towards values-free living

Can there be morality without God or gods? Can there be right and wrong without God or gods? Can there be values without God or gods? The answer is “yes” but only in relation to relative not absolute values, relative not absolute right and wrong, relative not absolute morality.

Most if not all values people accept or reject in this life are relative, not absolute. And that is simply because absolute values do not exist in this life, in this world.

Values differ from one culture to the next, one point in time to the next, one person to the next. It is the differences that comprise the relativity of values.

Take murder for instance. Most cultures today would condemn murdering children as "bad" or "wrong". Nowadays most people share values relating to protection and nurture of children. But in many ancient cultures, including the Carthaginian and Aztec cultures, child sacrifice was regularly practised on a large scale. In the Aztec culture, thousands of children were ritually drowned to appease the god Tlaloc.

But that was then, and this is now. Things have changed, for the "better" (whatever that means), haven't they? Today, all right-thinking people agree on what is right and wrong, don't they?

Well, actually, no. Here’s a good example: Mutilating the genitals of children, male and female, is still widely practised today. Some people think that genital mutilation is abhorrent, bad, wrong, evil. Other people think it OK, fine, even good. And yet another group of people believe that genital mutilation would be abhorrent, would be bad, would be evil if it were not a cultural practice, (and therefore not to be criticised or evaluated in any manner, shape or form, on any grounds at all, ever). Clearly, there is no agreement on the rightness or wrongness of genital mutilation. It is a relative not an absolute value. Just like the culturally determined value, with no rhyme or reason to it, under which some men wear neckties to work.

Most if not all people assess the worthiness or otherwise of their actions and thoughts by reference to rules or standards imposed by an authority or authorities external to the individual (eg God, gods, the law, the priesthood, the army, mom and dad, the headmaster, social worker, etc). But often, the external authority has feet of clay and acts or speaks in a way that is inconsistent with the values previously established by the selfsame authority. That's what we call hypocrisy. ("Don't do as I do, do as I say.")

Here's a great example. The New Testament records that Jesus lost his temper with a fig tree and withered it when it would not produce fruit on demand and out of season. So, in the context of Christianity, unreasonable anger is not seen as bad, or wrong, or to be avoided. In other contexts, unreasonable anger is not valued so highly.

Some (very few) people* have a strong enough belief in themselves consciously to reject the values of their culture and create their own values to live or die by. They can and often do refuse to submit to the values imposed by external authorities. Instead they use the compass of purpose to guide their behaviour. (Or so they telos!)

To illustrate, if my purpose is to travel from Paris, France to Berlin, Germany along the shortest possible route. For me to make that journey via Sydney, Australia would not be "wrong" or "bad", but rather, would not serve that particular purpose.

Another example: If I want to have a healthy respiratory system, then to smoke cigarettes would not serve my purpose. It would not be wrong or bad to smoke; it would be inadvisable given the stated purpose.

Another example: If I don't ever want to be punched in the face, then for me to punch someone in the face will not serve that particular purpose. Because by punching someone in the face I increase the likelihood of retaliation in kind. From a purpose-driven perspective, therefore, it would not be "wrong" or "bad" for me to punch someone in the face; instead, it would simply be an action that would not serve my purpose.

The answer, therefore, is no: we don't need God, or gods, or any external authority to dictate morality. The results produced by purpose-driven, values-free living are indistinguishable from those produced when values are imposed or dictated by an external authority. It's a bit like the "invisible hand" of market forces, but there's no time or space to get into that now.

*Psychopaths are among those who are able and willing to examine and if need be reject the values of their culture in favour of their own 'home-grown', do-it-yourself values.

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eBooks by Cosmic Rapture

NIGHTMERRIES: THE LIGHTER SIDE OF DARKNESS This so-called "book" will chew you up, spit you out, and leave you twitching and frothing on the carpet. More than 60 dark and feculent fictions (read ‘em and weep) copiously illustrated by over 20 grotesque images you wouldn't want to meet in a dark alley.

AWAREWOLF & OTHER CRHYMES AGAINST HUMANITY (Vot could be Verse?) We all hate poetry, right? But we might make an exception for this sick and twisted stuff. This devil's banquet of adults-only offal features more than 50 satanic sonnets, vitriolic verses and odious odes.

MANIC MEMES & OTHER MINDSPACE INVADERS A disturbing repository of quotably quirky quotes, sayings, proverbs, maxims, ponderances, adages and aphorisms. This menagerie holds no fewer than 184 memes from eight meme-species perfectly adapted to their respective environments.

MASTRESS & OTHER TWISTED TAILS, ILLUSTRATED: an unholy corpus of oddities, strangelings, bizarritudes and peculiaritisms

FIENDS & FREAKS Adults-only Tales of Serpents, Dragons, Devils, Lobsters, Anguished Spirits, Gods, Anti-gods and Other Horse-thieves You Wouldn't Want to Meet in a Dark Kosmos: 4th Edition

HAGS TO HAGGIS Whiskey-soaked Tails of War-nags, Witches, Manticores and Escapegoats, Debottlenecking and Desilofication, Illustrated

transanima said...

life of a cat is worth at least 10 (but going more towards 1000) human lifes ..

well, it's one of my imaginary values

..
and i feel a true empathy to spree killers.
here i recommand a film by
michael haneke
"71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance"

he really gives a lot of input to the subject of values

check also his "THE SEVENTH CONTINENT" ..
haneke is a genius