30Jan/102
Hypermoralism – Morality causes ordinary people to do immoral things.
Some people believe that immoral acts are caused by amoral individuals. However, very few people are truly immoral (~1% of individuals are psychopaths). The idea of the term, hypermoralism, is to popularize the idea that morality can actually cause people to be immoral, rather than prevent them from being immoral (e.g. see this post). It's very close to the idea of idealistic evil, except that I think the use of 'evil' makes it harder for people to see it in themselves. It's easier to accept that one might engage in hypermoralism from time to time rather than idealistic evil. But it's basically the same concept, couched in non-judgmental terms.
I hope to explore the idea of hypermoralism in a series of blog posts.
Posts in this category:
- Hypermoral Debt Ceiling Quotes
- Hypermoral Debt Ceiling Quotes
- Libya as a moral war (except for libertarians)
- Osama Bin Laden’s Death is a chance to escape Zero-Sum thinking
- Osama Bin Laden’s Death is a chance to escape Zero-Sum thinking
- You can’t put out a Fire with Gasoline – A Reaction to reactions to the Giffords Shooting
- Stewart/Colbert’s Rally to Restore Sanity and the Psychology of Moderates
- On Hyperpartisanship, Hypermoralism, and the Supernormal Stimuli of Modern Politics
- On Hyperpartisanship, Hypermoralism, and the Supernormal Stimuli of Modern Politics
- Sam Harris’ TED video and the danger of liberal atheist moral absolutism
- The Psychology of Aggression and the Ugliness of the Health Care Reform Debate
- Religion does not cause racism, but group morality may underlie both.
- Hypermoralism – Morality causes ordinary people to do immoral things.
- Hypermoralism – Morality causes ordinary people to do immoral things.
- Methland by Nick Reding: Moral Maximizing and the Drug War