Hello.
Here's me again, writing a short essay that will never be graded or even seen as opposed to studying for my exam ^_^
Im feel like stretching my legs and taking on the basis for almost all religious and contemporary secular morality, "ethic of reciprocity" otherwise know as, "The Golden Rule".
Good chance you may have heard of this, especially if you are christian as its usually (falsely) claimed to originate from christianity.
The saying essentially goes like this ""treat others as you would like to be treated".
Now I'm sure many of you would agree with this statement and say that if everyone followed this, the world is a better place as it promotes empathy and perspective-taking.
Some may even see me as a prick for trying to disprove this idea.
Well I am a prick, so here goes my shake on the issue
The underlining problem behind the idea of the "Golden Rule" being infallible is that you are inherently assuming that that everyone shares your frame of mind and criterias.
This also makes the claim that using the 'golden rule' promotes empathy and perspective-taking bunk as in reality its the reverse. You need the latter to have the former. Let me demonstrate.
If you are normal in your diet like me, and enjoy a fine piece of steak, then chances are you may not sympathize with the cow that became your meat.
To you, its simply an animal and the golden rule wouldnt apply in such a situation. The question "how would you like to be eaten" then becomes frivolous to you because you don't eqate the cow with yourself.
Now, let us look at an example closer to home. Prior to the Holocaust, Jews were in the same situation as the cow in the previous example. No, they werent being eaten
, but they werent equated with the person making the moral judgement. If asked "how would you like to be discriminated agaisnt for your faith", the anti-semite would just say "well Im not evil, therefore you cant compare".
Now you may say, "but Isaac, the example with a cow used an animal to a person, whereas the jewish example uses two people".
To which I would say you've proven my point. For the Golden Rule to fulfill the claims of proponents, we would have to have a universal definition of "person, people, ethical treatment, hierarchy of worth etc.". If you are still unsure, throw in a person vs. person example where one of the people is a serial killer/rapist. Chances are the criminal will be seen as "less-than a person" and the golden rule will fall into a similar problem as it did with trying to use it on the anti-semite. "Im not a serial rapist/killer!, if I were I would want you to stop me"
So one would have to have empathy already established with someone/thing with the same "likeness" to you with which you can do perspective-taking and identify with.
The relativity of the criteria on which the golden rule depends on, and the fact that is contributes nothing of its own, merely a reflection of something that would already have to be there, makes the Golden rule little more than a placebo for those claiming to be moral.
-Cheers!
Here's me again, writing a short essay that will never be graded or even seen as opposed to studying for my exam ^_^
Im feel like stretching my legs and taking on the basis for almost all religious and contemporary secular morality, "ethic of reciprocity" otherwise know as, "The Golden Rule".
Good chance you may have heard of this, especially if you are christian as its usually (falsely) claimed to originate from christianity.
The saying essentially goes like this ""treat others as you would like to be treated".
Now I'm sure many of you would agree with this statement and say that if everyone followed this, the world is a better place as it promotes empathy and perspective-taking.
Some may even see me as a prick for trying to disprove this idea.
Well I am a prick, so here goes my shake on the issue

The underlining problem behind the idea of the "Golden Rule" being infallible is that you are inherently assuming that that everyone shares your frame of mind and criterias.
This also makes the claim that using the 'golden rule' promotes empathy and perspective-taking bunk as in reality its the reverse. You need the latter to have the former. Let me demonstrate.
If you are normal in your diet like me, and enjoy a fine piece of steak, then chances are you may not sympathize with the cow that became your meat.
To you, its simply an animal and the golden rule wouldnt apply in such a situation. The question "how would you like to be eaten" then becomes frivolous to you because you don't eqate the cow with yourself.
Now, let us look at an example closer to home. Prior to the Holocaust, Jews were in the same situation as the cow in the previous example. No, they werent being eaten

Now you may say, "but Isaac, the example with a cow used an animal to a person, whereas the jewish example uses two people".
To which I would say you've proven my point. For the Golden Rule to fulfill the claims of proponents, we would have to have a universal definition of "person, people, ethical treatment, hierarchy of worth etc.". If you are still unsure, throw in a person vs. person example where one of the people is a serial killer/rapist. Chances are the criminal will be seen as "less-than a person" and the golden rule will fall into a similar problem as it did with trying to use it on the anti-semite. "Im not a serial rapist/killer!, if I were I would want you to stop me"
So one would have to have empathy already established with someone/thing with the same "likeness" to you with which you can do perspective-taking and identify with.
The relativity of the criteria on which the golden rule depends on, and the fact that is contributes nothing of its own, merely a reflection of something that would already have to be there, makes the Golden rule little more than a placebo for those claiming to be moral.
-Cheers!

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