Yeah, but to be flip, what does “agree” mean? What position you find most intellectually coherent? What you use to regulate your own behavior? What you use to form social judgments of behavior? I put down “consequentialism,” but I could have put down “virtue ethics” or “there’s no such thing as morality” if I were using a different frame.
I favored “no such thing as morality” in the sense that I don’t think I can tell somebody else what to do on the basis of it being wrong or right.
But since I am willing to kill people who act in a way sufficiently contrary to my own preferences, and my own preferences are consequential, I chose Consequentialism on the survey.
Actually, you can tell someone what to do on the basis of it being “wrong” or “right”; the only requirement is that their morality/preferences are similar to your own. If you can convince them that their actions are contrary to their own moral preferences, you could manage to convince them to do that which you both consider to be “right”.
But, if you meant that it is impossible to determine what someone should do by means of a universal set of moral rules, then yea, clearly not. But the absence of a universal morality does not imply an absence of all morality.
Calling them correct/incorrect is just a convention for saying you agree with them.
Yeah, but to be flip, what does “agree” mean? What position you find most intellectually coherent? What you use to regulate your own behavior? What you use to form social judgments of behavior? I put down “consequentialism,” but I could have put down “virtue ethics” or “there’s no such thing as morality” if I were using a different frame.
I favored “no such thing as morality” in the sense that I don’t think I can tell somebody else what to do on the basis of it being wrong or right.
But since I am willing to kill people who act in a way sufficiently contrary to my own preferences, and my own preferences are consequential, I chose Consequentialism on the survey.
Actually, you can tell someone what to do on the basis of it being “wrong” or “right”; the only requirement is that their morality/preferences are similar to your own. If you can convince them that their actions are contrary to their own moral preferences, you could manage to convince them to do that which you both consider to be “right”.
But, if you meant that it is impossible to determine what someone should do by means of a universal set of moral rules, then yea, clearly not. But the absence of a universal morality does not imply an absence of all morality.