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sophiaserpentia ([personal profile] sophiaserpentia) wrote2003-11-05 10:17 am
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Crossposting to [livejournal.com profile] philosophy

The thesis that I'm moving towards with regard to the evolution of ethics is this:

1. The moral or ethical code of any given soceity is largely based on, or at least never contradicts, current economic needs and realities.

2. A self-organizing principle of ethical evolution has guided the development of human morality over the millenia. That principle is simply this: ethical systems which are more self-consistent will tend to become prominent over less self-consistent ethical systems whenever they arise. This is true even when people act purely out of self-interest.

3. Exceptions to rule 2 are usually due to natural, political, or economic catastrophe.

4. Ethical evolution, like economic progress, has often been prodded by technological progress.

The logic behind rule 2 is the observation that efficiency tends to win out over inefficiency. Even though people may find that it is in their own immediate personal interest to commit an unethical act, I suggest that in the long run, and in the aggregate, unethical acts do not pay off. When a society is faced with a contest between two ethical systems, the one which is the most self-consistent will come to dominate because its adherents will, in the long run, do better.

"Self-consistency" is here measured in a way reminiscent of Kant's categorical imperative, which could be summarized as follows: "act only in such a way that you could want the maxim (the motivating principle) of your action to become a universal law." The basis of this is the observation that when people act unethically, they are acting in such a way that would lead to universal detriment if everyone acted that way.

[identity profile] alobar.livejournal.com 2003-11-06 02:31 am (UTC)(link)
The ruling class (of any culture) is not ethical from the perspective of those under them. The ruling class has only limited interest in being fair to people outside their class. That limited interest stems from the ruling class not wanting a revolution. Beyond their own vested self interest, the ruling class is immoral.