<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE("TBM")</div>So what you are referring to is the system or a system. Not morals?Quote:
simply put. I don't believe in any moral system[/b]
Getting caught up in the terminology certainly does make it fuzzy. It is almost like Republicans and Democrats. At first light they are polar opposites. The farther you dig to the core the more they are the same.
IMHO > It all is based around human nature. And with most of my arguments towards morality, it comes down to what I perceive as natural=nature.
What is natural can obviously be always changing. So is everything else. But nature holds in front of us a guide to right and wrong in most cases.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE("TBM")</div>This simply can't apply the same to all situations. I also did not mean for it to spill over into leadership roles. Although, parents peers and more, we all play some form of leadership.Quote:
Objectivism is the idea of "The Greater Good".
Utilitarianism encompasses more of an idea of "The better good" or "The least bad".[/b]
Every one of these concepts are derived from an individuals built character and performed by the individuals view of judgment and perception.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE("pj")</div>A form of self liberation? There are always standards of conformity that have to be met.Quote:
It all comes down to a simple question; are you free or slave? In other words, who owns you?
If you are free, then you are the ultimate authority and the the one ultimately responsible for your life. Freedom itself is what grants you that authority. The very state of BEING not only makes it achievable but inevitable.[/b]