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| Yes | 88% | 46 votes | Total: 52 votes | |
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Yes
Created on: September 14, 2010 Last Updated: September 15, 2010
Can Morals Survive in the Present Day World?
A former mayor of a major US city is sentenced to jail for lying under oath. A reality show contestant lies, cheats and immorally claws her way to the finish line for a cash prize. A famous sports figure is fined millions for breaking the moral clause of his contract. Is it possible as a society to conform to accepted rules of right conduct? Yes, if we are willing to follow the rules.
Morality and Human Rights
According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, empathy and other forms of social awareness are important in the development of a moral sense. We need to add to that a respect and tolerance for the mores of others. While Africans were being enslaved by moralist Englishmen who felt that colonization of Africans tribesmen would be for their moral good, many African parents were teaching moral lessons to their children through folklore and tradition.
Morality and Children
We have watched as one by one many athletes have been indicted for using performance-enhancing drugs; they failed one of the first lessons we learn as children: play by the rules.
Consistency is key when teaching rules of conduct to children. The parent who teaches his child that lying is wrong then tells that child to lie to others on his behalf is demonstrating moral ambiguity and showing the child that the moral lessons he is struggling to learn do not apply to the adult world.
Morals in the Workplace
What would you do if you were asked to lie for your employer or to falsify a record? One might be a judgment call without much consequence; the other could lead to termination or criminal prosecution. In general, employers favor people who conform to accepted standards of moral conduct. Having a set of moral guidelines to live your life by will give you confidence, poise, and will make you more marketable. In this tight job market, employers are looking past resumes and skill sets to the character of prospective employees. Many jobs administer moral aptitude tests and look at the credit history of prospective applicants.
When we look at our society's leaders, we understand that our sense of right and wrong cannot be predicated on what others might do. Instead of leaving our moral lessons to the discretion of reality TV producers, we need to return to making them a product of our upbringing; mother and/or father are responsible for raising their young ones to be morally decent human beings. But even if you didn't receive your morals from nurture, there are still solid principles and accepted rules of behavior. One such principle that has stood the test of time is the original golden rule: Don't do anything to others that you wouldn't want done to you. In short we are talking about morality not based solely on a penal code or Judeo-Christian doctrine, but a desire to live your life well without bringing harm to those around you.
Learn more about this author, Wanda Williams Jackson.
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No
Created on: December 09, 2009
There is a crisis of morality in our society. We have moved away from a modernist philosophy of constants and absolutes. We have instead moved toward a post-modern philosophy of relativism and subjectivity that already has degenerated morality at it's core. Morality by nature must be metaphysically absolute. When we start to tell ourselves that it isn't, when we go against our consciences and moral law, we slowly kill any viable sense of morality in culture. There is that rationale that we are simply changing our morality from generation to generation. However, I propose that these changes are exactly what is degenerating morality all together making it hard to survive in our current society. I think in general morality will not completely die off as there will always be a people group that will try to stand fast to their morals and values, but as a whole in this over arching society of ours, morality assuredly has been gasping for air.
First, consider the incredible amount of people that our in our prison systems. Prisons are overflowing with people who have stolen, killed, raped, and committed every other crime under the sun. We have some of the most crime ridden cities in the world. We've been trying to clean up these cities, but it doesn't seem to help much. There is no anchor, no value system, no real societal message for people to cling to anymore. Their moral system is broken. Thus, our society suffers under its weight.
Second, we have accepted and embraced the philosophy of moral relativism, which ultimately isn't a morality at all. Morality demands some type of structure, system, and code. If my morality isn't your morality and that spans across thousands of people, then there is no morality at all. With this there is no absolute or universal message that we can really spread to keep morality in society. With no anchor for a society to grasp to then they have to come up with their own devices to survive in the violent waters. Morality struggles to survive.
Third, any sense of morality or values in our society seems to be more of a smoke screen. People try to say they have values to show others they have some kind of character, but in reality they rarely actually hold to these values. No one wants to be held to any system. Humanity is a rebellious race. Morality had once held weight as a strong backbone to society, but now it's just used as a way to trick people into thinking your a good person. Morality has not real value or meaning anymore. Thus, what relevancy does it have anymore? None.
We live in a world full of violence, corruption, wickedness, and death that happens every second of everyday. Morality holds no weight anymore. It's practically scoffed at as out dated and old fashioned. Unless future generations rethink our current philosophy on morality, I have trouble thinking that morality will survive in the present day world.
Learn more about this author, Logan Mansfield.
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