Awesomelyglorious wrote:
What is the source of moral judgment in your mind? How do you determine what values are to be held higher and which ones lower? Why is this method of valuation valid? Why should you act in accordance to these ideas? Do you truly consider yourself beyond morality? Can you justify a belief that you are beyond any moral code? Poll included with following options:
Religious teachings/divine origin: A divine being tells you what is right and wrong and therefore right and wrong is because he says so, this is a variant of philosophy.
Morality is relative: Morality has no absolute truth to it, and my selection of a moral code is by its nature arbitrary and personal.
Conscience/Natural Law: Right and wrong is a product of what values your conscience seems to tell you, morality is inherent in man and buried in his nature.
Philosophy: You accept a moral premise as true and use it to derive the rest of your beliefs, this could be that individual gain is good, that the net gain of all people is good, that freedom is good, etc.
Beyond morality: You believe that you truly have no moral valuation system at all and run your life according to none.
Perhaps the options are flawed on some level as there is certainly a large level of overlap between some ideas, but I would like to see what argument is dominant. Hopefully I have most of the major categories, if not then screw it. At least this is a topic that isn't purely religion like so many are.
Tio answer this question, read Dr Michael Shermer's book: "The Science of Good and Evil"
In a nutshell, morailty is a result of evolutionary psycology. Those who behaved in a more "moral" sense passed on more genes than those who were entirely selfish.
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"The christian god is a being of terrific character; cruel, vindictive, capricious and unjust" - Thomas Jefferson