Re: Rational base for morals

From: Dan Fabulich (daniel.fabulich@yale.edu)
Date: Mon Jan 11 1999 - 10:45:17 MST


KPJ wrote:
>It appears as if Samael <Samael@dial.pipex.com> wrote:
>|
>|Can you tell me how I can, in good faith, follow a moral code when I believe
>|there is no logical reason to do so?
>|Especially when nobody has yet even managed to come up with a logical
>|objection to rape (which pretty much everyone on the planet admits is an
>|abbhorence (sic)).
>
>I suggest that the meme rules of conduct be commutative.
>
>Commutativity: If the rule is "X shall not perform act P on Y"
> then also the rule "Y shall not perform act P on X" shall hold.

You have more or less enunciated Kantianism. Kantianism has various
problems, however. Take killing, for example. We normally regard killing
in self-defense as OK. Must I simply relent if someone tries to kill me?
Similarly, attacking another person is usually considered wrong. Must I
turn over my wallet to an armed thug so as to avoid a fight?

IMO, the only act type that makes sense is consequentialist in nature; thus
there are only two act types: maximizing the good, and not maximizing the
good. (Note that I haven't yet enunciated what the good is; I'm just
trying to give an example of a coherent "commutative" or Kantian structure.)

-Dan

        -GIVE ME IMMORTALITY OR GIVE ME DEATH-



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