Bakustra wrote:
My understanding of Stirner is that morals are defined totally by the individual. So that while you could discard morals, there is no reason to, as you may redefine them freely at any time. Of course, this is purely a semantical matter.
I see that we return once again to the beginning of the thread. However, I'm not sure what the difference is between "I think" and "I perceive" if one invokes the genius.
I'll address the semantical issue below.
The difference between "I think" and "I perceive" lies in what is real. If my proof of myself rests on my thinking, then only my thoughts are given reality by my own existence. Anything I perceive that isn't my own thought cannot be trusted as really being there. Whereas with a proof based on perception, anything I perceive gains reality my perceiving them. Be I a brain in a vat, in a dreamscape, in an objective factual world, or lost in the illusions of an omnipotent daemon, what I perceive can be trusted as really there. If it wasn't, then I wouldn't be able to prove myself by perceiving it, but I have, so it is.
Bakustra wrote:A quick question. Is walking a moral or immoral action? This sounds irreverent, but frankly dismissing neutrality in a moral system so hastily sounds worrisome to me. This is also why I classified your position as a naive absolutism earlier. Is there a moral distinction between killing and stealing, under your system of duality? I am afraid that I cannot see where one would fit.
Walking is an amoral action, it is neither good nor bad, it can have good effects and bad effects. Yet morality is a categorization, something either is in the "moral" category, or it is not and therefore is in the "immoral" category. Bad is not good, walking is not good, therefore walking is bad. Yet good is not bad, walking is not bad, therefore walking is good. The system threatens to fall apart and the category of "amoral" is applied as duct tape to patch the system.
My method is different. I place every action first into the amoral box, and then freely move the actions into the moral or immoral boxes according to such criteria and information as I decide. At any time I can shift the actions in a box to either of the other boxes, should I revise my information or change my criteria.
If this is a "system of morality" to you, then feel free to call it that, I'm a nominalist and won't object to how you label your things. I however, do not label such an arrangement as a "system of morality", as I view systems as rigid and universally applicable and instead call it a heuristic, and would ask you not to put your labels on my stuff.