You’re sneaking in connotations. “Morality” has a much stronger connotation than “things that other people think are bad for me to do.” You can’t simply define the word to mean something convenient, because the connotations won’t go away. Morality is definitely not understood generally to be a social construct. Is that social construct the actual thing many people are in reality imagining when they talk about morality? Quite possibly. But those same people would tend to disagree with you if you made that claim to them; they would say that morality is just doing the right thing, and if society said something different then morality wouldn’t change.
Also, the land ownership analogy has no merit. Ownership exists as an explicit social construct, and I can point you to all sorts of evidence in the territory that shows who owns what. Social constructs about morality exist, but morality is not understood to be defined by those constructs. If I say “x is immoral” then I haven’t actually told you anything about x. In normal usage I’ve told you that I think people in general shouldn’t do x, but you don’t know why I think that unless you know my value system; you shouldn’t draw any conclusions about whether you think people should or shouldn’t x, other than due to the threat of my retaliation.
“Morality” in general is ill-defined, and often intuitions about it are incoherent. We make much, much better decisions by throwing away the entire concept. Saying “x is morally wrong” or “x is morally right” doesn’t have any additional effect on our actions, once we’ve run the best preference algorithms we have over them. Every single bit of information contained in “morally right/wrong” is also contained in our other decision algorithms, often in a more accurate form. It’s not even a useful shorthand; getting a concrete right/wrong value, or even a value along the scale, is not a well-defined operation, and thus the output does not have a consistent effect on our actions.
My original point was just that “subjective versus objective” is a false dichotomy in this context. I don’t want to have a big long discussion about meta-ethics, but, descriptively, many people do talk in a conventionalist way about morality or components of morality and thinking of it as a social construction is handy in navigating the world.
Turning now to the substance of whether moral or judgement words (“should”, “ought”, “honest”, etc) are bad concepts --
At work, we routinely have conversations about “is it ethical/honest to do X”, or “what’s the most ethical way to deal with circumstance Y”. And we do not mean “what is our private preference about outcomes or rules”—we mean something imprecise but more like “what would our peers think of us if they knew” or “what do we think our peers ought to think of us if they knew”. We aren’t being very precise how much is objective, subjective, and socially constructed, but I don’t see that we would gain from trying to speak with more precision than our thoughts actually have.
Yes, these terms are fuzzy and self-referential. Natural language often is. Yes, using ‘ethical’ instead of other terms smuggles in a lot of connotation. That’s the point! Vagueness with some emotional shading and implication is very useful linguistically and I think cognitively.
The original topic was “harmful” concepts, I believe, and I don’t think all vagueness is harmful. Often the imprecision is irrelevant to the actual communication or reasoning taking place.
The accusation of being bad concepts was not because they are vague, but because they lead to bad modes of thought (and because they are wrong concepts, in the manner of a wrong question). Being vague doesn’t protect you from being wrong; you can talk all day about “is it ethical to steal this cookie” but you are wasting your time. Either you’re actually referring to specific concepts that have names (will other people perceive of this as ethically justified?) or you’re babbling nonsense. Just use basic consequentialist reasoning and skip the whole ethics part. You gain literally nothing from discussing “is this moral”, unless what you’re really asking is “What are the social consequences” or “will person x think this is immoral” or whatever. It’s a dangerous habit epistemically and serves no instrumental purpose.
You’re sneaking in connotations. “Morality” has a much stronger connotation than “things that other people think are bad for me to do.” You can’t simply define the word to mean something convenient, because the connotations won’t go away. Morality is definitely not understood generally to be a social construct. Is that social construct the actual thing many people are in reality imagining when they talk about morality? Quite possibly. But those same people would tend to disagree with you if you made that claim to them; they would say that morality is just doing the right thing, and if society said something different then morality wouldn’t change.
Also, the land ownership analogy has no merit. Ownership exists as an explicit social construct, and I can point you to all sorts of evidence in the territory that shows who owns what. Social constructs about morality exist, but morality is not understood to be defined by those constructs. If I say “x is immoral” then I haven’t actually told you anything about x. In normal usage I’ve told you that I think people in general shouldn’t do x, but you don’t know why I think that unless you know my value system; you shouldn’t draw any conclusions about whether you think people should or shouldn’t x, other than due to the threat of my retaliation.
“Morality” in general is ill-defined, and often intuitions about it are incoherent. We make much, much better decisions by throwing away the entire concept. Saying “x is morally wrong” or “x is morally right” doesn’t have any additional effect on our actions, once we’ve run the best preference algorithms we have over them. Every single bit of information contained in “morally right/wrong” is also contained in our other decision algorithms, often in a more accurate form. It’s not even a useful shorthand; getting a concrete right/wrong value, or even a value along the scale, is not a well-defined operation, and thus the output does not have a consistent effect on our actions.
My original point was just that “subjective versus objective” is a false dichotomy in this context. I don’t want to have a big long discussion about meta-ethics, but, descriptively, many people do talk in a conventionalist way about morality or components of morality and thinking of it as a social construction is handy in navigating the world.
Turning now to the substance of whether moral or judgement words (“should”, “ought”, “honest”, etc) are bad concepts -- At work, we routinely have conversations about “is it ethical/honest to do X”, or “what’s the most ethical way to deal with circumstance Y”. And we do not mean “what is our private preference about outcomes or rules”—we mean something imprecise but more like “what would our peers think of us if they knew” or “what do we think our peers ought to think of us if they knew”. We aren’t being very precise how much is objective, subjective, and socially constructed, but I don’t see that we would gain from trying to speak with more precision than our thoughts actually have.
Yes, these terms are fuzzy and self-referential. Natural language often is. Yes, using ‘ethical’ instead of other terms smuggles in a lot of connotation. That’s the point! Vagueness with some emotional shading and implication is very useful linguistically and I think cognitively.
The original topic was “harmful” concepts, I believe, and I don’t think all vagueness is harmful. Often the imprecision is irrelevant to the actual communication or reasoning taking place.
The accusation of being bad concepts was not because they are vague, but because they lead to bad modes of thought (and because they are wrong concepts, in the manner of a wrong question). Being vague doesn’t protect you from being wrong; you can talk all day about “is it ethical to steal this cookie” but you are wasting your time. Either you’re actually referring to specific concepts that have names (will other people perceive of this as ethically justified?) or you’re babbling nonsense. Just use basic consequentialist reasoning and skip the whole ethics part. You gain literally nothing from discussing “is this moral”, unless what you’re really asking is “What are the social consequences” or “will person x think this is immoral” or whatever. It’s a dangerous habit epistemically and serves no instrumental purpose.