Originally posted by Whaleboy
Why must a system of morals be internally consistent and self-sufficient?
I don't mean the question in a pejorative sense, I'm interested as to why you think morals need these properties.
Why must a system of morals be internally consistent and self-sufficient?
I don't mean the question in a pejorative sense, I'm interested as to why you think morals need these properties.
They should be INTERNALLY CONSISTENT because basing your actions on something self-contradictory is deeply unsatisfactory and ultimately unworkable, since you'll get both yes and no answers to some questions. And yes, I know the Bible at least seems to contradict itself; FFS let's not get into that or we'll be here forever. That's more BK's bag anyway. I'm more concerned with the raw theology of religious traditions in general, which based on whichever assumptions are made (improbable though you may think them) makes it all fit together.
Come to think of it, SELF-SUFFICIENT could mean a number of things. I meant to say that it should leave no loose ends, nothing fuzzy to be explained by hopes or unspoken assumptions or open appeals to subjective emotions. Most especially no "you should be moral because it's moral" beg-the-question cop-outs, which a dismaying number of natural moral systems seem to boil down to.
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