I came across something recently that really - to quote the Oracle from the Matrix - baked my noodle. It's a psychological framework proposed by a dude named Jonathan Haidt called Moral Foundations Theory.
Y'see, what Jonny boy claims is that there are six basic foundations of human moral reasoning. In no particular order, they are:
Authority - if a person is in charge or a rule is in place, do what they say.
Proportionality - if you hit me, I hit you back. Fair is fair.
Care - help as many people as possible, hurt as few people as possible.
Loyalty - if you're on my team, I've got your back.
Liberty - bullies shouldn't be able to tell people what to do.
Sanctity - some things (human life, childhood innocence, the truth, etc) are precious and in need of protection.
Haidt proposes that these six foundations - all of which have solid anthropological reasons for existing - are the basic axioms from which humans derive their morality. If two people don't have the same foundations, or value them differently, they won't reach the same conclusions about what's right and what's wrong (in much the same way that you likely won't come to an agreement about geometry if you're talking with someone who thinks parallel lines will eventually intersect).
Now, if you're anything like me, you saw that list of six and thought "Pfft, what are you talking about? There's the one true, objectively correct foundation of all ethical and moral behaviour, right there, surrounded, for some reason, by five things that people who are selfish and evil and wrong think are important." Of course, the problem is, we might be looking at different foundations when we say that.
If you know me at all, you probably know which foundation is mine - Care. I identify with Spock, sacrificing himself, saying "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few or the one". That altruism, to me, is synonymous with goodness. You can see that ethos all throughout Leftover Soup - consider Max's frustration with her father's appeals to Authority and Sanctity, because standing at her brother's grave doesn't benefit living veterans.
That's why, when my main man Bernie comes on the teevee and says "we're gonna take from those who have and give to those who need so that the maximum number of people will have access to healthcare and education", I find myself jumping up and saying "YES this is GOOD this is VIRTUOUS this is RIGHTEOUS." In contrast, if you value Liberty or Proportionality as your foundations, you're likely saying "No, this is evil! You're forcing people to pay more taxes! You're taking money away from people who earned it fair and square! This is WRONG!" Regardless of the solidity of Sanders' plans, we're not going to agree that they are morally right if we don't have the same foundation for moral rightness.
So now that I have this Moral Foundations Theory in my head, I find it prompts a whole host of other ideas and concepts and questions.
1) Am I, through my work, gathering like-minded people with similar foundations to myself? If I were to poll my fanbase, would we have a disproportionate number of Carers?
2) If political ideologies are linked to these foundations, does that mean that the more popular ideologies and the more popular politicians will be the ones who appeal to as many of the six as possible? Is it possible to craft a movement or an ideology that values all six evenly?
3) Is there some neutral standpoint, outside of these six, from which we can evaluate and weigh the foundations? Without appealing to Care for its own sake, can there be any reason for me to claim that Care is the right moral foundation to have? Conversely, does my lack of concern for the other five foundations indicate a failing on my part, and should I strive to reorient my own priorities to attain balance? If I did somehow value all six foundations equally, wouldn't that just make me inconsistent and incapable of weighing one priority against another?
4) Are your moral foundations immutable, or can they be changed by training or by force of will? Are you simply born or raised with them? People's ideologies tend to shift rightward as they age - is that a result of their foundations shifting?
5) If we could, Divergent-style, identify and separate people into six types, which type should go where? Which group should control the military? The stock market? The arts? Which groups would you think would cause the most trouble in society, be the most likely to disrupt and cause problems?
Anyway, I'm curious. If you guys would be so kind as to post your foundations (order them from 1 to 6, if you like) in this thread, I'd like to see where we're at, as a group.