What makes imprudence in sin not a sin?
Why restate the claim rather than explaining it?
Saying that
imprudence in sin is sin assumes the very point that is in question.
The issue I raised earlier still stands. An action can be imprudent because it harms the person doing it. Touching fire harms you, but that does not make touching fire morally wrong.
The question remains: why would harming yourself make the action morally wrong rather than simply imprudent?
The 'dilemma' you're pointing out is just recycled judaic rules-lawyering, so yeah, this whole post is just a giant troll. It was a good one, but now... it has lost its luster because, like all jews, your 'victory' is never great enough. Bind that.
The dilemma I pointed out is a standard problem in moral philosophy.
It has nothing to do with trolling and everything to do with how moral authority is supposed to work. If you are not interested in addressing it, that's fine, but that's the question that is being discussed.
I have not gone through the thread yet, but J am a bit confused.
You're implying that there are other levers than societal, people are not addressing, but I am not sure there are.
For a moral code to be binding, it must be internalized within a culture. I don't see how it works any other way.
I think the confusion comes from the fact that two different questions are being blended together.
One question is how moral rules become internalized or enforced within a society. That can be explained by means of cultural reinforcement, shame, reputation, law, religion, and so on. All of these mechanisms can make people feel bound and there's more than enough evidence that they're effective at stabilizing norms across generations.
The question this thread is actually about is earlier in the causal chain. It's about what would make a rule
actually morally binding, rather than merely widely internalized or strongly enforced.
Lemme try showing the distinction in an example
A society might strongly internalize a rule like "do not criticize the king". People could be made to follow it via shame, punishment, and cultural norms. But that still leaves open the question: Is criticizing the king
morally wrong, or simply prohibited and socially punished?
In other words, the issue I'm trying to discuss is not how norms spread or how they get internalized, but what would make violating a rule morally wrong in the first place rather than simply costly, imprudent, or disapproved of.
On another meta note, now that discussion has slowed down a bit
A large number of replies, probably the overwhelming majority so far, have answered questions that are adjacent to the one that I asked, rather than the question itself. This is fairly standard with precise philosophical questions, but it is still noticeable.
Most replies so far fall cleanly within these three categories:
"Where do moral rules come from?" - religion, culture, biology, community pressures
"Why do people follow rules?" - punishment, social backlash, legal enforcement, incentives, reputation
"Why are rules useful?" - cooperation, stability, flourishing
The question I asked, however, is not that. I reckon a teacher would give a failing grade for submitting an essay on the wrong topic.
Many replies so far effectively reduce moral rules to consequences, incentives, or enforcement. Which is a perfectly coherent position, but it amounts to some form of moral nihilism. That is, "rules exist, but nothing makes them binding beyond outcomes or pressure"
Thousands of years of moral philosophy have largely been attempts to avoid exactly that conclusion. So simply saying "nothing makes them binding" is just giving up on the issue rather than solving it.
I mean, if someone wants to openly concede nihilism, that's fair enough, but that doesn't add much to the discussion.
So if anyone actually wants to address the question I posed in the OP, the missing step is still the same: what turns a description of the world into a claim about what someone
ought to do?