Wudang
BOFH
In the thread on "animal lives versus human lives" a couple of posters assumed the necessity of consistency in any morality. Btw I'm going to use the term Moral Philosophy to denote a formal philosophy based on axioms and reason rather than an informal philosophy (small p) such as "be excellent to each other".
My belief, as someone educated in the sciences who's dabbled in philosophy, is that any formal Moral Philosophy is a worthwhile endeavor as a means of questioning your own beliefs but any attempt to apply it to a real situation is the nth degree equivalent of the three-body problem - it very quickly becomes too complex to give useful results.
In the thread referenced above, a utilitarian philosophy was advocated whereby we do a cost-benefit analysis of the suffering incurred on each side of the equation and whichever is the smaller number is the most moral. So assuming we can consistently measure the suffering, we have a consistent morality. The assumption is questionable at best and we tie ourselves to a single metric.
I believe that consistency in a Moral Philosophy (or even philosophy) is a desirable trait. I don't see it as necessary or achievable. I'd be interested to hear arguments against that.
My belief, as someone educated in the sciences who's dabbled in philosophy, is that any formal Moral Philosophy is a worthwhile endeavor as a means of questioning your own beliefs but any attempt to apply it to a real situation is the nth degree equivalent of the three-body problem - it very quickly becomes too complex to give useful results.
In the thread referenced above, a utilitarian philosophy was advocated whereby we do a cost-benefit analysis of the suffering incurred on each side of the equation and whichever is the smaller number is the most moral. So assuming we can consistently measure the suffering, we have a consistent morality. The assumption is questionable at best and we tie ourselves to a single metric.
I believe that consistency in a Moral Philosophy (or even philosophy) is a desirable trait. I don't see it as necessary or achievable. I'd be interested to hear arguments against that.