Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
No, I said that laws are legislated morality, which is different. While the state grants all rights, there can exist other morality which says there are other rights. They can say it all they want, but that doesn't mean those other rights exist, at least in that society.
You said in effect that being legal is the same as being moral.
No, I said that laws are legislated morality, which is different. While the state grants all rights, there can exist other morality which says there are other rights. They can say it all they want, but that doesn't mean those other rights exist, at least in that society.
I might as well say that I'm not killing people because the Toronto Mac User Group wants me to kill people.
The Toronto Mac User Group doesn't have the power in society. So try again yourself.
But what if the moral code of society prohibits trying to change it?
Then it is 'wrong' to try to change the code AT THAT TIME. It is never wrong to actually change the moral code, because when you change it then you are validated. Trying to change and actually changing are two different things.
there is no non-arbitrary mechanism for doing so.
And your point? What is the non-arbitrary mechanism for deterrance? Why should a rapist get 10 instead of 15? How do we know that 10 would deter just as good?
I thought that was obvious. Deterrence is based on empirical fact.
"Oppress" is a moral word. If it's impossible for the state to do moral wrong, then by definition it is impossible for it to oppress its citizens.
Not for an outsider. Because their societies have their own defintion of what is a moral wrong or right and they can critcize other societies. However, even though they can do so, doesn't mean they are correct... unless they have the power to do something about it.
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