S
Shiro, Time Devourer
Guest
I've posted here to talk about a common school of thought that, though it sounds good in theory, is awful, self-defeating, and illogical in practice.
When some people hear others making a moral judgment against stealing, drinking underage, pornography, etc; and they actually like those things, they tend to say something along the lines of 'Who are you to force your morality on someone else?', or 'You should stop telling people what moral decisions to make.'
Those questions, however, commit suicide because by telling someone the wrongness of judging something morally, they have judge the morality, or 'rightness' of doing so.
The truth is, there are some things that are morally wrong because of harm they do to a person, institution, or society as a whole. To say 'morality is relative' would not be always true even if it was.
Your response is welcome.
When some people hear others making a moral judgment against stealing, drinking underage, pornography, etc; and they actually like those things, they tend to say something along the lines of 'Who are you to force your morality on someone else?', or 'You should stop telling people what moral decisions to make.'
Those questions, however, commit suicide because by telling someone the wrongness of judging something morally, they have judge the morality, or 'rightness' of doing so.
The truth is, there are some things that are morally wrong because of harm they do to a person, institution, or society as a whole. To say 'morality is relative' would not be always true even if it was.
Your response is welcome.