Which still appears to place it beyond your level, I'm afraid. Your only answer to a stock ethics scenario is to deny its possibility and then continue to rant about your system without justifying it.The Question wrote:This is just amateur league stuff.
So you think it's immoral to steal in order to save a life? You have no concept of the different relative values of human life and a piece of food?Despite the impossibility of this scenario, when faced with such an emergency situation, one might make the active choice to violate the property rights of another by theft or force, but one would be deluding himself to imagine that it is in any way anything less than an immoral act.
And how do you justify this valuation? It's always the same with you: you spout your long-winded pompous declarations of what you think is right, and then clam up, evade, or simply ignore it when someone demands that you justify those claims.Same as if I am dangling from a balcony in a high rise. If I slip and fall I might manuver myself to land on your balcony below me to save my life.
But while I would choose to act in such a way to save my life, it would not justify or forgive the fact that I have violated your property rights, nor would my need absolve me from the necessity of making restitution.
Wow, another pompous declaration of just how right you are. Perhaps you could get around to justifying some of your claims, eh? You claimed that your ethics system is based solely on "irreducible primaries", but when challenged to produce those "irreducible primaries", you simply regurgitated some tautologies, some facts common to all ethical systems, and ... the tenets of your system, in a lovely display of circular reasoning: in essense, "morality is based solely on rights because morality is based solely on rights".One might - in those rare emergency situation - choose to act immorally, but it is the reality evader who attempts to justify the action as moral, based on need.
And now, when faced with an ethical situation in which your system clearly fails, you simply declare that the system's judgements, which are clearly absurd, should not be followed (after pretending that it's "impossible" despite the fact that it's undoubtedly happened in many poverty-stricken nations around the world, and more times than you can count). If its judgements have little to do with what you should actually do in any given situation, then what good is this system of yours, apart from giving you an opportunity to blow pompous wind?