The Instigator
phantom
Con (against)
Winning
6 Points
The Contender
Gingerbreadman
Pro (for)
Losing
0 Points

Resolved: Objective morality is determined by the collective goals of society.

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Post Voting Period
The voting period for this debate has ended.
after 1 vote the winner is...
phantom
Started: 5/14/2012 Category: Philosophy
Updated: 1 year ago Status: Post Voting Period
Viewed: 899 times Debate No: 22738
Debate Rounds (4)
Comments (31)
Votes (1)

 

phantom

Con




Resolved: Objective morality is determined by the collective goals of society.



Clarifications


This is an attempt to debunk a certain atheist view of morality, though my opponent does not necessarily have to be atheist, nor does he have to argue from an atheist viewpoint.

According to this viewpoint a moral action, such as murder, is wrong because it goes against the collective goals of society.




Burden of proof


The BOP rests on the pro to prove that the collective goals of society are reliable in determining objective moral truths.



Definitions


Objective morality: morality that is absolute, set in stone; fact,

Goals - the end toward which effort is directed[1]

Collective - shared or assumed by the large majority of members of the group [2]

Collective goals of society - the end toward which effort is directed, in which the sought after end is shared or assumed by the large majority of members of society

[If you have any questions or complaints about the definitions please post in the comments]

Set up

As the BOP rests on pro, if my opponent wants he/she may go first. But if so, please refrain from using the last round for arguing so as to keep the amount of round arguments between us even.

1st - 3rd rounds: Arguments and rebuttal
4th round: No new arguments


Please no semantics


[1] http://www.merriam-webster.com...

[2] http://www.merriam-webster.com...
Gingerbreadman

Pro

Could you please re-post your main point because I'm having trouble understanding what your idea is that you are fighting for and/or fighting against
Debate Round No. 1
phantom

Con

I welcome my opponent to this website and would like to thank him for accepting this debate.



I have not had time to use a computer very much these past few days and I also accidentally moved the chord which unplugged the computer erasing everything I had written, and the internet keeps turning off as usual so as it is now working I better post this before it turns off again, so I apologize for the incompleteness of this. But since my opponent has the burden of proof I suppose it does not matter to much.



The collective goals moral theory is based on human opinion and is thus subjective, not objective.


Perhaps the easiest and most obvious way to negate the resolution is to point out the fact that the purposed moral theory coincides perfectly with the definition of subjective morality, thus rendering it useless. Subjective morality is defined as influenced by personal judgments beliefs.[ http://atheism.about.com...] In other words subjective morality is based upon opinion. The foundation of morality that pro is advocating consists completely off opinion and so is found to be subjective which completely refutes his position. For example and to make it clearer, let’s create a hypothetical conversation. Suppose Emily wants to know why Rick thinks stealing is wrong. Rick, being an advocate of the same theory my opponent is affirming, tells her that it is wrong because it does not correspond with the collective goals of society. Emily isn’t satisfied however. Most people would agree that stealing is wrong if they believe in objective morality, but she doesn’t like Ricks hypothesis. She points out the goals society sets out are based upon the opinion of the individual people making up this society, but objective morality is independent on human opinion thus it is not sufficient in explaining moral truths. There is no way for Rick to justify his moral view as anything close to objective.



The goals of society are based upon beliefs prone to falseness.


Taking into account mans limited knowledge and fallible reasoning, this is a self-evident fact. Humans set goals derived from the knowledge they believe to be true. But the problem with this is, very often what they believe to be true is wrong. For example, in ancient times rules were often times set up based upon the religion that was believed in. Unfortunately if this religion is false, the entire basis of the moral assertion completely falls. Thus the moral postulation is found to be false for it relies on premises that are false. Burning witches used to be acceptable therefore according to my opponent, burning witches used to be an objectively moral act. We know now however that there is no justification in burning those who were thought of as witches.



The goals of society are constantly evolving thus rendering it a non objective moral code.


Objective morality cannot be relative. It is absolute and never changing. My opponents moral views however change constantly. For example it used to be illegal to buy and sell alcohol, whereas now it coincides with the law perfectly as long as you are the right age. It used to be acceptable to own slaves. Now people would be disgusted at the thought.



Why does majority rule trump other individual’s opinion?


My opponent needs to explain why we should view the majority as right and ignore those who hold different views. Objective morality is a morality which applies to all mankind. Even if we did accept opinion based morality as objective, there is no way to justify one groups opinion as superior to another’s.

Gingerbreadman

Pro

Gingerbreadman forfeited this round.
Debate Round No. 2
Gingerbreadman

Pro

Gingerbreadman forfeited this round.
Debate Round No. 3
phantom

Con






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Gingerbreadman

Pro

Gingerbreadman forfeited this round.
Debate Round No. 4
31 comments have been posted on this debate. Showing 21 through 30 records.
Posted by phantom 1 year ago
phantom
And I btw do not view it as affirmable which is why I'm taking con.
Posted by phantom 1 year ago
phantom
@thett, I was arguing against it with rational thinker a while ago in this thread if you want to take a look at how he argues it. http://www.debate.org...

I've got to go in a sec but basically he says the rules of chess are objective even though they are based on what humans made them and the same goes for moral actions.

He made the exact claim that is in the resolution or at least pretty close.

@XimenBao, what is the current exchange rate between internet points and the US dollar?
Posted by thett3 1 year ago
thett3
Lmao @ round one.

Hey phantom, just a question: How do you view the resolution as affirmable? Wouldnt morality be by definition non-objective if it was decided by majority rule?
Posted by XimenBao 1 year ago
XimenBao
1000 internet points if Con's R2 argument in it's entirety reads, "No."
Posted by phantom 1 year ago
phantom
-YYW, Disproving objective morality would be defeating yourself...

-XimenBao, I want to see how this could be argued further than what I've got from the person I was arguing with in the forums who stopped responding.
Posted by XimenBao 1 year ago
XimenBao
You should probably close this then. As sapiens said, the meaning of objective morality is that it is not determined by the collective goals of society. That's the definition of subjective or relative morality.
Posted by Zaradi 1 year ago
Zaradi
I'll wait for osmeone to accept and argue social contract theory. 8000 characters of spamming Locke and Gauthier.
Posted by YYW 1 year ago
YYW
This would be tempting, if I could argue that objective morality does not exist.
Posted by phantom 1 year ago
phantom
Meh

Now that definition seems to be wrong. It's late and my mind isn't functioning well. I'll reopen this when I can properly think on the definitions.
Posted by phantom 1 year ago
phantom
The person I was arguing this with on the forums stopped responding. I want to see if someone will be willing to debate it.

But I understand your point. I will change the definition of collective I think.
1 votes has been placed for this debate.
Vote Placed by socialpinko 1 year ago
socialpinko
phantomGingerbreadmanTied
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Total points awarded:60 
Reasons for voting decision: Due to forfeits, Pro was unable to respond and thus conceded all of Con's arguments.