Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj



User Name Thread Name Subject Posted
Amos BS: The Pope in America (1751* d) RE: BS: The Pope in America 14 Oct 15


Moral codes are sets of evolved agreements which may or may not have anything to do with ethicality. It is a sin in some circles to eat bacon on certain days, or at all, because it violates agreements that have been established for some groups. But there is nothing ethically flawed about eating bacon, or carrots, or even cats or dogs, in the business of bodily survival. If you can choose a more broadly beneficial way to fuel a body, then, you may find a more ethical formulation, but it has nothing to do with agreements or moral codes.

Choosing right action--whether it fits into some code of agreement or not--is an individual act of consciousness, and as such it can be marred, flawed, or completely inverted depending on the state of awareness of the individual.

Keeping to a moral code is a matter of compliance, or maintaining agreements once made, whether actually ethical or not. The only thing that might be considered unethical about departing from a given moral code is any upset caused to those who expected you to keep it. Among rational beings, of course, this can be remedied by civil communication and mutual respect.

The crutch of using a moral code instead of selecting right action based on one's own sense of good consequences is a popular crutch, indeed, because it saves you from doing all kinds of work, mentally and spiritually.

But that don't make it good! :D

A




Back to the Main Forum Page

By clicking on the User Name, you will requery the forum for that user. You will see everything that he or she has posted with that Mudcat name.

By clicking on the Thread Name, you will be sent to the Forum on that thread as if you selected it from the main Mudcat Forum page.
   * Click on the linked number with * to view the thread split into pages (click "d" for chronologically descending).

By clicking on the Subject, you will also go to the thread as if you selected it from the original Forum page, but also go directly to that particular message.

By clicking on the Date (Posted), you will dig out every message posted that day.

Try it all, you will see.