A number of posts on different threads have crystallized a thought that has been underlying a lot of my posting on morality. I think there are two ways of looking at morals and moral decisions that are common on the board. One is that we, our some surrogate entity look at the greater good from some Olympian height calculating what is the overall impact and seeing the big picture. In this view we can connect all those who might believe in gods together and say that Muslims are all somehow responsible for Paris, Beirut, Yola etc.
It's the view that was behind the thread that drew me back to the board a couple of years ago where we discussed what you do if a nutter with a vital of some dread virus says they will break it unless you allow them to torture a child to death. Viewing the thread , there was near unanimity that you allow the child to be tortured so I rejoined to disagree with that.
And I still disagree with it because I am at the opposite end of view. I don't think we can see the big picture , or indeed that there are any surrogate entities doing it on our behalf. We can develop some basic heuristics which allows us to object to things in principle, slavery, murder, rape etc but most of our dilemmas are smaller. I fear the big picture view as it leads to wanting to make grand statements and gestures, to seek solutions and if none obvious come to mind to throw our hands up and declare things to be impossible. It also leads to the classic folly of 'We must do something. This is something. We must do this'
My view is almost myopic. I look at the thread on Tuam and can see no connection with my mother and her belief and that abomination. My mother does not contribute to the world view in a calculating manner, and, I would suggest, such a hubristic view is only held by wannabe tyrants, madmen and fools. As said before to quote Hue and Cry,most of us are 'ordinary angels winning tiny victories'. I think we should accept that that's probably in reality true for all of us and that thinking there is anyone out there with a grand plan is a wish for wisdom that does not and has never existed. We expect politicians to solve things when I think we should first hope that they don't make things worse, and then inch by inch make things a tiny bit better.
In a world where working out the best utilities tariff is such a challenge, solving the problems in Syria is not about the big plans. It's about the saving of one child.