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First, let's get the potential for drive-by sniping from those who haven't been following along at home out of the way: I am fully and completely against the death penalty, a card-carrying member of Amnesty International and a person of deep religious conviction.
Second, No I honestly don't think that the traffic laws in Luxor are on a par with putting people to death. However, the ways we decide the rightness or wrongness of the acts as a society are similar.
Lemme 'splain.
If we take God out of the equation; if we assume that the notions of right and wrong, good and evil, moral and immoral do not come from a source external to humanity, then we have to suggest they come from humanity itself.
These abstract concepts are very real ways that humanity, society has found make it possible for mankind to live together in community in relative amounts of peace. Time and experience have shown us that we get along better in if we don't steal one another's things, seduce each other's spouses, kill when the whim or the anger overtakes us, etc...
The more complex and involved the society and it's culture, the more complex and evolved its concept of right and wrong.
Most members of what we call the 'animal kingdom' don't suffer from the concept of right and wrong. If the puma feels hungry or threatened or pissed off, it likely will kill and feel no remorse.
If Hammurabi had chosen instead of patterning his code after the laws Anu to pattern them after the natural tendencies in the animal kingdom, societies and our concepts of what is right and wrong might have evolved very differently.
We can say that we're speaking to different things, but ultimately -we're not. It is a society's concept of right and wrong over time and through popular agreement, that shape that society's or any individual culture's concepts of right and wrong.
As abominable as we perceive slavery today, it was for centuries a part of the human landscape which was not believed wrong. Even the religions of this earth built parable regarding the treatment of slaves and never suggested the concept itself evil.
But time and a gradually growing population who found the practice shameful and wrong changed the belief in slavery's correctness. So, the bible and Q'ran say you can have slaves, but conscience now tells us it's wrong.
For centuries, premarital sex was considered a deeply wrong and immoral thing. Time and a predominant population who saw no harm has changed that concept. In much of contemporary western society, its not not only no longer a bad thing, -it's now a good thing. We congratulate one another on having acheived it.
Without god in the mix, without a moral absolute, time and popular opinion do and have changed the minds and hearts of societies with regard to what is right and wrong.
Even if it were true that more people believed in the correctness of the death penalty than believed it wrong, that would not necessarily make it correct, or wise, or objectively virtuous. But if for the next 200 years, a vastly larger portion of the population believed it correct and wise, it might grow to be like those traffic laws in Luxor, like the public perception of premarital sex. The world might lose track of the reasons why would should feel it wrong and shameful.
I like to hope, instead that we'll give up killing people in favour of treating the insanities, and teaching. I like to hope we'll change our perspectives on the acceptabilities of polluting the environment and treating education and educators with less regard and pay than we treat rubbish collection.
I wonder how to reconcile a moral absolute like 'a wrong thing is always wrong.' With moral relativism like 'a groping is worse than a theft,' - except in Italy, of course.
Anytime death is involved it holds a moral trump on that relativism, but the progressive in me acknowledges that not all people see it from my perspective. Many countries and many cultures feel there is merit in putting to death those who live outside certain of their laws. I don't agree. We allow people to have abortions in this country, some here and in many cultures find that horrific. I don't agree. And the more I think about the fierce passions of people's belief that which is right and that which is wrong the more relative the perceived correctness of a thing becomes.
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