What makes a moral rule actually binding? - Discuss the ethics of ethics

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As for ethics, ethics is usually presented different from moral philosophy.
The two are used interchangeably in the vast majority of contemporary philosophy and in ordinary English. There is no generally or widely accepted distinction here. The OP is confusing.

it's specifically about the grounding step. Like, the point where a description of the world becomes a claim about what someone must do
Why would morality be grounded in a description of the world?
 
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At this point I'd like to pose the question of what actually makes a moral rule binding in the first place?
God, or a divine God-King.

All attempts to codify morality without a supreme law-giver devolve into hair splitting pilpul where the person in question comes up with logical reasons why they should believe what they think they believe and they're all equally valid/invalid.

The utilitarian arguing that its OK to kill 3 people to save 5 is just as "moral" as the hedonist who says the most important thing is to increase the amount of pleasure in the world.

The lack of a God enforcing morality is part of the reason the modern world is so schizophrenic in terms of values and why people's "moral outrage" can be so selectively triggered.
 
God, or a divine God-King.

All attempts to codify morality without a supreme law-giver devolve into hair splitting pilpul where the person in question comes up with logical reasons why they should believe what they think they believe and they're all equally valid/invalid.

The utilitarian arguing that its OK to kill 3 people to save 5 is just as "moral" as the hedonist who says the most important thing is to increase the amount of pleasure in the world.

The lack of a God enforcing morality is part of the reason the modern world is so schizophrenic in terms of values and why people's "moral outrage" can be so selectively triggered.
Everything is valid under relative morality and we've seen what that gets us.
 
Normative claims depend on reality being described.
I mean, normative claims certainly need to refer to reality, for otherwise they would just be arbitrary assertions. The issue here is that is by itself not enough to yield normativity.
A description of reality can be perfectly accurate without yielding any obligation. For example, "this action will harm you" or "this action will shorten your life" are both descriptions of reality.
The question is what property of reality would turn such descriptions into a claim that someone ought (not) do something.
Reality -> description -> ??? -> normative obligation



So it's like this. 1. We know that morality exists, because it exists as an idea in conscious thought. 2. By definition, an 'ought' must exist, since morality itself is defined by the 'ought'. 3. Just because we may not all agree on what the 'ought' is, does not mean that is does not exist. 4. Therefore, since an 'ought' does exist, so must a moral obligation which binds people, which is expressed by the resulting consequences of whether or not one fills that obligation. It is not necessary that anyone agrees upon or even for one person to follow or even know what the 'ought' is for it to exist, for it exists by the very nature of the idea of morality even existing.
That is a definition of morality in terms of an "ought", concluding that an "ought" exists. But that doesn't answer the question I raised.
For example, I could go and define a "moral rule" as "a rule that people ought to follow". From that description, it would trivially follow that moral rules involve an "ought", but the definition itself does not actually explain why anyone really ought to follow them.
Look at step 1. The fact that morality exists as an idea in human thought does not by itself yield or produce an obligation. Astrology, unicorns, fictional worlds, those ideas also exist, but their existence as ideas does not make them normatively binding.
So what feature of reality would make turn a rule from an idea about behavior into something that a person actually ought to follow?



In the long run, after life, truth and outcomes are the same.
Pushing the convergence of truth and outcome into the afterlife is a move that only works if you accept the premise that such a judgment actually occurs. For someone who does not accept that premise, the structure returns to the earlier problem that outcomes within life remain the only observable constraint.
What would make that rule binding independently of accepting that theological premise?



To accept my premise is to accept that acting “good” would require acting in accordance with this principle, which would be the equivalent of an obligation. As in, failure to achieve these higher orders of fulfillment or flourishing would be “bad” or “wrong,” definitionally.
I don't see how that follows. Like, defining "good" as acting in accordance with the telos does not by itself yield the conclusion that acting in accordance with the telos is obligatory. A description of what counts as flourishing does not by itself explain why a person ought to pursue that in the first place.
The same issue appears in the appeal to aesthetic truths. The notion that certain states of affairs generate obligations simply by their nature is a new premise, and that premise is what you would need to explain.
Again, what property of those states of affairs would make them morally binding rather than simply descriptions of flourishing?
Descriptions of flourishing -> ??? -> moral obligation



["Ethics" and "moral philosophy"] are used interchangeably in the vast majority of contemporary philosophy and in ordinary English.
True, but whether these terms are distinguished or used interchangeably ultimately isn't really important for the thread.
Why would morality be grounded in a description of the world?
Many moral theories attempt to do exactly that. They appeal to various facts about the world and then infer an obligation from them. E.g.:
God commands something -> therefore you ought to obey it
Human flourishing is good -> therefore you ought to promote it
An action increases happiness -> therefore you ought to perform it
Human life requires certain actions -> therefore you ought to perform them
In each of those cases, the structure is the same :
Fact about the world -> therefore a person ought to act in a certain way
The question in the thread is to zoom in on that step and examine what would make the transition from a fact to an obligation valid.
That is to say, I'm not asserting that morality must come from facts, I'm examining theories that claim it does.



God, or a divine God-King.
That's a point that has already been raised several times in the thread.
The short version is that "God -> moral authority -> binding rules" explains who issues the rule, but it does not explain why the command itself becomes morally binding. In other words, find the missing step in "authority -> ??? -> moral obligation"
Everything is valid under relative morality
As much as I personally dislike moral relativism, that statement is incorrect.
Moral relativism does not claim or imply that everything is valid, instead it claims that moral claims are evaluated relative to a framework (as opposed to evaluated universally).



Morality is subjective. Therefore, moral rules are only bound by force, or personal restraint.
That position is clean and internally consistent, but it changes the meaning of "moral rule".
That is, if morality is indeed purely subjective, then a "moral rule" is no longer something that a person actually ought to follow. It becomes either a personal preference or a social rule that's backed by force.
Under moral subjectivism, the conclusion would be that moral rules in the stronger sense, which is usually implied when people say things like "murder is wrong", simply do not exist.



The thread has reached 6 pages, so I'll summarize the different directions the discussion has taken so far
  • What makes normative claims actually binding?
    • Nothing.
      Nothing grounds moral obligation -> moral rules are not truly binding.
      • Morality doesn't exist (nihilism)
        • Question: If that is true, then why have people spent thousands of years doing moral philosophy in an attempt to explain moral obligation rather than dismissing it?
      • Morality is subjective (subjectivism)
        • Problem: Under that view, "moral rules" boil down to preferences or enforced norms, which means that moral obligations in the stronger sense simply don't exist. See: nihilism
    • Something.
      • Teleology / flourishing.
        Human nature -> flourishing -> good.
        • Problem: It explains what counts as flourishing, but doesn't answer the question.
          Flourishing -> ??? -> obligation to pursue flourishing.
      • Life.
        Life -> self-interest -> rules.
        • Problem: At best, self-interest can yield prudence, but not a categorical moral obligation.
          Self-interest -> action -> consequence -> accept or avoid consequence.
      • Reality itself.
        • Reality -> morality exists -> ought exists.
          • Problem: Simply asserting that moral facts exist does not explain what property of the facts generates the obligation.
            Fact about reality -> ??? -> obligation.
  • Why do people follow rules?
    Not the question this thread is about.
    Every answer has the structure "rule -> consequences -> comply or accept consequences", which describes behavioral incentives, but yields prudential reasoning rather than moral obligation
    • Punishment
    • Legal enforcement
    • Social backlash
    • Personal restraint
    • Reputation
    • Self-interest
  • Where do moral rules come from?
    Not the question this thread is about.
    Explaining who declares a rule does not explain why someone actually ought to follow them. Origin of rule -> ??? -> moral obligation.
    • God / divine lawgiver
    • Culture and social norms
    • Biology and empathy
    • Community survival pressures
 
Moral relativism does not claim or imply that everything is valid, instead it claims that moral claims are evaluated relative to a framework (as opposed to evaluated universally).
And what framework is that? a countries standards? are we going to start comparing morals by country?
 
And what framework is that? a countries standards? are we going to start comparing morals by country?
A moral framework in the relativist sense means the set of principles that a person or group uses to evaluate actions. Examples could be a culture's norms, a religion's rules, a personal value system, a philosophical theory.
The core point of moral relativism is that there is no one single universal standard against which all moral claims are evaluated. Not the same thing as "everything is valid", rather it's "different frameworks can generate different moral judgments".
That said, it's somewhat beside the point of the thread. The question here isn't whether relativism is correct, but what would make a rule actually binding in the first place. See the map right above your post; I pointed out that moral relativism ultimately collapses into moral nihilism.
 
Pascal's wager.
A prudential argument. The argument you mentioned says that someone should behave a certain way because the potential consequences are extremely large. If you look at the structure of the argument, it should be clear why this is prudential (goal-contingent) rather than categorical (universally binding):
action -> possible outcome -> decision whether to accept the risk
That is, Pascal's wager can explain why someone might choose to follow a rule, but it does not explain why failing to follow it would be morally wrong.
Administration of pain.
The same thing holds true here. Pain or punishment can enforce a rule, but enforcement explains why people comply, and not what makes the rule morally binding.
Same structure: action -> possible outcome -> decision whether to accept the consequence
What makes a moral rule binding independently of incentives or punishment?
 
Flip a coin. Heads I win, tails you lose.
You mean something like "rule -> outcome always favors the rule-giver"?
That too illustrates the same structure as punishment or enforcement. Rule -> asymmetrical consequences -> comply or lose.
Explains why someone might go along with the rule, but still treats the rule as backed by leverage, and not morally binding in itself. That is, it still doesn't explain why refusing to comply would be morally wrong, rather than simply costly.
 
Man by himself can not create a sustaining set of morals without pointing to something greater.
I think you'd need to argue for that claim rather than simply assert it.
Historically, many moral frameworks have been proposed without appealing to anything "greater than man" in the sense you describe. Off the top of my head, I can think of three obvious examples:
Aristotelian ethics (appealing to human flourishing)
Utilitarianism (appealing to consequences for wellbeing)
Contract theory (appealing to agreements among rational agents)
Whether those approaches ultimately succeed is a separate question, but the fact that they exist shows that moral systems can be proposed without appealing to a higher authority.
 
I think you'd need to argue for that claim rather than simply assert it.
Historically, many moral frameworks have been proposed without appealing to anything "greater than man" in the sense you describe. Off the top of my head, I can think of three obvious examples:
Aristotelian ethics (appealing to human flourishing)
Utilitarianism (appealing to consequences for wellbeing)
Contract theory (appealing to agreements among rational agents)
Whether those approaches ultimately succeed is a separate question, but the fact that they exist shows that moral systems can be proposed without appealing to a higher authority.
But they don't really have any backing do they? you can choose to follow them or not follow them and possibly get away with disobeying them. i mean what were the kind of societies that followed them? was it nost just piggybacking off of earlier morals?
 
A description of reality can be perfectly accurate without yielding any obligation. For example, "this action will harm you" or "this action will shorten your life" are both descriptions of reality.

This has nothing to do with whether or not something is or isn't moral. Plenty of moral frameworks allow for you to take actions that harm people. Morality is entirely subjective. What is or isn't morally right could be (and generally is) at least slightly different for everyone.

This is why religions & governments exist, because in order to have a cohesive community you need some sort of agreed upon set of values. You don't have to believe in them, but you're expected to abide by them.
 
The fact that morality exists as an idea in human thought does not by itself yield or produce an obligation. Astrology, unicorns, fictional worlds, those ideas also exist, but their existence as ideas does not make them normatively binding.
So what feature of reality would make turn a rule from an idea about behavior into something that a person actually ought to follow?
Astrology, unicorns, etc. are descriptions of things but they do not describe inherent universal laws that produce a consequence by nature of their existence as ideas. The ought does. That is the difference. The obligation is inherent to reality, like the gravitational constant. A person is obligated to follow the ought because it is ontologically impossible for them to not to. Even if I say I am acting amorally, in reality, I am just saying I interpret the 'ought' differently in essence, not that it does not exist or that I do not have to follow it. It is just as binding as gravity. Every choice someone makes is in direct relation to the 'ought' just as any movement I make is bound by gravity. I can jump, but gravity will be pull my down. I can attempt to act against the 'ought' (whether I know what it is or not, just as you don't need to know what gravity is to jump) but I am still bound by the ought, because at that point I am simply saying I ought to not follow the ought, thus I am still following the ought no matter what I do. The expression of this binding for gravity is the consequence of falling. The expression of following or not following an ought is the consequence of that action.
 
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But they don't really have any backing do they? you can choose to follow them or not follow them and possibly get away with disobeying them.
Right, and that's exactly the issue being discussed.
Getting away with it brings the explanation back to consequences or enforcement, already been addressed. What's missing is reasoning showing why not following them is actually morally wrong.
was it nost just piggybacking off of earlier morals?
That's a question of historical origin and not normative grounding. That is, whether a theory is historically downstream from older norms has no bearing on whether it succeeds or fails on its own structure.



This is why religions & governments exist, because in order to have a cohesive community you need some sort of agreed upon set of values.
True, but that addresses a different question.
Community -> agreed rules -> expectation/enforcement is an explanation why people comply with rules, but it does not explain why the rule is morally binding.
Under the subjectivist view you described earlier, moral judgments differ from person to person. In that case, the rules enforced by a religion or government would simply be social rules, and not moral obligations in the stronger sense.
Which brings us back to the original question: what would make a rule something that a person ought to follow, rather than simply a rule that a community or law enforcement expects them to follow?



It is just as binding as gravity.
The thing is, your analogy is describing a physical constraint, not a normative obligation.
Gravity is binding on motion in the sense that objects cannot escape the effects of gravity. But nobody would claim that gravity is somehow morally right or wrong. Jumping off a cliff may be imprudent because gravity will pull you down, but no one would say that the person is falling because they ought not have jumped.

Like, the structure of your analogy looks roughly like this:
gravity -> universal law -> unavoidable consequences
morality -> universal ought -> unavoidable consequences
But "having consequences" and being binding in the sense of "generating an obligation" are two different things.

What remains open is: fact about reality -> ??? -> moral obligation
What property of the fact generates the moral obligation?
 
Right, and that's exactly the issue being discussed.
Getting away with it brings the explanation back to consequences or enforcement, already been addressed. What's missing is reasoning showing why not following them is actually morally wrong.
The only thing that truly has consequences in the eternal is religion, the only thing motivating you to not commit crimes in this world is whether or not you can get away with it if we believe morals are just social constructs. if we have a morality that permits anything as long as you get away with it then sure you can do that, but that doesn't mean it's correct. you are trying to divorce morality from religion but you can not, otherwise there's literally no reason why a tyrant is any worse from a humanitarian worker his perspective, they're both doing what they see as right.
That's a question of historical origin and not normative grounding. That is, whether a theory is historically downstream from older norms has no bearing on whether it succeeds or fails on its own structure.
We can't use historical examples?
 
What remains open is: fact about reality -> ??? -> moral obligation
What property of the fact generates the moral obligation?
The same thing which determines what the gravitational constant is. The mere existence of the ought as an idea generates a moral obligation ontologically. How the idea of an ought can exist is not any different from asking how the gravitational constant can exist.

Gravity is binding on motion in the sense that objects cannot escape the effects of gravity. But nobody would claim that gravity is somehow morally right or wrong. Jumping off a cliff may be imprudent because gravity will pull you down, but no one would say that the person is falling because they ought not have jumped.
It is irrelevant to know what the ought is or what one's moral obligation is. Man used to not know what gravity was or how it worked but was still bound by it. Whether or not they ought to have jumped is irrelevant. The fall regardless. Whether one thinks they are acting morally or not is also irrelevant, because that choice to not act morally is itself an ought.
 
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