I think that prof is ignorant and arrogant, as a lot of them are in my experience. Your friend may have written a cogent, reasoned argument about moral relativism, which can certainly be done, and the prof's response, as you described it, was capricious and unreasoned. It does not make the case for moral absolutes.
Based on the argument made by the paper, morality is basically a matter of opinion. But opinion doesn't define right and wrong, or even just and unjust. Its groundless, and only objective morality can define such things. The point is that knucklehead's REACTION wasn't as if it were relative, or just a matter of opinion. He saw it as UNJUST. What standard was he comparing it to? His GROUNDLESS opinion? My friend's reaction proved he believed in ABSOLUTE justice. Not relative justice.
Now, peoples reactions are a big part of my case, so allow me give you another example. People may claim to be relativists but, no one would ever want their spouse to live as a sexual relativist. They don't want them to be relatively faithful. Yet, nearly every male relativist expects their spouse to live as if adultery were ABSOLUTELY wrong. And would REACT quite negatively if she lived out relativism and committed adultery. And even if there are a few relativists who wouldn’t object to adultery, do you think they would accept the morality of murder or rape if someone wanted to kill or rape them? Of course not. Relativism contradicts our reactions and our common sense.
Reactions even help us identify right and wrong as a nation. When muslim terrorists attacked the states, and flew planes into the WTC buildings with innocent people in them, our emotional reaction fit the immensity of the crime. Our reaction reinforced the truth that the act was ABSOLUTELY wrong. Some may say, “But Bin Laden and his fellow criminals thought the act was morally right.” That’s partially because they were not on the receiving end of the crime. How do you think Bin Laden would have REACTED if america had flown its planes into his buildings with his innocent loved ones in them? He would have known immediately that such an act was undeniably wrong.
So objective morality is not always apparent from our actions, as evidenced by the terrible things human beings do to one another. But it is brightly revealed in our reactions--what we do when we are personally treated unfairly.
In other words, the moral code written on our hearts is not always the standard by which we treat others, but it is nearly alwayz the standard by which we EXCEPT others to treat us. It does not describe how we actually behave, but rather it prescribes how we ought to behave.
Later Dex...:smile:
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