More on Natural Moral Institutions
Overview
The properties already described are listed and elaborated here:
L | Types of Moral Institution | Identity Realm [PH'4] & Typical Concerns |
Society's Survival Need |
Main Ethical Rule* & Target |
---|---|---|---|---|
I" | Sensory: dress, appearance, dining, speech. |
Ceremonial respect | Prescriptions [PH'6L1] for social behaviours |
|
II" | Vital (Body): sex. aggression, work, alcohol, drugs, money. |
Conformity | Conventions [PH'6L2] for social attitudes |
|
III" | Emotional: any quality or aspect of a society that enables attachment. |
Energy | Tenets [PH'6L3] for social values |
|
IV" | Individual: Claims, duties, powers, disabilities, privileges, immunities, liabilities. |
Order | Rights [PH'6L4] for social boundaries |
|
V" | Relational: handling personal and social relationships. |
Virtue | Maxims [PH'6L5] for social functioning |
|
VI" | Social: maintaining peace, order, justice, freedom and the common good. |
Stability | Laws [PH'6L6] for social enforcement |
|
VII" | Transpersonal: mysteries of existence—especially evil, suffering, God. |
Meaning | Absolutes [PH'6L7] for social existence |
*Each institution uses all
: see below.Tables are modified from Ch.7 Working with Values: Software of the Mind (1995).
For a more detailed explanation, download Ch. 7 here.
Effects on Individuals
Individuality matters because these powerful and enduring
impact heavily on each member of society, often in an unforgiving way. Compliance demands, and the approach to individual differences, vary according to the .Each
takes a distinctive view of individuals and their differences: at the lowest levels, individuals are regarded as virtually identical. However, as the hierarchy is ascended, the significance of individual differences is increasingly realized until at the very highest these differences are transcended.
Ethical Rules within the Institutions
The
Satellite only provides ultra-brief summary accounts of ethical matters.Working with Values: Software of the Mind (1995) explored ethical choice and ethical institutions in detail.
See Ch.6 for
See Ch.7 for .
See Ch.8 for .
See Ch.9 for .
The Chapters can be downloaded free.
Originally posted: July 2009; Last updated: 12 June 2014.