by jimwalton » Mon Jun 25, 2018 7:06 pm
> I'm sorry but that's a bit of goalpost-shifting there
No, not at all. What I have been saying all along is that there is no culture that believes that the torturing of babies for the fun of it is a good thing to do. Some kill or torture babies for religious reasons, some kill or torture babies in warfare or in genocide, and some kill or torture babies when they are mentally disturbed. But no culture anywhere anytime subscribes to the morality that it's generally a good thing—and right—to kill and torture babies for the fun of it.
> Yeah, not killing your own kids randomly is a no-brainer, because any society that does that simply becomes extinct in short order.
Exactly, but that's not even what I'm talking about, because some societies do kill their own children (child sacrifice, abortion). I'm specifying for the fun of it. No culture does that, no culture culture believes it is right and good.
> On the other hand, if you're arguing, that evolutionary necessities dictate morals, we agree.
No, I'm not arguing this at all.
> No. Not as long as they were the children of others - of hostile groups.
Ah, here's the condition that changes the situation. As I said, as an act of war, hostility, or genocide, yep. But not in general.
>The issue is specifically that: that the emphasis was not on the fact that they were children, it was on which group they belonged to.
That's correct, but not in general, not as a cultural good no matter what the situation. There is no culture that believes it is right, regardless of any situations or conditions, to torture or kill children for the fun of it.
For instance, our culture believes that sexual abuse is wrong. In general. Regardless of any situations or conditions. Whether an adult or child, it's wrong. Not every culture believed that (like ancient Rome), but ours does. But there is NO culture, regardless of any situations or conditions, that believed that torturing a child for the fun of it was right and good. None. It's a moral absolute.
> I'm sorry but that's a bit of goalpost-shifting there
No, not at all. What I have been saying all along is that there is no culture that believes that the torturing of babies for the fun of it is a good thing to do. Some kill or torture babies for religious reasons, some kill or torture babies in warfare or in genocide, and some kill or torture babies when they are mentally disturbed. But no culture anywhere anytime subscribes to the morality that it's generally a good thing—and right—to kill and torture babies for the fun of it.
> Yeah, not killing your own kids randomly is a no-brainer, because any society that does that simply becomes extinct in short order.
Exactly, but that's not even what I'm talking about, because some societies do kill their own children (child sacrifice, abortion). I'm specifying [b]for the fun of it[/b]. No culture does that, no culture culture believes it is right and good.
> On the other hand, if you're arguing, that evolutionary necessities dictate morals, we agree.
No, I'm not arguing this at all.
> No. Not as long as they were the children of others - of hostile groups.
Ah, here's the condition that changes the situation. As I said, as an act of war, hostility, or genocide, yep. But not in general.
>The issue is specifically that: that the emphasis was not on the fact that they were children, it was on which group they belonged to.
That's correct, but not in general, not as a cultural good no matter what the situation. There is no culture that believes it is right, regardless of any situations or conditions, to torture or kill children for the fun of it.
For instance, our culture believes that sexual abuse is wrong. In general. Regardless of any situations or conditions. Whether an adult or child, it's wrong. Not every culture believed that (like ancient Rome), but ours does. But there is NO culture, regardless of any situations or conditions, that believed that torturing a child for the fun of it was right and good. None. It's a moral absolute.