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Is Morality a Majoritarian Tyranny?

Copernicus January 20, 2026 at 13:54 1300 views 28 comments
If we agree that just because the majority says something doesn't make it right (in most cases, which can be mobocracy), why have we codified societal rulings on ethics and morals in our lives?

Comments (28)

I like sushi January 20, 2026 at 14:18 #1036424
You have seen the light! :D
T_Clark January 20, 2026 at 14:36 #1036426
Quoting Copernicus
If we agree that just because the majority says something doesn't make it right (in most cases, which can be mobocracy), why have we codified societal rulings on ethics and morals in our lives?


I’ll turn your comment around. It’s not majoritarian tyranny. It’s necessary social control to maintain societal equilibrium. That’s not to say it doesn’t squash people sometimes, but as a general matter, it’s inevitable and indispensable.
Zebeden January 20, 2026 at 16:01 #1036435
Unless you live alone on some remote island, you are part of a society. And for a society to function, most of its members must at least give their tacit approval to certain things.

Even when people are ruled by a tyrant, the majority often goes along with the tyrannical rule and does not resist—hence the tacit approval. Otherwise, the tyrant would be overthrown the very same day he came to power.
BC January 20, 2026 at 16:49 #1036440
Quoting T Clark
That’s not to say it doesn’t squash people sometimes


That's what our system of squash courts are for: upholding morality.
Christoffer January 20, 2026 at 16:51 #1036441
Reply to Copernicus

Though, morality changes and shifts with time. It is not a decision made by a majority that “now we think like this”, but rather a defining set of values by a certain generation. A new generation will likely shift what is considered moral and as the older generation dies, the new generation morals start to become the norm.
Copernicus January 20, 2026 at 19:03 #1036456
Copernicus January 20, 2026 at 19:05 #1036458
Reply to T Clark I think you're confusing ethics with laws.
Copernicus January 20, 2026 at 19:06 #1036459
Reply to Zebeden I think you're confusing ethics with laws. (2)
Copernicus January 20, 2026 at 19:06 #1036460
Reply to Christoffer I think you're confusing ethics with laws. (3)
Christoffer January 20, 2026 at 19:19 #1036465
Quoting Copernicus
I think you're confusing ethics with laws. (3)


Laws are formed out of the morals of the people. Laws are just the most extreme form of the consensus of morals. And if laws are based on morals that only half of the people hold, then it usually becomes the focus of that time's politics.
T_Clark January 20, 2026 at 19:38 #1036473
Quoting Copernicus
I think you're confusing ethics with laws.


Ethics and morality are just fancy words for social control.

Laws are one kind of social control, but not the only or most common one.
Tom Storm January 20, 2026 at 20:10 #1036478
Reply to Copernicus Where do we find morality? I know there are laws.
GazingGecko January 20, 2026 at 22:38 #1036500
Quoting Copernicus
If we agree that just because the majority says something doesn't make it right (in most cases, which can be mobocracy), why have we codified societal rulings on ethics and morals in our lives?


I think people seldomly codify ethics in their lives. Actions and judgments accord far more to convenience, signaling social tribes, and vibes about what seems normal. Rather than a code, it is frequently an incoherent mess of various conflicting judgments picked up socially.

This description is not universal. Some people are more principled and virtuous. Most people reason and reflect on occasion and can be motivated by what they think is right. But the bulk of "ethical" engagement is influenced by a cluster of tribal instincts. On reflection, one could see that something's popularity does not make it right, but the comfort of getting along is often more enticing than any cold principle or code.
Copernicus January 21, 2026 at 05:13 #1036536
Reply to Tom Storm Reply to T Clark Reply to Christoffer

Laws can go beyond ethics and address procedural issues. Ethics are taught in family and society.

For example, an old man can't sleep with a 4 y/o. But they can with an adult. Let's use laws and ethics interchangeably. Why do you think we've all agreed to this? Let's assume the kid is his own and no community war will break out.
Tom Storm January 21, 2026 at 05:46 #1036537
Reply to Copernicus I think such matters boil down to intersubjective agreement. This is never unanimous, there are always dissenters, and the mores or systems we have, whether informal codes of conduct or formal laws, were built up over time. Some are now obsolete, some are too weak, and some are simply silly. The question is whether we think people would behave respectfully towards each other without the law.
LuckyR January 21, 2026 at 06:00 #1036540
If we agree that just because the majority says something doesn't make it right (in most cases, which can be mobocracy), why have we codified societal rulings on ethics and morals in our lives?

Reply to Copernicus
If by "codified", you mean "passed laws", I'd ask what your alternative would be? Laws based on what a small minority of the community thought was correct? Though since laws are passed by legislators (not the populace), I suppose one could argue that laws aren't passed by the majority of those governed by those laws, rather a majority of their representatives, who make up their own community.
Christoffer January 21, 2026 at 11:33 #1036556
Quoting Copernicus
Laws can go beyond ethics and address procedural issues. Ethics are taught in family and society.

For example, an old man can't sleep with a 4 y/o. But they can with an adult. Let's use laws and ethics interchangeably. Why do you think we've all agreed to this? Let's assume the kid is his own and no community war will break out.


You argue like both laws and ethics overall was something that everyone just decided on overnight. Morality and laws grows out of society over time. Most fundamental moral values appeared organically over years of trying to find stability within social communities. If someone murders, steals or abuse a child, it has always had major negative consequences on the community in which it happened. And so people started to adopt values that forms the basis for stability in that community.

By the time a community grew so large it needed laws, those laws were based on those values.

And if we look at nations and cultures with practices which breaks against this basic idea of stability, they’re usually corrupted states in which people of power decide what’s best for them and not the society they govern. In those places, violence and immoral behavior becomes a norm only accepted by the risk of more violence and harm. If that society were to rid themselves of abusive leaders, they would slowly rid themselves of such values over time as the need for stability overturns the arbitrary ethics that were forced upon the people.

If we look at nations today which are considered free democracies (actual free democracies, not the US), the fundamental laws reflect the people’s need for collective stability. They’re a set of ethics which over hundreds of years have, more or less by blood, been arrived at through trial and error of societal norms.

Morality is just an extension of the basic instincts that flock animals have to form a stability within the flock. It’s extended into a more advanced form because of the cognitive differences between animals and humans. Since humans make more complex decisions and since humans are able to form larger blocks of collective groups, morality becomes more complex along the line of the complexity of human interaction. But it’s still based on the stability of the group and the stability of the individual psyche based on the emotional guidance it has for our interaction with others.

If we treat the complexity of us as an intelligent species and that all our actions and what we humans build and transforms in reality, to be part of our biological being, then morality is an organic self-guiding mechanism for collective stability and psychological balance of the individual. Arrived at over time through evolutionary trial and error. Our laws are only reflections of this, put into systemic practice by the necessity to govern a massive amount of people as a collective.
Alexander Hine January 21, 2026 at 11:38 #1036559
Quoting Copernicus
If we agree that just because the majority says something doesn't make it right (in most cases, which can be mobocracy), why have we codified societal rulings on ethics and morals in our lives?


Can you give at least one real world example to support your hypothesis.
T_Clark January 21, 2026 at 14:43 #1036583
Quoting Copernicus
Laws can go beyond ethics and address procedural issues. Ethics are taught in family and society.


The fact that not all social control is related to ethics or morality does not mean that ethics and morality are not types of social control.
DingoJones January 22, 2026 at 03:52 #1036686
Quoting T Clark
The fact that not all social control is related to ethics or morality does not mean that ethics and morality are not types of social control.


Im curious how you would differentiate between social control and social responsibility. The responsibility IS the control?
Also, do you think that moral philosophers are motivated by control?
Without proper moral “control” in place, do you think immoral behaviours would just run rampant?
Lastly, are you including self control when you are talking about social control?
Alexander Hine January 22, 2026 at 08:43 #1036710
Rules and regulations do not necessarily set the template for moral conduct or its induction.
AmadeusD January 23, 2026 at 00:27 #1036865
T_Clark January 23, 2026 at 13:57 #1036952
Quoting DingoJones
Im curious how you would differentiate between social control and social responsibility. The responsibility IS the control?


Yes, I think this is right. Where does social responsibility come from? I can think of three sources socialization, desire to be thought well of, and an innate sense of personal responsibility. As I see it, only the last of these can be accurately called "morality."
Moliere January 23, 2026 at 15:17 #1036966
Quoting Copernicus
Ethics are taught in family and society.


Quoting Copernicus
If we agree that just because the majority says something doesn't make it right (in most cases, which can be mobocracy), why have we codified societal rulings on ethics and morals in our lives?


Because it was good enough for Moses and it was Good enough for Paw Paw so it's good enough for me.

Moral codes aren't really agreed upon as much as enforced. The insight of Freud is that we have a prohibition against incest because our id's desire is to have sex with our mother or father: extending this we should look at moral codes as signifiers of human desire. We prohibit these things because we are horrified by the desire people have. It's a sense of disgust which justifies punishing even your children harshly. (and most certainly the adults who know better)

[quote=Tao te Ching 38]
When the Tao is lost, there is goodness.
When goodness is lost, there is morality.
When morality is lost, there is ritual.
Ritual is the husk of true faith,
the beginning of chaos.
[/quote]

Athena January 23, 2026 at 17:11 #1036979
Quoting Copernicus
If we agree that just because the majority says something doesn't make it right (in most cases, which can be mobocracy), why have we codified societal rulings on ethics and morals in our lives?


I believe there is a connection between reason and morality. We used to read our children stories such as The King With No clothes, The Little Red Hen, The Fox and Grapes, and then ask, "What is the moral of that story." The answer would cause and effect. No one would help the Little Red Chicken make the bread, so she did not share it.

Especially The King With No Clothes is about saying what is true even when no one else is saying what is true.
DingoJones January 23, 2026 at 20:39 #1037004
Reply to T Clark i see, thanks. I was curious about the answers to my other questions as well.

“Also, do you think that moral philosophers are motivated by control?
Without proper moral “control” in place, do you think immoral behaviours would just run rampant?
Lastly, are you including self control when you are talking about social control?“
T_Clark January 24, 2026 at 23:26 #1037159
Quoting DingoJones
Also, do you think that moral philosophers are motivated by control?
Without proper moral “control” in place, do you think immoral behaviours would just run rampant?
Lastly, are you including self control when you are talking about social control?“


No, I don’t think moral philosophers are motivated by control.

As for the need for proper moral control— I don’t really care about immoral behaviors. What matters are behaviors that harm people and cause social disruption.

What I call morality relates to my own behavior. What do I think is the right thing to do? I guess that’s what you call self-control or conscience or what Taoists call “Te.”
DingoJones January 25, 2026 at 07:02 #1037178
Reply to T Clark

I see, thank you.