The problem is that ethics can work with other axioms. Someone might be a deontologist, and define ethics around bad actions e.g. “murder is bad”, not because the suffering of the victim and their bereaved loved ones is bad but because murder is bad. Such a set of axioms results in a different ethical system than one rooted in consequentialist axioms such as “suffering is bad”, but by what measure can you say that the one system is better than the other? The difference is hardly the same as between attempting rationality with empiricism vs without.
There is a difference, I’ll be posting it Friday. I’ve got an exam tomorrow and it still needs some finishing touches. This project got a bit out of hand, the complete train of thought is about 4 pages long to explain properly, so a post is more appropriate than a comment. I’d like to hear your opinion on it, if you are willing :)
The problem is that ethics can work with other axioms. Someone might be a deontologist, and define ethics around bad actions e.g. “murder is bad”, not because the suffering of the victim and their bereaved loved ones is bad but because murder is bad. Such a set of axioms results in a different ethical system than one rooted in consequentialist axioms such as “suffering is bad”, but by what measure can you say that the one system is better than the other? The difference is hardly the same as between attempting rationality with empiricism vs without.
There is a difference, I’ll be posting it Friday. I’ve got an exam tomorrow and it still needs some finishing touches. This project got a bit out of hand, the complete train of thought is about 4 pages long to explain properly, so a post is more appropriate than a comment. I’d like to hear your opinion on it, if you are willing :)