DEFINITIONS OF MORAL, ETHICAL, CRIMINAL
Moral: costs imposed by externality.
Ethical: costs imposed interpersonally.
Criminal: costs imposed physically
Evil: costs imposed for the purpose of imposing costs and causing suffering rather than for personal gain.
Objective morality: necessary/natural law. (think physical law, and natural law.)
Normative morality : evolved morality – includes normative contractual provisions. If a moral norm requires the bearing of a cost, and one violates that norm, one imposes a cost upon those who bear the cost. (think contract law)
Traditional Moral Commands: Religious contract traditions that may or may not be in fact moral. Since a religion requires a contract of one sort or another that causes mass behavior that is usually costly to members, it is a violation of that normative contract that imposes costs upon others to fail to observe it. (think legislation)
Declining Traditional, Religious, and normative moral rules: changing circumstance has eliminate the value of the prior order’s demand for to forgo an opportunity or bear a cost. Some continue to pay and others do not, but objectively the value of the behavior has declined. (think outdated legislation)
Abnormal Moral Rules: signal traditions that are objectively immoral but have not been eradicated through competition. (Think ancient traditions that actually cause harm.)
This is pretty much how it works world ’round.
Curt
Source date (UTC): 2016-03-11 10:54:00 UTC
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