • #26
russ_watters said:
Well, no, not quite. Raolduke is saying that because morality is a human concept, it doesn't exist without humans. The justification was that no human concept actually exists unless we create it. But that clearly is not valid at face value, since gravity still exists regardless of whether or not we are here to theorize it. Applicability is a separate issue, but you're just as wrong about that as Raolduke is about the existence of concepts outside the human mind: The concept of ethics can and is often applied to animals and if we weren't here, the animals would still behave in roughly the same way.

So we'll need a better justification for why morality can't exist outside the human mind... Again, gravity. Humans are fallible and Newton's theory of gravity was flawed. Does that mean gravity doesn't exist outside the human mind? Of course not: just because we don't know the laws of physics completely, doesn't mean gravity doesn't exist.

So fallibility is also not a valid reason why morality/ethics isn't "real".
Ethics exists within the "mind" of any agent which distinguishes "good" behaviour from "bad", or "right" behaviour from "wrong". In absence of all such agents, ethics is also absent.
 
  • #27
If such an "agent" does not exist, does that prevent behaviors from happening? I can choose to analyze an animal's actions or not - does that change the actions?

Physics is the study of why objects behave the way they do.
Ethics is the study of why humans (or animals) behave the way they do.

Just like with physics, we may have invented the language for describing behavior, but we didn't invent behavior.

The fact that animals tend to behave a certain way and are cosistent in their behavior means that 'something' must be guiding their behavior, in the same way that the fact that planets behave in a certain way means that 'something' must be guiding their behavior. And these things exist whether we choose to examine them and label them or not.
 
  • #28
russ_watters said:
If such an "agent" does not exist, does that prevent behaviors from happening?
No, but that's not my point. Behaviours in the absence of any judgemental agent (an agent who distinguishes right from wrong, or good from bad) cannot be morally right or wrong - because it is the judgemental agent who supplies the moral standard against which the rightness or wrongness of the behaviour is judged. Take away all such judgemental agents and the behaviour stays the same, but it is no longer morally right or wrong.

It is rather like asking, in absence of the planet Earth and the solar system, whether a particular direction in space is "north" or "south" - the question has no meaning, because it is only against the framework of the solar system that such a question can be answered. Similarly, in absence of some form of moral code (which exists in the mind of the moral agent making the judgement), asking whether an isolated behaviour is right or wrong has no meaning.

russ_watters said:
I can choose to analyze an animal's actions or not - does that change the actions?
No, but again that's not my point. It is the act of analysing an animal's actions which (may) result in moral judgements on those actions - the actions in themselves (in absence of such analysis) cannot be morally right or wrong.

If you need further evidence to support what I am saying : One agent may analyse the animal's actions to be morally right; another agent may analyse the same animal's actions to be morally wrong. This shows that the moral value of an action is the result of a convolution of the action itself along with the moral values of the agent judging the action - remove the agent and there is no moral value involved.

russ_watters said:
Ethics is the study of why humans (or animals) behave the way they do.
I beg to differ. Ethics is not so broad and general as the study of "why humans or animals behave the way they do"; it is more specifically the study of the general nature of morals and of the specific moral choices made by agents (which in turn implies that such agents must either have a set of moral standards, or their behaviours must be judged against an external set of moral standards)

russ_watters said:
The fact that animals tend to behave a certain way and are cosistent in their behavior means that 'something' must be guiding their behavior, in the same way that the fact that planets behave in a certain way means that 'something' must be guiding their behavior.
This does not lead to the conclusion that non-human animals have any set of moral standards. Moral judgements passed by humans on animal behaviour may simply be the result of anthropomorphising.
 
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  • #29
russ_watters said:
Physics is the study of why objects behave the way they do. Ethics is the study of why humans (or animals) behave the way they do.

Ethics is divided into descriptive and prescriptive ethics. What you seem to be talking about is descriptive ethics, which is the empirical study of the ethical systems actually used by people, or why they behave the way they behave ethically speaking. The descriptive ethicist is not concerned with all behavior, like why I chose the soup over the salad last night, just the ethical decisions that we make. Prescriptive ethics, on the other hand, is purely the study of how moral agents ought to behave. The former can exist in the absence of ethicists (but not in the absence of moral agents, any more than gravity would exist in the absense of space and mass), but the latter is a trickier. No doubt there actually exists some set of principles by which different groups of actors and reactors behave, but does there exist, in the absence of their articulation by ethicists, a set of principles by which these ought to behave? The answer is a clear cut no with many types of ethics; the law would not exist without lawmakers, business ethics would not exist in the absence of businesses, Victorian etiquette would not exist in the absence of prisses, etc.

So the question is this: Are ethical principles abstractions like gravity, or are they abstractions like legislative laws? The former abstracts from mind-independent reality, whereas the latter is straightforwardly a social construction.
 
  • #30
loseyourname said:
So the question is this: Are ethical principles abstractions like gravity, or are they abstractions like legislative laws? The former abstracts from mind-independent reality, whereas the latter is straightforwardly a social construction.
In other words, do moral or ethical principles exist independently of any agent or observer (like gravity), or are moral/ethical principles created from the interaction of observer (agent) and observed (and hence do not exist independently of observers or agents) (like legislative laws)?

How do we tell?

In the case of gravity we have been able to establish through countless empirical studies that there seems to be a principle at work which is independent of any and all observers. There appears to be a law of universal gravitational attraction with well-defined properties, which law is the same for every agent and observer.

In the case of legislative laws we have a clear case of laws which vary from one social system to another, and although there may often be similarity between many of these laws there is no identifiable "law of universal legislation" which operates independently of the agents or observers who make up these social systems - the laws are created by the agents and observers themselves, they do not exist in absence of these agents and observers.

What happens when we analyse moral and ethical principles in the same way?
 

What is the purpose of exploring the limits of human morals?

The purpose of exploring the limits of human morals is to gain a better understanding of the boundaries and constraints that govern human behavior. This can help us identify and address ethical issues and moral dilemmas in society.

How is this exploration conducted?

This exploration is conducted through various methods such as psychological experiments, philosophical discussions, and ethical debates. It also involves studying historical and cultural perspectives on morality.

What are some examples of limits in human morals?

Some examples of limits in human morals include the boundaries between right and wrong, the extent to which individuals are willing to sacrifice for the greater good, and the impact of societal norms and values on individual moral decision-making.

Can human morals be changed or influenced?

Yes, human morals can be changed or influenced through various factors such as upbringing, cultural and societal norms, personal experiences, and exposure to different perspectives. However, there are also innate moral principles that are believed to be universal and unchangeable.

What are the implications of understanding the limits of human morals?

Understanding the limits of human morals can have significant implications for fields such as psychology, sociology, and ethics. It can also inform decision-making in areas such as law, politics, and social justice. Ultimately, it can contribute to creating a more ethical and just society.

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