Do you have a moral code you try to live by? - Well, do you?

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I used to (try to) live in a daoistic mindset, but some time ago I somehow lost the way (pun intended).

Nice to see a Stirner post on here lol


I dont want to list bunch of 'isms like it is a Twitter/Tumblr bio; the general ethics that I follow is avoiding causing harm if possible, especially if they are weaker than me.
 
I don't go out of my way to hurt people, but for the most part I look out for me and mine only.

Used to be more of a do-gooder but life smacked me upside the head and mugged me while I was counting stars and I haven't been the same since. Takes a long drag of my cigarette and a sip of my Old Fashioned as the screen fades to black
 
Don't diddle kids, I think anyone can get behind that. I guess that's more ethical then moral though.
 
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"Family is first"
As a man, its my duty to make sure my family is safe and well provided, if I can't do that much then I've failed as both human and man.

I also like this tidbit.
 
Enjoy life and try not to get in the way of others doing the same.
It's not that fucking difficult.
Not getting in the way of miserable people is recommended, too.

OT: Don´t disturb me with your fucking bullshit, can´t you see I´m grilling/playing viday?
 
Having a moral code is inflexible. It sounds edgy, but really, are you so mature that you have all the answers to every situation? Take every situation as it comes, work in context, and try to get out with nothing bad happening in general. It's all anyone can do in life, and expecting more is entitlement on your/their part. And if that's a moral code, then I say the situation is still very dynamic
 
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Having a moral code is inflexible. It sounds edgy, but really, are you so mature that you have all the answers to every situation? Take every situation as it comes, work in context, and try to get out with nothing bad happening in general. It's all anyone can do in life, and expecting more is entitlement on your/their part. And if that's a moral code, then I say the situation is still very dynamic
So that's a no.
 
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Not anymore. I eat the elephant one bite at a time when it comes to life, and I'm simply too physically and psychologically exhausted to give a shit about "right and wrong". I just do things for me, and hope for the best. By default, I tend to fall in line with Christian morality, but I don't exactly put any effort into being a good boy. If that happens, it's by coincidence.
 
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Not anymore. I eat the elephant one bite at a time when it comes to life, and I'm simply too physically and psychologically exhausted to give a shit about "right and wrong". I just do things for me, and hope for the best. By default, I tend to fall in line with Christian morality, but I don't exactly put any effort into being a good boy. If that happens, it's by coincidence.
In later life Desmond Tutu became more existentialist about things.
 
Fortitude - being without self-pity
Obedience - being without ego after agreement is reached
Industriousness - doing a hard days work without complaint
Sense of Order - allowing for hierarchies & spiritual authority and not attempting to go around them
Tolerant Godliness - letting each choose their own salvation
Strength of Mind - the ability to stick to one's purpose at hand without wavering
Responsibility - having a sense of the importance of the matter at hand
Austerity - being anti-materialistic
Courage - being in control of one's fear
Incorruptibility - being without mercenary double-dealing
Sense of Duty - being more substance than semblance
Matching Discipline to Frankness - being sincerely committed while still committing to complete sincerity
Uprightness - holding to a cause alone if one must
Prudence - knowing when to have foresight, wisdom, and personal discretion
 
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Everyone has a code they live by, a kernel if you will. They may not know what it is but if you consider the whole of a person, you can make a pretty good guess.

For me:
  1. I will never go in your yard uninvited (and all metaphors you can extrapolate).
  2. I will always be where I said I was going to be, doing what I said I was going to be doing, and with the people I said I’d be doing it with.
  3. I will never agree to something I know I cannot or will not deliver.
Which is why dealing with Trickster culture causes me fundamental outrage, and why its ascent has divorced me from the left. Everyone I truly despise in that elemental sort of way is a Trickster or representing or defending Tricksters. Tricksters live to violate the boundaries of people who respect boundaries, lie to people who themselves are honest, and promise things they have no intention of providing...and they think it’s hilarious and you deserved it for falling for the trick.
 
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Fortitude - being without self-pity
Obedience - being without ego after agreement is reached
Industriousness - doing a hard days work without complaint
Sense of Order - allowing for hierarchies & spiritual authority and not attempting to go around them
Tolerant Godliness - letting each choose their own salvation
Strength of Mind - the ability to stick to one's purpose at hand without wavering
Responsibility - having a sense of the importance of the matter at hand
Austerity - being anti-materialistic
Courage - being in control of one's fear
Incorruptibility - being without mercenary double-dealing
Sense of Duty - being more substance than semblance
Matching Discipline to Frankness - being sincerely committed while still committing to complete sincerity
Uprightness - holding to a cause alone if one must
Prudence - knowing when to have foresight, wisdom, and personal discretion
Lefties must fear and dispise you. More power to your elbow.
 
Having a moral code is inflexible. It sounds edgy, but really, are you so mature that you have all the answers to every situation? Take every situation as it comes, work in context, and try to get out with nothing bad happening in general. It's all anyone can do in life, and expecting more is entitlement on your/their part. And if that's a moral code, then I say the situation is still very dynamic
You have a consequential moral code as opposed to a deontological one.
A consequential moral code is one that relies on the consequences of one's actions in order to define the morality of said actions.
Pros:
  • It makes immediate sense at the surface level for those immediately skeptical of the concept of morality
  • Post-hoc evaluation of a decision has evidence to demonstrate it
  • If done properly, the most "good" will apply to most people and the least "bad" will be done to the fewest people
Cons:
  • It requires competence to do properly
  • Well meaning individuals could be seen as "immoral" due to unforeseen consequences of their actions
  • Terrible things can be done in the effort to achieve a greater end goal ("Utopia is just one purge away, comrade!")

A deontological code is one that is more "rule-based" in that intent and outcomes are not what determine the morality of an action, the action itself does.
Pros:
  • Easy to tell "right" from "wrong"
  • No competence required; only adherence to the code
  • No "do bad thing for greater good"
Cons:
  • A bad code leads to a terrible society
  • Is inflexible and dogmatic
  • Disregards the results of an action ("this person will die if you don't do this 'bad' thing, but at least you weren't the one to directly cause his death so it's better that you don't do the 'bad' thing")
Of course, I doubt very many people are 100% for either of these frameworks. It's more a spectrum if anything. Nietzsche's "master/slave" morality is basically the idea that which code you choose depends on how much control you have over other people's behavior: A master (one who has this control) should act consequentially whereas a slave (one who is controlled) should act deontologically. But I think it's fair to say most everyone tends to operate in some weird and varying hybrid of both regardless of social status.
What I mean to say is it's all a spectrum. But it's best to try to think of a concise way of expressing what it is that makes something "good" or "bad" to you.
 
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