UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
Offshoot from another thread.
Posted by Geoff:
Wikipedia on Kant's ethics:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Categorical_Imperative
DJ, in response...
Posted by DarkJaguar:
Ethics is hard. But I'm with Kant. D.J. is defending utilitatirianism - the belief that consequences are more important than intentions. I believe that intentions are more important than consequences, in terms of morality.
Posted by Geoff:
Very simple. Imagine that whatever you do, everybody else did the same thing in the same situation. If the result is a world you would not want to live in, or worse - a world which could not exist because it would be illogical - then you should not act in this way.
There is nothing scientific about this question. It is purely philosophical. But it is not irrelevant, and it refers to something very real - human moral decisions. Few things are more important than this.
Wikipedia on Kant's ethics:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Categorical_Imperative
DJ, in response...
Posted by DarkJaguar:
Also, what an odd sense of morality. Consequences of action are irrelevent? At least that's what the wikipedia article seems to be saying. Sorry, I can't go with that. Consequences seem to be all that MATTERS when it comes to an action, at least the most probable consequence as one who is deciding can judge it. It's not okay to steal because if one says "it is okay to steal" and universalizes it, then property can't exist and the statement is meaningless". Interesting, except it seems a nonsequiter, as well as making only two options when there are more. What about just CHANGING the statement to "propery does not exist"? Universalized THAT still makes sense. Stealing won't exist, but a lot of people would disagree with the person that does it and might stop him. Maybe consequences are important? It is "never okay to lie" because you can't universalize it? Fine, I'll remember that next time you are being hunted down by someone wanting to kill you and they demand your location from me. Still think consequences are irrelevent? Philosophy is all well and good until reality steps in and forces you to make a choice that doesn't always have a "perfectly logically formed solution that is applicable in all situations in perpetuity througout the universe".
Ethics is hard. But I'm with Kant. D.J. is defending utilitatirianism - the belief that consequences are more important than intentions. I believe that intentions are more important than consequences, in terms of morality.