angrysoba
Philosophile
I agree with the first paragraph.
About the second: If what I have read -not much- is true our moral decisions are not taken in strict logical order: axioms, postulates and rules. We take many particular moral decisions in an intuitive mood and we try to rationalize them after. This sounds well.
That’s the problem I am alluding to. It’s definitely true that this happens often and can be demonstrated that much of our moral decisions are post-hoc rationalizations - or at least many controlled experiments show that humans will do this. And yet, what they often also show is that there is a rational answer them against which the rationalization can be shown (maybe I am not explaining this well). It seems to me that it only underscores the need to learn how to deal with cognitive biases and to train ourselves to be more rational.
Maybe a good example is someone who says “I realize I rationalize eating meat when I know that it follows from any reasonable principle that I shouldn’t eat it.”