Subject: For me it is a little bit different
Author:
Posted on: 2015-06-28 19:35:00 UTC
I do not see that act of killing another human being as inherently wrong. I do not see things in black or white, I am a moral relativist.
Take for example this hypothetical, A kills B for monetary gain. Is this wrong? I would say as a general rule as yes. But now lets change it up a bit. A kills B, but but was about to kill C. Is this wrong? I do not think so. Or taking it further. A kills B, but B is an enemy combatant during a war. Is that wrong? No.
For me the reason I see murder, which I will chose to define as the unjustified killing of another, as wrong is because of its overall effect on society. I very much subscribe to Thomas Hobbes' State of Nature theory, "during the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called warre; and such a warre as is of every man against every man"
Or put another way, I believe humans really are just animals. But animals with the capacity for something greater. But I think we do need civilization to keep our baser instincts in check. Just look at what happens during times of great chaos: looting, killing, other acts of violence. In those times when civilization fails, I think we see what humans really are. So I think that murder, as I defined it above, is wrong because it harms civilization as a whole, and brings humanity closer to their natural state.
Of course, evolution and my personal religion are not inconsistent, but I do not need someone in a fancy hat to tell me the unjustified killing of another is wrong. It is because it harms society and civilization as a whole.