Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 17

Concept of Morality – A multidimensional approach

Dr V. K. Maheshwari, Ph.D Dr Suraksha Bansal, Ph.D

Former Principal Sr Lecturer

K.L.D.A.V.(P.G.) College, D.I.M.S

ROORKEE. India MEERUT .India

It is with flowers, as with moral qualities: the bright-coloured are sometimes poisonous;
but, I believe, never the sweet-smelling. ~Augustus William Hare and Julius Charles Hare,
Guesses at Truth, by Two Brothers, 1827

Moral or ethical behavior is generally taken to mean behavior that conforms to some code of
conduct which is held to be authoritative in matters of right and wrong. The set of principles that
define what is right and wrong being called 'morality' or 'ethics'.

Morality refers to the concept of human ethics which pertain to matters of good and evil —also
referred to as "right or wrong", used within three contexts: individual conscience, systems of
principles and judgments — sometimes called moral values —shared within a cultural, religious,
secular, Humanist, or philosophical community; and codes of behavior or conduct derived from
these systems.

Personal morality defines and distinguishes among right and wrong intentions, motivations or
actions, as these have been learned, engendered, or otherwise developed within each individual.

The topic of morality makes many people uncomfortable. Many people believe morality is a
private issue and that no one has a right to make a judgment about someone else's moral
decision.

What is morality? Most people pay only cursory attention to the somewhat intimidating
philosophical concept called Morality. They erroneously presume that a precise examination of
morality is the domain of philosophers.

Most people acquire a somewhat vague sense of morality, a sense of how we should or should
not behave, from their parents, their social group, their political environment or their religious
affiliation. They believe that they have a sufficiently clear understanding of morality to meet
their needs and they do not try to analyze a subject that is seemingly fraught with contradictions.
Morality for some is a set of rules. For others, morality is based upon a set of principles. Some
accept morality as the teachings of parents or society. Others believe every individual is capable
of determining morality. Some believe that what is relevant to the discussion of morals is that
you can believe what you want until it affects someone else. Others believe that morality
includes private ideas that may affect only the individual holding the idea

Most persons have acquired the basic tenets of their morality from others and have accepted
them as true and valid, without further questioning.

The term Morality covers the vast arena of human conduct that examines our interaction with
other human beings. Morality touches every aspect of our life, every moment of our life.

A clear understanding of morality is of extreme importance to all of our interactions with our
environment and thus, to our attainment of happiness.

The more precisely our thought processes and our emotions are aligned with our environment,
the more advanced will be our ability to avoid painful conflicts with reality and the more
enhanced will be our ability to achieve happiness. We will not find much happiness if we do not
understand the basic nature of man and the ebb and flow of human interactions as governed by
human morality. If we do not fully understand what morality is and how morality affects human
beings, we will encounter many conflicts in life

Human beings are constantly interacting with two principal spheres of their environment. The
inanimate world, such as trees, houses, cars, is distinctly separate from the domain of human
interactions. Morality does not concern itself with our inanimate environment.

Neither does morality refer to the interaction between man and other animals. Human beings
have no social contracts with other animals. Other animals, aside from fellow human beings,
exist solely at our pleasure. .

Morality concerns itself exclusively with interactions among human beings. The human concept
of morality has been the subject of controversy and has provided fuel for many heated
philosophical discourses during the entire range of human history. Morality provides the rules by
which people love each other, fight with each other and interact with each other in every
conceivable way. Many people have killed each other, fighting over the alleged superiority of
their respective morality, without a clear understanding of what they were fighting for. What is
morality? In order to address this question, we must develop a clear insigt into the concept of
morality.

We frequently obfuscate the term morality by the clever use of words. Morality becomes
somewhat more transparent if we replace the emotion-laden word morality with the emotionally
neutral synonym.

In this context, it becomes clear that our discussion of Morality revolves around the manner in
which persons conduct themselves in relation to other people. Morality pertains to concepts such
as good and evil, right and wrong, good and bad, moral and immoral. Our morality tells us how
to act under specific circumstances.

In an attempt to consider all relevant issues associated with the all-pervasive impact of morality
on human affairs, it is essential to view this subject from several different perspectives. The basic
issue that divides all discussions of morality revolves around the question, is morality an
evolutionary human concept? Is Morality a relative and subjective concept, or is morality
imposed on humans as an absolute, universal and objective imperative

PERSPECTIVES OF MORALITY

A. Philosophical perspective of morality

Disagreements between atheists and theists in the realm of morality occur across the three major
divisions of moral philosophy: descriptive ethics, normative ethics, and metaethics. Each is
important and must be approached in differently, Atheists and theists may find broad agreement
in the other categories, but there is far less agreement or common ground here. This mirrors the
debate between atheists and theists over the proper grounding for beliefs generally and the
conflict between faith and reason.

Descriptive Ethics:

Descriptive ethics involves describing how people behave and/or the moral standards they claim
to follow. Descriptive ethics incorporates research from anthropology, psychology, sociology
and history to understand beliefs about moral norms. Atheists who compare what religious
theists say about moral behavior or the basis for morality against how they actually behave need
to understand how to properly describe both their ethical beliefs and their actions. To defend
their own moral philosophy, atheists need to know how to accurately explain the nature of their
moral standards as well as the moral choices they make.

Normative Ethics:

Normative ethics involves creating or evaluating moral standards, so is an attempt to figure out
what people should do or whether current moral behavior is reasonable. Traditionally, most
moral philosophy has involved normative ethics — few philosophers haven't tried their hand at
explaining what they think people should do and why. Religious, theistic normative ethics often
rely on the commands of an alleged god; for atheists, normative ethics can have a variety of
sources. Debates between the two thus frequently revolve around what the best basis for morality
is as much as what the proper moral behavior should be.

An important feature of morality is that it serves as a guide for people’s actions. Because of this,
it is necessary to point out that moral judgments are made about those actions which involve
choice. It is only when people have possible alternatives to their actions that we conclude those
actions are either morally good or morally bad. This has important implications in debates
between atheists and theists because if the existence of a god is incompatible with the existence
of free will, then none of us have any real choice in what we do and, therefore, cannot be held
morally accountable for our actions.

Essentially, it seems likely that morality can be placed into two major categories. The major
difference in these two types of morality is their origin. From either an inductive origin or a
deductive origin different modes of morality are formed. This table is to serve as a beginning
place to examine some of the concepts underpinning moral positions.

Information concerning the philosophical concepts related to developing a concept of morality is


contained in the following table.

Concepts Induction Deduction

Self Object Subject

God Related To Humankind Unrelated To Humankind

Universe Purposeful Unintentional

Death New Beginning The End

Knowledge A Priori A Posteriori

Commitment Irrational Rational

Thus philosophically the purpose of morality appear to have three answers :


1. To lead people to behave in accordance with the wishes of a divine authority.
2. To lead people to behave in a way that benefits society at large rather than their own
narrow self interest.
3. To lead people to control their desires and aversions in the belief that this will result in a
more satisfying, rewarding and contented way of life.
B. THEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE OF MORALITY

“Let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion.
Reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of
religious principle.”

George Washington (1732-1799) First President of the USA.

Religion clearly plays an important part in many people's moral decisions, and for those with a
religious faith moral behaviour is often seen as being necessary, both as an act of obedience to
God's wishes and as a requirement for spiritual development
Before developing insight into the religious perspective of morality, it will be illuminating to
comprehend the basic moral concepts in different religions.

Buddhism: Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful. (Udana-Varga 5:18)

The Buddhist view is that moral behavior flows naturally from mastering one's ego and desires
and cultivating loving kindness (metta) and compassion (karuna).

Judaism: What is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow man. That is the entire Law; all the rest
is commentary. (Talmud, Shabbat 31a)

Hinduism: This is the sum of duty: Do naught unto others which would cause you pain if done
to you. (Mahabharata 5:1517)

Ethics, which concerns itself with the study of conduct, is derived, in Hinduism, from certain
spiritual concepts; it forms the steel-frame foundation of the spiritual life. Though right conduct
is generally considered to belong to legalistic ethics, it has a spiritual value as well. . Hindu
ethics prescribes the disciplines for a spiritual life, which are to be observed consciously or
unconsciously as long as man lives.

Hindu ethics is mainly subjective or personal, its purpose being to eliminate such mental
impurities as greed and egoism, for the ultimate attainment of the highest good.. Objective ethics,
which deals with social welfare, has also been considered by Hindu thinkers. It is based upon the
Hindu conception of Dharma, or duty, related to a man’s position in society and his stage in life.
Objective ethics, according to the Hindu view, is a means to an end, its purpose being to help the
members of society to rid themselves of self-centredness, cruelty, greed, and other vices, and
thus to create an environment helpful to the pursuit of the highest good, which transcends
society. Hinduism further speaks of certain universal ethical principles which apply to all human
beings irrespective of their position in society or stage in life.

Among the social virtues are included ‘hospitality, courtesy, and duties to wife, children, and
grandchildren.’ In one of the Upanishads, a king, in answer to a question by a Rishi regarding the
state of affairs in his country, says: "In my kingdom there is no thief, no miser, no drunkard, no
man without an altar in his home, no ignorant person, no adulterer, much less an adulteress."

Confucianism: Surely it is the maxim of loving kindness: Do not unto others what you would
not have them do to you. (Analects 15:23)

Zoroastrianism: That nature alone is good which refrains from doing unto another whatsoever
is not god for itself.

The principle of morality concerns only the man, and is formulated as follows:

1. During the Gumezishn, when dualism and the dynamic upheaval is the order of the day, only
the man is given the freedom to choose between the good and evil.
2. Moreover, the Wise Lord cannot succeed in his cosmic duel with the Angra Mainyu unless he
is helped by the mortals (Mard).

3. If man is righteous through good deeds, words, and thoughts, then the Wise Lord will
vanquish the Angra Mainyu.

4. However, if man is wicked, then the Angra mainyu will succeed.

5. There is, therefore, no predestination. The man is the master of his own destiny (Luther), and
the only instrument to ensure the ultimate victory of good over evil. This will destroy, once and
for all, the pandemonium and, therefore, everything evil; it will bring about the end of time; the
dynamic world would become once more an everlasting static one.

6. This glorious moment is called by the prophet " Frashe-Kerei" (making wonderful).

Christianity: The Christian faith actually uses two complimentary rules: The ineffective Biblical
Golden Rule which proclaims: "All things whatsoever ye would that man should do to you, do ye
even so to them; for this is the law and the prophets" (Matt 7:12). However, most of the Ten
Commandments are framed in negatives, as all moral codes must be in order to be effective.

Islam: No one is a believer until he desires for his brother that which he desires for himself.
(Sunnah) This moral code is also a version of the positive Golden Rule. It is very ineffective and
ambiguous. Muslims, being normal human beings, follow it very selectively. This code relies on
the unrealistic assumption that your brother has precisely the same needs and wants as you do.

Religious persons try to find the answer to moral right or wrong, evil and goodness, in the bible
or other religious texts. Where do these scriptures come from? In reviewing the origins of many
different religions, it appears that scholars attribute religious texts to mysterious or mystical
writers in the distant past. The element of time has shrouded all such scriptures in extreme
mystery or factual haziness.

There is never any clear, objective, historical chain that might clarify and establish the
authenticity of the authorship of religious texts. These writings have been copied innumerable
times and have become less and less focused with each copying process. As a result, religious
writings have become so ambiguous and nebulous that it is often necessary to substantially re-
interpret or re-phrase their meaning.

The translation of these texts from archaic languages provides ample room for misconstructions
or misinterpretations. Such translations and interpretations will vary with each translator and
interpreter, depending on their personal beliefs, opinions, preconceived notions and their
comprehension of the original language.

As the result of this multi-faceted, compounded obfuscation, there are many conflicting
interpretations dealing with the concept of good and evil in the Bible, the Koran, the Torah or
any of the multitudes of other scriptures.
All of these texts proclaim to be the only definitive arbiter of morality. Each religious authority
implies that a person acts moral if he follows its prescriptions or its dogma. Christians have no
moral problem eating pork; Muslims and Jews have strict moral prohibitions against eating pork.

How can we determine which of the many contradictory revelations described in different
religious writings are correct so that we may all act in a moral manner? Since all of these
scriptures contradict each other, how can we know which one is really the true one and which
ones are false?

Is the Torah correct or is the New Testament more truthful? How can we reconcile the Bible with
the Koran? Do all of the one billion Muslims follow an erroneous doctrine or does the Koran
more truthfully reflect the nature of true morality than the Bible?Religious person face the
difficult task of selecting a suitable morality because their search is made more complicated by
the large number of religious sects, cults, churches and denominations from which he can
choose. He faces constant contradictions because each of these belief systems claims to be the
only true and authoritative source of morality. These contradictory claims appear to be absurd
because they can obviously not all be correct

One of the universal contradictions in the theological approach to morality involves a dilemma
posed by all religions. What is the relationship of good and evil to a benevolent and omnipotent
god?

Regardless of the ambivalent and unreliable nature of religious texts setting forth the moral
teachings of a particular religion, the ultimate source for the moral code imbedded in a religion
always rests in a god or gods. A god is the central, authoritative and controlling power that is the
backbone of all religions. By definition, all religions must have an omnipotent god, a supreme
being and creator of the universe. This god must be specific to a particular religion. Different
religions cannot have the same god.

Thus, all religions derive their morality from the authority of the god they worship, usually
through an intermediary in the nature of a messenger or affiliate, such as Jesus or Mohammed or
Joseph Smith.

A system of morality that relies on the existence of gods or godlike beings is irrational because
no god or godlike beings have ever manifested themselves in an objective manner to human
beings. There is no evidence whatsoever that a god exists or has ever existed, anywhere, at any
time. In fact, all objective evidence available to man precludes and contradicts the existence of a
god or gods.

Thus, an attempt to seek morality as a derivative of non-existing gods is difficult to justify. In all
religions, faith and fairytales replace and supersede factual evidence. The faith-based acceptance
of a theological doctrine of morality reflects merely illusions or delusions: Faith is necessary
only for the acceptance as true of a statement that objective evidence has already proven false.
Faith is only necessary if religious dogma is in direct conflict with Objective Reality.
No matter which one of the many religious text we might adapt as the basis for our own
morality, we are making such choice based on our individual preferences and convictions. We
are choosing our own morality from a variety of religious moralities. Again, we choose our own
morality. We are not considering if we should follow an absolute, universal, objective religious
morality, but we are considering which one of many relative, subjective morality systems we
should select from a smorgasbord of religious morality systems.

Thus, by making a personal choice from many contradictory religious morality systems, we end
up with a personal, relative morality, rather than an absolute, objective, universal morality.

C. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE OF MORALITY

All living organisms, including bacteria, fish and human beings have developed from inanimate
matter through the process of evolution. Evolution, and life itself, is due to the ability of a
complex chemical compound to sense a threat to its continued existence and to react upon such
impulse with an attempt to negate any incipient threat. We know this instinctive, automatic
interaction with the environment as the survival instinct.

This instinct must be present in all living things and is the basic emotion from which all other
emotions evolved. Over eons of time, man has enhanced the survival instinct imbedded in his
genes, by developing complex emotions, such as love, hatred, hunger, despair, fear, joy and
many other powerful feelings. The nerve centers dealing with these ancient emotions are
physically located in the deepest layers of the human brain, particularly in our brain stem, our so-
called reptilian brain.

Deeply imbedded instincts and emotions govern all animal behavior, including human behavior.
However, during the past two million years of hominoid development, man has developed a new
mental faculty that sets him aside from other animals. This ability superimposes rational, logical
thought processes on our primitive emotions.

Our rational mind applies a thin veneer of logical thought processes over the raw emotions that
govern our interaction with our environment. Emotions control the preponderance of basic
human needs and behavior patterns. Emotions determine when we are hungry, when we feel
sexually aroused, when we are afraid, when we feel a sense of well-being.

The evolution of our newly developed rational mind greatly facilitated interaction among human
beings. Our instincts and our emotions still initiate the human sex drive but our rational mind
imposes beneficial restrictions as to the circumstances under which the sex drive can be satisfied.

Unlike dogs, humans do not meet their emotional sex drive by copulating at street corners.
Instead, humans go through a rational mating process that enhances the survival of the offspring
that often results from sexual activity. Thus, rationality greatly enhances the survival and
perpetuation of rational, intellectual beings.
Our rational mind has similarly enhanced many other human interactions, such as our ability to
influence or to manipulate other human beings: We have learned how to cause other people to do
what we would like them to do. All of human existence is a constant process of manipulating or
influencing other persons with different degrees of subtlety. The degree of subtleness usually
depends on the respective intelligence of the manipulator and the manipulated person.

The arena of morality is one of the primary spheres where human beings utilize their rational
mind to manipulate other human beings. We may refer to another person as evil in order to prod
him to mend his ways and to modify his behavior to our liking. We may also refer to another
person as evil if we wish to prevent other persons from emulating him or associating with him.

We frequently obfuscate the term morality by the clever use of words. Morality becomes
somewhat more transparent if we replace the emotion-laden word morality with the emotionally
neutral synonym

D. A BIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE OF MORALITY

Some evolutionary psychologists have argued that human morality originated from evolutionary
processes. An innate tendency to develop a sense of right and wrong helps an individual to
survive and reproduce in a species with complex social interactions. Selected behaviors, seen in
abstraction as moral codes, are seen to be common to all human cultures, and reflect, in their
development, similarities to natural selection and these aspects of morality can be seen in as the
basis of some religious doctrine. From this, some also argue that there may be a simple
Darwinian explanation for the existence of religion: that, regardless of the truth of religious
beliefs, religion tends to encourage behavior beneficial to the species, as a code of morality tends
to encourage communality, and communality tends to assist survival.

Morality is the product of the evolutionary development of man and society. Morality is always
relative and never absolute. Within the framework of our society, we chose our own, personal
code of moral conduct

Our self-proclaimed moral authorities do not consider animals capable of or subject to morality.
The Law of Evolution clearly establishes that man is only another animal, although man has
evolved a more highly developed brain structure than other animals.Why do we talk about
morality when we talk about Homo sapiens but why do we not refer to morality when we talk
about other species of animals? If we consider it immoral for human beings to torture other
animals, why do we not condemn a cat for playing with a mouse before eating it or discarding it?

Why do we morally approve of the fact that man kills and eats other animals, but we condemn
the mistreatment of animals as immoral or unlawful? If there were a choice, it is obvious that an
animal would rather subsist in a cage than be killed and eaten. As human beings, would we not
prefer to be enslaved or mistreated than to be killed? Slaves do not commit suicide, even under
the most horrible conditions. Therefore, slavery or torture is universally preferable to death.
Clearly, our various preordained teachings about morality make a nebulous moral distinction
between the animal called man and other animals. We are saying, morality only applies to
selected animals instead of having morality apply to all forms of life.

If there are extraterrestrial life forms or beings, are they subject to human morality or can they
make the same distinction that we make between man and other animals. Would an
extraterrestrial thus be morally justified in eating us or in killing humans for sport? An
affirmative answer seems to be the logical consequence of our view of morality as we apply it to
humans and other animals.

These situations demonstrate that, from a biological perspective, morality is a relative, synthetic
concept, solely for the convenience of man, rather than a universal and absolute dictum.

E. A SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE OF MORALITY

Morality does not apply to individual human beings when they are alone. A shipwrecked
survivor on an island need not concern himself with morality because it does not apply to him in
his isolation. This illustration emphasizes the fact that gods or extraterrestrials did not imbed the
concept of morality in individual human beings but that morality is applicable to an individual
only when he interacts with other persons.

Morality is a societal phenomenon and, since man creates societies, all morality is a concept
created by man. It follows, that morality is relative to our environment and does not apply to all
persons at all times. Morality can only be relative and subjective; instead of objective, universal
and absolute.

A wide variety of morality-systems exists among men, depending on where they live. Eskimos,
Europeans, Atheists, Americans, Devil Worshippers, Iranians, Chinese. Brazilians, Indians. All
of these societies have voluntarily adopted unique and different morality systems, and all of
these systems contradict each other in many aspects.

The specific conduct that one group may consider immoral or forbidden, may be tolerated,
praised or even venerated in another societal group.

Morality is nothing but a code of conduct arrived at by mutually consenting persons who
consider such code of conduct, such morality, to be in their own best self-interest.

All successful societies have based their specific code of conduct, their morality, on the innate
human drive to always act in what each individual considers to be in his own best self-interest.

F. A COSMOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE OF MORALITY

All evidence known to man confirms that the universe is 13.7 billion years old.

Life on this planet, on earth, developed about 3.5 billion years ago.

The human race has existed for only a few hundred thousand years.
The Earth is part of a small solar system, centered on an insignificant star that we, somewhat
presumptuously, call our sun.

Our solar system is part of our Milky Way Galaxy that consists of about 100 million stars, of
which our sun is a minor component.

There are approximately 200 billion galaxies in the universe, with an average of 200 billion stars
in each galaxy.

As far as the universe is concerned, this infinitely small grain of sand that we call Earth, and all
the human beings on this tiny grain of sand, almost does not exist. From the perspective of the
universe, the human race exists only to the extent of recognition we give to a single grain of sand
on all the beaches on earth.

In this, the cosmological perspective, it would seem rather presumptuous or even ludicrous to
stipulate that our human code of conduct, our human morality, is universal and absolute and
must therefore be presumed to apply to the incomprehensible vastness of the whole universe

G. THE LEGAL PERSPECTIVE OF MORALITY

Ronald D Dworkin once said that “Moral principles is the foundation of law”

Not all codes of conduct are moral. There are etiquettes, regulations, laws and religious
observances, all of which seek to order our lives, but breaches of which might not be thought
morally wrong. Wearing pyjamas to a business meeting might be a breach of etiquette,
accidentally overstaying on a parking meter may be unlawful, but neither of these acts would
normally be thought to be immoral

It is important to differentiate between morality and related terms such as ethics and legality. We
may apply the term ethics synonymously with morality but this word may also refer to laws or to
quasi-laws, such as the ethics of a particular profession. Some varieties of ethics may convey
merely an informative context, such as the lack of ethics of a politician. Other designations of
ethics have the force of laws. The ethics of thle legal profession, if flaunted, can result in
disbarment.

The term ethics can be ambiguous and it is best to avoid it in the context of moral issues. We
should also avoid any potential confusion of morality with actual laws, either common laws or
codified laws.

Morality and laws are definitely not synonymous: A specific act may be moral, valued and
lawful in one country, while the identical act may be punishable by death in another country.
This disparity in moral values is evident in many conflicts arising from divergent religions.
Salman Rushdie discovered this truth when he published the "Satanic Verses".

A society of persons, in the sociological context, is the conglomeration of individual human


beings who have come together for their mutual protection, welfare or communality of interests.
All such individuals search for individual happiness in their own way, as is the nature of all
individuals.

One person may wish to pursue a tranquil lifestyle; another person may be intent on
accumulating wealth. In order to function smoothly, society must apply common denominators,
common values that large numbers of people share, in order to achieve order, safety and
predictability for all of its members. The emotional and physical well being of a society and its
members depends on a common code of conduct, a common morality among all of its members.

It is not necessary for all members of a society to subscribe to the identical morality. However, it
is important for all individuals to be aware of any differences in conduct that may exist among
various groups. This consensus enables individuals to cope with, not only other individual
members of their own society, but also with groups of non-conforming persons beyond their own
society.

In the interest of the internal cohesion of a society, it is imperative that all individuals and groups
within the society adhere to fundamental rules of moral conduct, which we will call the Three
Natural Laws of Morality. We call these laws natural, not because they are immutable Laws of
Nature, but to indicate that these laws have evolved from the innate nature of man.

The most fundamental law of the Three Natural Laws of Morality is the dictum: All persons
within a society must refrain from killing or injure other members of the society, except in self-
defense. This law is so simple and self-explanatory that all societies throughout human history
have adopted it and vigorously enforce it. These laws are concerned with the right of all
members of society to be free from enslavement and to hold property.

Since there is an infinite number of potential human activities and desires, we cannot establish a
Code of Conduct, a morality system, by making a list of human activities that society permits or
tolerates. Conversely, a list of human-caused events that no person likes to experience is very
short.

Therefore, an effective moral code must define only those activities that are not permissible, that
society prohibits under threat of punishment. Furthermore, it is imperative that any societal
system of morality stipulates unequivocally that any act, which is not expressly prohibited, is
permitted: Anything that is not prohibited is permitted. This statement is a crucial ingredient of
any effectual legal system.

The human survival instinct is the primary and most powerful human emotion. The promulgation
of prohibited acts must take cognizance of those events that no person wants to be subject to,
such as to be killed. These basic prohibitions are the backbone of the laws of any society and
may be verbal or they may be embodied in a formal, written code of laws. Disregard of these
basic moral laws will invoke drastic punishment and anyone breaking these laws must take into
account the potential consequence of breaking them.
The fundamental prohibitions, without which no society can function, cover those events that no
human being wants to happen to him:

It is prohibited to kill or injure another human being, except in self-defense *

It is prohibited to enslave another human being by physically restraining him

It is prohibited to use the property of another person without his express consent*

*Note: Self Defense includes the protection of members of the immediate Survival Circle:

Preemptive Strikes are never permitted: They destroy the fabric of society.

Property: Things subject to the legal and physical control of a person

All activities that are not expressly prohibited, are permitted.

MORAL CONUNDRUMS AND ENIGMAS OF MORALITY

It may be enlightening to apply some of the above aspects of morality to actual life situations.
All of the depicted events confirm the relative nature of all morality:

A terrorist for one country is a heroic freedom fighter for another country. The American
Government referred to Osama Bin Laden as an evil terrorist. Simultaneously, hundreds of
millions of Muslims around the world acclaimed him as a hero. Women even named their
children after Osama Bin Laden. Is Bin Laden a sainted hero, or is he an evil terrorist?

American guerillas under Francis Marion were famous for killing many British soldiers from
ambush. They were freedom fighters. Iraqi insurgents killed many American conquerors from
ambush, why were they terrorists?

A study of the relative nature of morality poses interesting questions. Penetrating questions
regarding morality make many people uncomfortable or angry because they often interfere with
their personal view of morality or history. It is often painful to come to terms with the relative
nature of the human concept we call morality.

We fare best if we avoid the use of morally judgmental words like good or evil. Precision in
language suggests the use of descriptive words without moral connotations, such as
unproductive, counterproductive, inefficient, efficient, lawless, dangerous and murderous. The
list of words depends on our vocabulary.

In a war, is it an evil act to kill civilians intentionally? Who is more evil, George Bush or Sadam
Hussein? Who of the two killed more women and children? It is questionable if Bush or Hussein
killed more civilians. Are they both evil? Are the Americans who supported the Gulf War, evil?
They made it possible for Bush to kill civilians. An analysis of the morality of historical events
can be very enlightening with regard to the hidden motivations of the perpetrators, the
participants and the alleged victims.
Stalin killed 30 million of his fellow Russian civilians in the 1930’s. Hitler killed five or six
million Jews. Churchill, Roosevelt and Truman intentionally burned alive about 2 million
German and Japanese women and children as part of their terror-bombing campaigns. What is
the definition of a mass-murderer? Is it always the victor, who writes the history of a war and
who defines war crimes? Are some of these mass-murderers more evil than others are or, are all
mass-murderers evil?

All morality and all moral codes can only be relative and subjective. Human beings
devise moral judgments, such as good and evil, right and wrong, either with the objective of
furthering law and order within societies, or with the objective of manipulating other human
beings.

Manipulations, under the pretext of morality, may represent an attempt to reap personal gain by
altering the self-perception or self-esteem of another person. Manipulations of moral issues may
also be attempts to gain from the distortion of reality, as other persons perceive it.

Although morality is relative, human societies have established codes of conduct, codes of
morality, to meet their particular needs for manipulations. Because of such manipulations,
members of a particular society may loose the ability to recognize the relative nature of the
morality system imbedded in their society.

Instead, all members of that particular society will consider the moral dictums of their society as
applicable to all of humanity and the universe and they will then proceed to impose their
standards on other human beings.

This moral stance has been very common throughout human history. We can readily discern this
distortion of values at the beginning of the third millennium, as societies with a predominant
Judeo/Christian orientation try to impose their morality on Islamic societies.

All societies impose moral standards on its members. Societies cannot exist without a cohesive
code of conduct, without a system of morality. In past centuries, the religious hierarchy
governing a society commonly promulgated the rules and dogmas of what they consider moral
conduct.

In order to validate their own moral system, members of a particular society frequently insist that
their moral standards apply not only to their society, but also to all human beings. These persons
conveniently overlook the fact that their universal moral standard would need to have its origin
in innate human characteristics, imbedded in human genes. There would have to be a gene for
morality. Of course, there is no such gene

Alternately, mysterious or mystical beings or exterior forces might have imbedded such moral
qualities in human beings. There is no objective evidence whatsoever of such genetically
imposed morality or the imposition of moral standards by mystical beings, such as gods. Nobody
has ever provided any evidence of such mystical beings. Babies are not born with a moral code
imbedded in them. Morality is always relative to our society.
Freedom is the opportunity to do what we please, subject only to the restrictions that we
voluntarily impose on ourselves. We accept such moral restriction in order to enhance those
objectives that we consider being in our own best self-interest. If all other members of our
society adhere to the same set of moral rules, we mutually benefit from this enhancement to our
security.

Most people consider slavery one of the great evils of humanity. Were Thomas Jefferson and
George Washington evil? They both sold and maintained hundreds of slaves on their estates
throughout their lifetimes, while simultaneously proclaiming the equality of all men. Were they
evil hypocrites? If we oppose the evil of slavery, why do we build marble monuments to men
who enslaved other men for their personal gain?

In setting up rules of conduct we must have a means of determining precisely what conduct is
mutually beneficial and therefore permissible, and what conduct is not beneficial and therefore
prohibited.

Adherence to a Code of Conduct, a Codified Morality, requires that we give up some freedom of
action in return for the enhancement of our security and thus, our survival. Without this
framework of morality, governing the conduct among members of a particular society, there
cannot be an orderly conduct of human affairs. Any society lacking compulsory rules governing
the conduct, the morals, of its members will quickly collapse into chaos.

Three billion years of evolution have imbued all life on earth with one basic motivation: All
living organisms, including all human beings, always act in what they consider to be in their best
self-interest. This unalterable motivation is the source for all other emotions of all living
organisms. This motive is also the precursor of the Negative Golden Rule, which first appears in
the writings of the nascent periods of major religions and civilizations.

The Biblical Golden Rule states: "Do unto others what you want done to yourself" The Negative
Golden Rule states: "Do not do to others what you do not want done to yourself". This nugget of
wisdom goes back thousands of years. It appears in old Judaic teachings as well as in the ancient
Tibetan Buddhist aphorism: "Let all hear this moral maxim and having heard it, keep it well:
Whatever is not pleasing to yourself, do not that into others".

The actual Golden Rule, as embedded in the New Testament of the Bible, is adverse to human
emotional and evolutionary motivation. Unfortunately, St. Matthew was not familiar with human
nature when he said in (7-12) "Therefor all things whatsoever ye would that men do to you, do
ye even so to them. For this is the law and the prophets".

The same psychological principles that apply to the moral code of a society, also apply to
individual members of a society who merely wish to enhance their coexistence with other
members of their family or society. All human beings have an infinite number of wants, needs
and desires. It is impossible to know and understand all of the wants and likes of another person.
Therefore, it is impossible and presumptive for a person to decide what may be desirable for
another person, merely as a projection of his own desires. A projection of our own likes would
rely on the unrealistic assumption that others have the same needs and desires as we do. We
know from everyday observations that other people do not have the same likes as we do and,
since we can merely surmise what others may like, we will almost certainly create dismay more
often than happiness.

If we are determined to make somebody happy by providing gifts, why not give such gifts to
ourselves and make ourselves happy? Nobody else in the whole world knows better than we do,
precisely, what it is that we enjoy. If every person does what brings him happiness, instead of
engaging in the speculative attempt to make other persons happy, it follows logically that all
people will be happy.

he whole world would be brimming with happy persons, if only people would stop trying to
make other people happy. It is much easier and much more rewarding to focus all of our efforts
and resources on making ourselves happy.

It is sometimes difficult to gain insights into our own needs and to make ourselves happy by
acting upon our needs. Most people find it easier and more convenient to try to find happiness in
their futile attempt to make other people happy, regardless of the true preferences of those other
people.

The moral stance of most religions further aggravates this situation. Religious organizations
benefit from encouraging the indiscriminate giving of gifts. Religions proclaim, "It is more
blessed to give than to receive" (Acts 20:35). Churches are frequently the beneficiaries of guilt-
ridden adherents. These persons try to find happiness not only in their current life. By giving to
their church, they try to open the door to a happier life after their death. They believe that their
Church holds the key to this door.

Moral codes differ over time and between places, and there are many cases of things being
considered moral by one society and immoral by another. In the Roman Empire and medieval
Japan suicide was often considered an honourable act if carried out in response to personal
failure or to protect the interests of one's family, but many of the world's religions condemn it as
immoral.

Due to the relative nature of all morality, the list of moral conundrums and enigmas is endless

This wide divergence of moral codes has led to a view that all morality is relative, that there is no
universal ('normative') ideal standard which can be used to judge what is better or worse. The
morally good is whatever a culture or group decides it is.

Bertrand Russell rightly comments :

“We have, in fact, two kinds of morality side by side; one which we preach but do not practice,
and another which we practice but seldom preach.”
Refrences :

• Dr Oric Basirov : old Iranian Religion & Zoroastrian Reforms


• Morality: Absolute or Relative? A multifaceted approach to Morality Walter E. Requadt
www.rationality.net/morality.htm
• Definition of Morality http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/morality-definition/

• Morality http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morality
• Relativity and Concept of Morality http://www.u.arizona.edu/~gillm/Relativity.pdf
• Steve A. Smith, Satisfaction of Interest and the concept of Morality
• Immanuel Kant,Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals, Published by the
Echo Library
• S R Sharma,Morality In Indian Education, Cosmo Publications Div.of
• Smilansky, Saul,10 Moral Paradoxes, Blackwell Publishers (Published: 5/2007)
• Robinson, The Golden Legend Of India, Rupa & Company
• Colors of Truth : Religion, Self and Emotions : Perspectives of Hinduism, Buddhism,
Jainism, Zoroastrianism, Islam, Sikhism and Contemporary Psychology, Sonali Bhatt ,
Vedamsbooks
• Hinduism in the Context of Manusmriti, Vedas, and Bhagavad Gita, R. Ramachandran,
Vitasta , Vedam Books
• Man’s concept of morality and lawyer’s outlook on it,
http://www.mindrelief.net/mans_concept_of_morality.html
• Durkheim’s concept of morality
○ http://katecalle.com/durkheims-concept-of-morality/
○ http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1205261/Facts-Values-and-Norms-
Essays-Toward-a-Morality-of-Consequence
• Facts, Values and Norms: Essays Toward a Morality of Consequence

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi