I think it’s an artifact of how we think about ethics. It doesn’t FEEL like a bullet should fly the same exact way as an arrow or as a rock, but when you feel your moral intuitions they seem like they should obviously apply to everyone. Maybe because we learn about throwing things and motion through infinitely iterated trial and error, but we learn about morality from simple commands from our parents/teachers, we think about them in different ways.
So, I’m not quite sure I understood you, but you seem to be explaining how someone might come to believe that ethics are universal/objective in the sense of right action not depending on the actor or the situation at all, even at relatively low levels of specification like “eat more vegetables” or whatever.
Did I get that right?
If so… sure, I can see where someone whose moral intuitions primarily derive from obeying the commands of others might end up with ethics that work like that.
I think it’s an artifact of how we think about ethics. It doesn’t FEEL like a bullet should fly the same exact way as an arrow or as a rock, but when you feel your moral intuitions they seem like they should obviously apply to everyone. Maybe because we learn about throwing things and motion through infinitely iterated trial and error, but we learn about morality from simple commands from our parents/teachers, we think about them in different ways.
So, I’m not quite sure I understood you, but you seem to be explaining how someone might come to believe that ethics are universal/objective in the sense of right action not depending on the actor or the situation at all, even at relatively low levels of specification like “eat more vegetables” or whatever.
Did I get that right?
If so… sure, I can see where someone whose moral intuitions primarily derive from obeying the commands of others might end up with ethics that work like that.