OBJECTIVE vs SUBJECTIVE Morality
Route 70 > 07-15-2016, 05:21 AM
I would like to challenge the notion that all morality is objective. To the contrary, morality is in actuality subjective. Morality is, therefore, relative. I am game for any argument to the contrary.
I support my notion with the very definition of morality itself. I have perused several definitions, and they can all be summed as this: morality is a set of principals that dictate one's behavior. That word principals caught my eye. principals are like laws -- they are established by decree. That makes them subjective. Not all peoples share the same moral code. What might be considered moral in one society is considered immoral in another. There is no absolute morality. For instance, in Pakistan the use of contraceptives is seen as highly immoral. In Germany the use of contraceptives is considered highly moral.
Even in the United States, morality is established, in some cases, by state statute and varies from state to state. For instance, in the state of Alabama it is wrong for an adult person to have unmarried sex with another person below age 16. In California the age of consent is 18. Just a few years ago in the State of South Carolina it was considered okay for an adult to engage in unmarried sex with someone as young as 15!
Whatever the case, a set of moral values is no good if not practiced. There are those who object to an atheist decrying the immoral behavior of a theist. "What is you moral code?" is a question I have seen asked of the atheist who would dare do such a thing. Leave it to the atheist to be the one to do the right thing, I say.
What say you?