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Topic ClosedImmorality and the Free Market

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Poll Question: Does the Free Market promote immorality? (and does it have to?)
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
10 [47.62%]
5 [23.81%]
3 [14.29%]
2 [9.52%]
0 [0.00%]
0 [0.00%]
1 [4.76%]
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IVNORD View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 12 2008 at 22:29
Originally posted by Forgotten Son Forgotten Son wrote:

 
Originally posted by INVORD INVORD wrote:

I am afraid to even mention the human cost as our casualties are horrific already.


I feel compelled to mention the human costs to them, as I feel it is a little disturbing that, in conflicts involving the US (though by no means limited to that country), US casualties are known down to the nearest man and regularly cited first.

Over 1,000,000 Iraqis have died as a result of the 2003 invasion, with around another 5,000,000 made refugees.
  US casualties are cited first because it hurts.
 
I don't want to repeat all the propaganda slogans about democracy in Iraq.
Saddam should be given credit for keeping Iraq peaceful. I don't want to go into detail how he achieved it. The US did not go there to liberate the opressed Iraqi people. The civil war in Iraq can be blamed on the US invasion all you want, but it is hardly a result of it. Just ask yourself who supports that civil war

Originally posted by Forgotten Son Forgotten Son wrote:

 
Originally posted by INVORD INVORD wrote:

man has always exploited man, and always will.


I disagree. Someone in the 18th century could have made the argument that slavery has always existed and always will, but that institution has been greatly decreased since then. Also, as a flipside to your argument, solidarity and mutual aid have always existed. I see no reason why the latter shouldn't triumph over the former.
You bank too much on the good side of human nature.
 
Although I would not dismiss that possibility entirely, in the foreseeble future any form of communism is unlikely. Technological advances could decrease or even eliminate the need in human labor, but it's very hardr to imagine what kind of social relations would be in place then. People like you and I may not survive it
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 12 2008 at 22:47
Originally posted by jimmy_row jimmy_row wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

I tend to fall somewhere between the first and last option, but voted for the first considering the last is intended as a joke. I believe strongly that capitalism is flawed and is a huge crime against humanity. When the US was founded it was set up as a way to prevent despotism in polotics, why is it that we allow despotism to thrive in our economy with the rich feeding off the poor. If our political leaders are elected our economic ones should be as well.
You're at it again... No matter what your beloved Marx said, man has always exploited man, and always will. Marx went thru the entire history of human race to state that all social formations were based on exploitation, and then he declared that the next formation will be based on equality. On what grounds? If anything, the prior experience woudl dictate the future course of history. And how do you propose we elect our economic leaders?
not exactly, society and the class order had to go through a cycle of conflict first (ie. Capitalism leading to revolution leading to dictatorship leading to "true" Communism...his ideas were predicated upon this process (which wasn't as rigid and dogmatic as many believe).  But alas, we have never had an actual communist society, so whether or not it is possible, we shall not know...but western capitalism and imperialism probably have a lot to do with that...
 
But Marx did believe that human nature had the capacity to leave behind this history of exploitation - because it was a result of ecological factors - thus, you change the environment...the system, the way people live, then you can reform the social order and begin to eradicate the manipulation that capitalism 'promotes'.
So why has the cycle never resulted in communism? Marx based his theories on laws of economy, not on human nature. His belief that humans are capable of being uniformly good was probably eiher an intellectual compromise or wishful thinking, not a sincere conviction. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 12 2008 at 22:48
Originally posted by Deathrabbit Deathrabbit wrote:

Libertarian socialist, that sounds impossible. That's like a giant midget.
 
SmileSmileSmileSmile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 12 2008 at 22:58
Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

I tend to fall somewhere between the first and last option, but voted for the first considering the last is intended as a joke. I believe strongly that capitalism is flawed and is a huge crime against humanity. When the US was founded it was set up as a way to prevent despotism in polotics, why is it that we allow despotism to thrive in our economy with the rich feeding off the poor. If our political leaders are elected our economic ones should be as well.
You're at it again... No matter what your beloved Marx said, man has always exploited man, and always will. Marx went thru the entire history of human race to state that all social formations were based on exploitation, and then he declared that the next formation will be based on equality. On what grounds? If anything, the prior experience woudl dictate the future course of history. And how do you propose we elect our economic leaders?
I actually thought I toned doun my argument from last time. Before Democracy it was considered to be crazy, the strongest people with the most wepons had ruled countries for years, and there had never been any system in wich Democracy/Republics had worked (Rome tried republics and see what happened)
 
I find it odd that we decided to elect the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches of government and yet the Economic branch is the most powerfull. If the CEO had to worry about being elected by their workers and not just about pleasing their customers their would be much less problems of extortion in the work force.
 
If such an idea were implemented it would divert the power buisnesses have gained over the government and wrest it back into the hands of the citizens.
 
 
In actuallity this is a completely Democratic system, the only thread it shares with Marx is that it sees that there needs to be a change in the economic system
Sorry, I didn't mean to reprimand you, said it jokingly...
 
What you propose has been around for centuries. It's called public company. THe only difference is that one has to be a shareholder to elect a CEO.  Your desire to transfer control of the means of production to workers negates the notion of private property. All experiments like this have failed.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 12 2008 at 23:08
Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

I tend to fall somewhere between the first and last option, but voted for the first considering the last is intended as a joke. I believe strongly that capitalism is flawed and is a huge crime against humanity. When the US was founded it was set up as a way to prevent despotism in polotics, why is it that we allow despotism to thrive in our economy with the rich feeding off the poor. If our political leaders are elected our economic ones should be as well.
You're at it again... No matter what your beloved Marx said, man has always exploited man, and always will. Marx went thru the entire history of human race to state that all social formations were based on exploitation, and then he declared that the next formation will be based on equality. On what grounds? If anything, the prior experience woudl dictate the future course of history. And how do you propose we elect our economic leaders?
I actually thought I toned doun my argument from last time. Before Democracy it was considered to be crazy, the strongest people with the most wepons had ruled countries for years, and there had never been any system in wich Democracy/Republics had worked (Rome tried republics and see what happened)
 
I find it odd that we decided to elect the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches of government and yet the Economic branch is the most powerfull. If the CEO had to worry about being elected by their workers and not just about pleasing their customers their would be much less problems of extortion in the work force.
 
If such an idea were implemented it would divert the power buisnesses have gained over the government and wrest it back into the hands of the citizens.
 
 
In actuallity this is a completely Democratic system, the only thread it shares with Marx is that it sees that there needs to be a change in the economic system
Sorry, I didn't mean to reprimand you, said it jokingly...
 
What you propose has been around for centuries. It's called public company. THe only difference is that one has to be a shareholder to elect a CEO.  Your desire to transfer control of the means of production to workers negates the notion of private property. All experiments like this have failed.
name three.
Democracy/Republics failed the first few times they tried it too.
 
I know that one company doing this is a stupid Idea that would never hold up in the economy as it is but if they all were...
 
The public company is the OPPOSITE of what I want, shareholders are the elite and wouldn't care for the needs of the workers
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 12 2008 at 23:16
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Is there a definite, universal moral code, or is it all subjective? I think when you look in as a skeptical person at history, you see certain common threads, but no definitive commonalities throughout every culture.

Excessive consumerism is detrimental to society (as I think we'll soon see, if it's not already obvious), and the free market encourages that, certainly more than communism. But is it better to take from the people who are able and give to the people who are unable? Is that moral? You define it.
 
i love your post stonebeard, im still contemplating it. on one hand, is it fair, just and moral for a billionares cat to eat from a crystal gobblet and a child with cancer not get treatment?  as unbelieveable as that sounds, it does happen, if the childs parents make too much for medicaid, too little for the over-inflated costs of hmo/ppo.  im not sure anymore whats the definitive "right" choice, to forceably take money from one to give to another is wrong, but to let the other suffer is not right either.  i believe balance is whats needed in the USA, although balance is almost a joke to our politicians.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 12 2008 at 23:18
Originally posted by rileydog22 rileydog22 wrote:

Originally posted by TheProgtologist TheProgtologist wrote:

Originally posted by el böthy el böthy wrote:

Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Well another position I've always maintained is that capitalism works best when tempered by socialism and vise versa, though this is probably just another way to say what I just said already.

Probably true. I think that what the USA goverment is trying to make by the latter wars they have been starting is looking for a new USSR type of enemy, something that is so against everything USA stands for that patriotism blossoms akk around... of course what I have just said isnt jarbreaking, nor is it very revealing... but I said it... I said it
 
"I think that what the USA goverment is trying to make by the latter wars they have been starting is looking for a new USSR type of enemy"
 
I don't mean to go off topic but please name one war that the US instigated BESIDES the Iraqi conflict.And we really didn't have to "look" for a new enemy,we found that in Al-Queda and terrorism.And they started that,by killing almost 5,000 of my countrymen in one day.They should have taken a lesson from Japan's book and studied the chapter called "Don't Kick a Hornets Nest".
 
Sorry man,your post bothered me.We rarely start wars,but have a good track record on finishing them(until recently,I'm sad to say).


Comparing Iraq in this war to Japan in WWII is not at all legitimate.  Pearl Harbor was an attack by a nation against another nation, and thus a legitimate cause for war.  9/11 was an attack by civilians against other civilians, and thus not a legitimate cause for war.  Going into Iraq because of 9/11 is like invading Mexico because a Hispanic person kidnapped your mother. 
I do believe that Saddam had something to do with 9/11. The fact that no proof of his involvement has ever been found does not fully convince me. No trace of chemical weapons was found either, but the entire world knows he'd had them. Even if Saddam was completely innocent, which I sincerely doubt, he could easily be the prime suspect. To prevent a repeat of 9/11, a precedent must be set. Saddam was the best candidate for it. Forget about legitimacy and political correctness. How Afghanistan is more legitimate than Iraq? We invaded an independent country under the pretext of catching a fugitive who was sheltered by the government of that independent country. Why not invade France? They shelter Roman Polansky. He's a fugitive too
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 12 2008 at 23:26
Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

I tend to fall somewhere between the first and last option, but voted for the first considering the last is intended as a joke. I believe strongly that capitalism is flawed and is a huge crime against humanity. When the US was founded it was set up as a way to prevent despotism in polotics, why is it that we allow despotism to thrive in our economy with the rich feeding off the poor. If our political leaders are elected our economic ones should be as well.
You're at it again... No matter what your beloved Marx said, man has always exploited man, and always will. Marx went thru the entire history of human race to state that all social formations were based on exploitation, and then he declared that the next formation will be based on equality. On what grounds? If anything, the prior experience woudl dictate the future course of history. And how do you propose we elect our economic leaders?
I actually thought I toned doun my argument from last time. Before Democracy it was considered to be crazy, the strongest people with the most wepons had ruled countries for years, and there had never been any system in wich Democracy/Republics had worked (Rome tried republics and see what happened)
 
I find it odd that we decided to elect the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches of government and yet the Economic branch is the most powerfull. If the CEO had to worry about being elected by their workers and not just about pleasing their customers their would be much less problems of extortion in the work force.
 
If such an idea were implemented it would divert the power buisnesses have gained over the government and wrest it back into the hands of the citizens.
 
 
In actuallity this is a completely Democratic system, the only thread it shares with Marx is that it sees that there needs to be a change in the economic system
Sorry, I didn't mean to reprimand you, said it jokingly...
 
What you propose has been around for centuries. It's called public company. THe only difference is that one has to be a shareholder to elect a CEO.  Your desire to transfer control of the means of production to workers negates the notion of private property. All experiments like this have failed.
name three.
Democracy/Republics failed the first few times they tried it too.
Do you want 3 experiments? I'll name one, but a big one - the USSR. You could find a few more in its ruins.
I am not talking about democratic republics, but a politico-economis system.
 
Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

I know that one company doing this is a stupid Idea that would never hold up in the economy as it is but if they all were...
 
The public company is the OPPOSITE of what I want, shareholders are the elite and wouldn't care for the needs of the workers
Not true. Workers are given a piece of the pie thru their profit sharing plans, bonus pay, etc. If you look at the unions' pension mutual funds, it's scary how much power they have over corporations sometimes.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 15:46
"The free market is an excellent servant, but a terrible master"
I think that sums it up quite well.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 17:30
Morality is a subjective concept. You cannot impose your morals (or lack thereof) on someone who isn't predisposed to them. Now, there are many things that I may personally se as immoral, so I don't engage in them. But it is up to me to make that choice. There are others that may see my sense of humor as immoral. So be it. But there are no absolutes in this arena. The Free market reaps what it will bear. If the majority of consumers were only interested in the "Leave it to Beaver" lifestyle, that's what the market would offer. All T.V. moms would be June Cleaver. If most people were Buddhist, there would be a lot of ads about peace, and low cost incense.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 17:59
Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

I tend to fall somewhere between the first and last option, but voted for the first considering the last is intended as a joke. I believe strongly that capitalism is flawed and is a huge crime against humanity. When the US was founded it was set up as a way to prevent despotism in polotics, why is it that we allow despotism to thrive in our economy with the rich feeding off the poor. If our political leaders are elected our economic ones should be as well.
You're at it again... No matter what your beloved Marx said, man has always exploited man, and always will. Marx went thru the entire history of human race to state that all social formations were based on exploitation, and then he declared that the next formation will be based on equality. On what grounds? If anything, the prior experience woudl dictate the future course of history. And how do you propose we elect our economic leaders?
I actually thought I toned doun my argument from last time. Before Democracy it was considered to be crazy, the strongest people with the most wepons had ruled countries for years, and there had never been any system in wich Democracy/Republics had worked (Rome tried republics and see what happened)
 
I find it odd that we decided to elect the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches of government and yet the Economic branch is the most powerfull. If the CEO had to worry about being elected by their workers and not just about pleasing their customers their would be much less problems of extortion in the work force.
 
If such an idea were implemented it would divert the power buisnesses have gained over the government and wrest it back into the hands of the citizens.
 
 
In actuallity this is a completely Democratic system, the only thread it shares with Marx is that it sees that there needs to be a change in the economic system
Sorry, I didn't mean to reprimand you, said it jokingly...
 
What you propose has been around for centuries. It's called public company. THe only difference is that one has to be a shareholder to elect a CEO.  Your desire to transfer control of the means of production to workers negates the notion of private property. All experiments like this have failed.
name three.
Democracy/Republics failed the first few times they tried it too.
Do you want 3 experiments? I'll name one, but a big one - the USSR. You could find a few more in its ruins.
Not a good example, the whole voting part was conspicuosly missing, not to mention too much power was placed in too few hands, a council is always more trustworthy than one person. Also I have said nothing about redistribution of wealth through forced means.
 
I am not talking about democratic republics, but a politico-economis system.
Simply stating that not evrything works the first few times around
 
Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

I know that one company doing this is a stupid Idea that would never hold up in the economy as it is but if they all were...
 
The public company is the OPPOSITE of what I want, shareholders are the elite and wouldn't care for the needs of the workers
Not true. Workers are given a piece of the pie thru their profit sharing plans, bonus pay, etc. If you look at the unions' pension mutual funds, it's scary how much power they have over corporations sometimes.
Not what I am talking about at all, I am talking about direct power by workers over the leaders of corperations through democracy, in all companies, with no other changes to the system.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 18:26
A free market is inherently immoral*. It encourages people to make others suffer for self-advancement. A completely free market ultimately results in communism, miner-style.

*Morality is subjective; here, we define it as general benevolence.


Edited by Gamemako - February 13 2008 at 18:27
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 21:31
Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Morality is a subjective concept. You cannot impose your morals (or lack thereof) on someone who isn't predisposed to them. Now, there are many things that I may personally se as immoral, so I don't engage in them. But it is up to me to make that choice. There are others that may see my sense of humor as immoral. So be it. But there are no absolutes in this arena. The Free market reaps what it will bear. If the majority of consumers were only interested in the "Leave it to Beaver" lifestyle, that's what the market would offer. All T.V. moms would be June Cleaver. If most people were Buddhist, there would be a lot of ads about peace, and low cost incense.
We use morality in a generally accepted form, not philosophical.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 22:00
Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

 THe only difference is that one has to be a shareholder to elect a CEO.  Your desire to transfer control of the means of production to workers negates the notion of private property. All experiments like this have failed.
name three.
Democracy/Republics failed the first few times they tried it too.
Do you want 3 experiments? I'll name one, but a big one - the USSR. You could find a few more in its ruins.
Not a good example, the whole voting part was conspicuosly missing, not to mention too much power was placed in too few hands, a council is always more trustworthy than one person. Also I have said nothing about redistribution of wealth through forced means.
  
Originally posted by Proletariat Proletariat wrote:

I know that one company doing this is a stupid Idea that would never hold up in the economy as it is but if they all were...
 
The public company is the OPPOSITE of what I want, shareholders are the elite and wouldn't care for the needs of the workers
Not true. Workers are given a piece of the pie thru their profit sharing plans, bonus pay, etc. If you look at the unions' pension mutual funds, it's scary how much power they have over corporations sometimes.
Not what I am talking about at all, I am talking about direct power by workers over the leaders of corperations through democracy, in all companies, with no other changes to the system.
We misunderstood each other.
To transfer control of a plant (the means of production ) to workers equates to expropriation of private property since it belongs to someone else (shareholders or private owners). This is what I meant by "experiments." This type of "communal" ownership is endemic to comminist philosophy. Thus the USSR was the best example here. I know that they tried workers' ownership in Yugoslavia in the 50's and 60's (maybe longer), and you know how it all ended up.
 
Unfortunately, fear is the engine of progress. Not greed, not incentive, but fear. One fears to lose a means of survival (in a broad sense on the word) be that a job, a business, a trade - any source of income. Absence of fear brings complacency. What you advocate is complacency. That's why it doesn't work.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 22:06
Originally posted by Gamemako Gamemako wrote:

A free market is inherently immoral*. It encourages people to make others suffer for self-advancement. A completely free market ultimately results in communism, miner-style.

This statement would have earned you the chairman's seat at the congress of revisionists of Marxism some 50 years ago.
 
Without capitalizing on your misprint, would you elaborate on minor- and major-style communism?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 22:17
Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Morality is a subjective concept. You cannot impose your morals (or lack thereof) on someone who isn't predisposed to them. Now, there are many things that I may personally se as immoral, so I don't engage in them. But it is up to me to make that choice. There are others that may see my sense of humor as immoral. So be it. But there are no absolutes in this arena. The Free market reaps what it will bear. If the majority of consumers were only interested in the "Leave it to Beaver" lifestyle, that's what the market would offer. All T.V. moms would be June Cleaver. If most people were Buddhist, there would be a lot of ads about peace, and low cost incense.
We use morality in a generally accepted form, not philosophical.


But what is the generally accepted form of morality? In your community it may be something quite different than mine.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 22:19
Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Morality is a subjective concept. You cannot impose your morals (or lack thereof) on someone who isn't predisposed to them. Now, there are many things that I may personally se as immoral, so I don't engage in them. But it is up to me to make that choice. There are others that may see my sense of humor as immoral. So be it. But there are no absolutes in this arena. The Free market reaps what it will bear. If the majority of consumers were only interested in the "Leave it to Beaver" lifestyle, that's what the market would offer. All T.V. moms would be June Cleaver. If most people were Buddhist, there would be a lot of ads about peace, and low cost incense.
We use morality in a generally accepted form, not philosophical.


But what is the generally accepted form of morality? In your community it may be something quite different than mine.


  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morality
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 13 2008 at 23:28
Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Morality is a subjective concept. You cannot impose your morals (or lack thereof) on someone who isn't predisposed to them. Now, there are many things that I may personally se as immoral, so I don't engage in them. But it is up to me to make that choice. There are others that may see my sense of humor as immoral. So be it. But there are no absolutes in this arena. The Free market reaps what it will bear. If the majority of consumers were only interested in the "Leave it to Beaver" lifestyle, that's what the market would offer. All T.V. moms would be June Cleaver. If most people were Buddhist, there would be a lot of ads about peace, and low cost incense.
We use morality in a generally accepted form, not philosophical.
But what is the generally accepted form of morality? In your community it may be something quite different than mine.
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morality


Seriously, you are using Wikipedia to prove your point? That only bolsters my position that morality is a subjective concept, not an absolute.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 01:57
Morality is a consensus for the purposes of social science. This a sociological debate, so using the social imagination is probably the preferred mode of debate.  Having a debate on multiple levels of abstraction is kinda pointless.

I'm an engineer, so we use stuff all the time that's not the truth. Newtonian mechanics, classical e-mag, and so forth. Just because something is not the absolute truth does not mean it isn't useful.


Edited by Deathrabbit - February 14 2008 at 02:05
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 14 2008 at 07:50
Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Originally posted by IVNORD IVNORD wrote:

Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

Morality is a subjective concept. You cannot impose your morals (or lack thereof) on someone who isn't predisposed to them. Now, there are many things that I may personally se as immoral, so I don't engage in them. But it is up to me to make that choice. There are others that may see my sense of humor as immoral. So be it. But there are no absolutes in this arena. The Free market reaps what it will bear. If the majority of consumers were only interested in the "Leave it to Beaver" lifestyle, that's what the market would offer. All T.V. moms would be June Cleaver. If most people were Buddhist, there would be a lot of ads about peace, and low cost incense.
We use morality in a generally accepted form, not philosophical.
But what is the generally accepted form of morality? In your community it may be something quite different than mine.
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morality


Seriously, you are using Wikipedia to prove your point? That only bolsters my position that morality is a subjective concept, not an absolute.


I'm not proving anything. I am not contesting your point, just explaining that there's an everyday use of the word, and Wikipedia is very descriptive here. It's like philosophizing about God and saying "god-damm-it."
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