I agree with you here that majority rules is not necessarily the best way to determine right and wrong. I'm going to leave legal and illegal out of it because theoretically right should equal legal and wrong should equal illegal and I don't want to confuse the issue. However, if democracy (majority rules or variations where you need a certain amount of majority to rule) is not the best system to determine what is right or wrong then what is? A single man? How do you pick him? A small council? How do you pick them?Limewater wrote:You do not have to believe to believe in absolute right or wrong to disagree with the "might makes right" ideas of democracy. Not believing in absolute right or wrong does not logically lead one to democracy or a 50% + 1 determination of right and wrong. Additionally, there is no necessary link between "right" and "wrong" and "legal" and "illegal". There are many things that I believe to be wrong which I also believe should be legal.I agree that there are certain acts that tend to be considered wrong across all cultures and times. However, I don't see these as absolute morals as immuatable as the physical laws that govern the universe. I see these as survival mechanisms that allow humans and society to continue to grow and evolve. To use your rape and child killing But this aversion initiates from a subconcious level. And we can look through history and see just how often war and rape go hand-in-hand.
The conversation at this point can go two ways. Either it can continue as a discussion of politics, or the existence of absolute morality. I do not see a strong correlation between the two.
Any system of government involves trading in some amount of freedom to do whatevery ou want in exchange for security. A system of laws determines what you can and cannot do. By the very nature of having government the laws must apply to everyone (once again, let's not cloud the issue with special case laws). And no matter how the laws are picked there will be people that disagree with them. So how do you decide which things should be laws? Democracy has the greatest chance of creating laws that people will accept because they the majority of the population has agreed that something should be a law.
Now, don't forget that we don't live in a democracy; we live in a republic. There is a big difference between the two. Can you imagine trying to pass ANYTHING if everyone in America was allowed to vote on it?