fadingCaptain said:
One thing is for sure: making a late payment on a credit card has little to do with morality.
Absolutely. But that a person could make that connection says something about his grasp on morality. And makes for interesting discussion

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StrayDogStrut said:
To begin with, morality is of course, subjective.
Subjective to what? I would say, at most, our
experience of it is subjective. Our application of moral guidelines depends on our understanding of its requirements. But I would like to see you substantiate whether those
requirements are so subjective.
But once you start to establish faith in something, such as the coworker guy has faith in the Bible, you are bound by those values.
This is exactly where the discussion went, this "distancing" from responsibility. Are you saying that if you don't profess faith in something, you are not bound to it? This why the statement "morality is subjective", might itself be considered immmoral. If you apply that belief consistently, you are exonerating yourself from responsibility towards another person - which is the
essence of morality. It says, "I might not be responsible for the things others think I should be responible for". If don't say which morals you consider subjective, who can trust you? That's why we make laws - to compensate for those who might actually live as if all morals subjective.
People develop their own moral code. If someone thinks that stealing is alright if you need it and the victim doesn't, and they don't mind when they're at the receiving end of it, sure, that's cool. But that's where the whole line in the sandbox o society comes in.
Those lines are the last frontiers of depravity, and they become increasingly blurry. On the one hand we have a government that protects freedom, and on the other we have individuals who distance themselves from the government yet profit from that freedom. People who develop their own moral code are moral parasites, but so are people who simply rely on others to dictate their morality to them. If you don't live a moral life, you are not being moral - not subjectively
or objectively.
So, to end my incoherent message, I think the coworker is immoral but social acceptable. He's not really doing anything social unacceptable, but he is breaking his own moral code
Is a criminal only guilty when he commits the crime? There are socially acceptible crimes, committed by people who have distanced themselves from any higher moral responsibility ("since it's relative, anyway"). They're not breaking any moral code, by your definition. Should we wait until they do, before we show them the road they're on?