- 
	Moral
 Reasoning
- 
	"A
 man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy,
 education, and social ties; no religious basis is necessary. Man
 would indeed be in a poor way if he had to be restrained by fear of
 punishment and hope of reward after death."
- - Albert Einstein
- 
	
 Now
 let us discuss the rational thinking regarding moral reasoning.
 First we have a consequential view that puts morality into the
 consequences of an action. Most popular view of this is Jeremy
 Bentham and John Stuart Mill's Utilitarianism which says the right
 action is what produces the most pleasure and least pain for the
 greater number of people called the “happiness principle”. This
 would say for example that if you had the choice in your actions to
 save five people versus one person that obviously you should pick
 the five people because it would cause the least pain to the
 majority, each person despite race, religious views, sex, etc each
 having an equal right to live and be happy. The consequences
 furthermore dictate that even if you were to have to murder one
 person to save the lives of others that the killing is justified. Of
 course killing is an extreme case, but as a scenario if the
 consequences for it result in the greater happiness and lesser pain
 including the quality of happiness plus number of people weighed
 against the quality and pain of a number of pain then that is the
 correct action to take. Utilitarianism may not be the only or best
 'rational' way to look at things. I'm in the process of watching
 class lectures on video on Justice to find any ways that
 Utilitarianism may fail as a philosophy. So far it is only the best
 that I have came across, there is also for one the Libertarian view
 point that I am in the process of researching. Who knows at the end
 of this book I may have found a better method and need to rewrite
 this. As our knowledge grows so does our world and better our
 perspective of it.
- 
	    Now on to
 the second, we have a categorical way of determining morality by
 following certain duties and rights. An extreme example again would
 be that killing even one person to save the lives of 5 is wrong to
 do. It is murder and no matter what the circumstances that it is
 wrong to do this. Another example might be to not to lie, even when
 the lie may well indeed be best for everyone, of course we all know
 that killing and lying is usually going to end in bad
 consequences.
 However if we were to follow this all the time
 without thought to the consequence would a lie be better than to
 tell someone the truth that may end up in some very bad
 consequences. This has been
 programmed into us to follow lets say
 the ten commandments of the
 bible or by the the law of your
 country that has been made. But
 what if we followed the ten
 commandments precisely in every action
 we take and not consider
 the consequences of it?
- 
	    Why
 don't we look at the ten commandments at a closer view, here I'll be
 using the list from NIV. First
 four here relate to god nothing to do with ethics... only about
 putting god first and a silly one about keeping sabbath holy, what
 about the rest of the week? Why is that day any different to be
 held to a different standard just to worship god more?
- 
I. "You 
 shall have no other gods before me.
- 
II. 
 "You shall not make for yourself an idol in the form of
 anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters
 below. You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the
 LORD your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin
 of the fathers to the third and fourth generation of those who hate
 me, but showing love to a thousand [generations] of those who love
 me and keep my commandments.
- 
III. 
 "You
 shall not misuse the name of the LORD your God, for the LORD will
 not hold anyone guiltless who misuses his name.
- 
IV. 
 "Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Six days you
 shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh
 day
 is a Sabbath to the LORD your God. On it you shall not do any work,
 neither you, nor your son or daughter, nor your manservant or
 maidservant, nor your animals, nor the alien within your gates. For
 in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and
 all that is in them, but he rested on the seventh day. Therefore the
 LORD blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.
	    Next
we have to “honour” our mother and father, well that's great to
teach your kids to listen as children but as you grow older they
should be teaching you to think for yourself. That is a parent's
role to teach their children to think for themselves and be able to
make good decisions and a good member of society as they grow older.
This isn't much of a ethical rule if you ask me.
- 
V. 
 "Honor your father and your mother, so that you may live long
 in the land the LORD your God is giving you.
    Now
we have the next four that I'll address and say that in general are
good rules, to not murder, commit adultery, steal and lie. There are
exceptions to rules of course but these are good guidelines I
believe. 
- 
VI. 
 "You shall not murder.
- 
VII. 
 "You shall not commit adultery.
- 
VIII. 
 "You shall not steal.
- 
IX. 
 "You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor.
    Now
to 'covet' your neighbor's things is suppose to be 'sinful'? And is
this a ethical guideline or just a piece of good advice? Personally
I agree with the advice that you shouldn't envy your neighbor's
things. As Pliny the Younger said “Caeca invidia est.” i.e. envy
is blind. However I don't find it to be an ethical rule to live by
as I do the four former commandments. 
- 
X. 
 "You shall not covet your neighbor's house. You shall not covet
 your neighbor's wife, or his manservant or maidservant, his ox or
 donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbor."
- 
	    So
 that leaves us with don't murder, commit adultery, steal or lie.
 All good things in general to go by but could also be summed up by
 "Love
 your neighbor as yourself." (Galatians 5:14)
 
- 
	    How
 about our laws, are they infallible especially in certain cases.
 Justice here I think you'll find is not done by following a
 commandment or the law but by following what we best can determine
 the consequences will be. Determining the results of your actions is
 the most logical way to make decisions from day to day. Yet how many
 of you would do the rational thing given special circumstances?
 Would you make the rational decision lets say Harry S. Truman's
 decision to drop the atom bombs on Japan knowing that it would
 stop the war and save thousands of lives by the result? Or would
 you find it wrong to simply kill because that has been taught to
 you that killing is wrong no matter what despite the thousands
 that could be saved by dropping that bomb. To have to kill
 thousands in what I feel are
 needless wars itself is a hard
 decision for a president to make.
 And I'm sure Harry S. Truman
 had a hard time deciding but I believe
 he did make the right
 choice, but you need to decide for yourself.
 Which is more
 rational here to do the former based on consequences
 of your
 actions and to think for yourself if you will or to follow
 what
 one believes their duty is according to a holy text, the law or
 some
 other reasoning. Not advocating breaking the law nor do
 I believe
 that the ten commandments for example are not good
 guidelines of
 how to behave. But personally I believe they should
 be
 'guidelines' not an absolute in all case scenarios. In general
 these
 things such as the Ten Commandments of the bible, Buddhist's
 five
 concepts, and our countries laws help teach moral concepts that
 good
 actions generally result in good consequences. And of course
 that
 bad actions usually result in bad consequences, but my point
 here
 is that to be a rational thinker one must think first about
 the
 consequences of an action before acting on them. Not simply
 follow
 a strict code of rules. Virtue
 is not based solely on following rules and making a habit of them
 but also having the wisdom of knowing what will bring the most
 happiness to those around them. I believe it is compassionate
 wisdom that we are looking for in all our decision making and
 behaviors.
 
 
 
