- Posts: 2143
- Joined: Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:32 am
It's not moral relativism to point out that determining what is moral vs immoral, right vs wrong, is often complicated in real life as opposed to children's books. I was not equating all of my examples, in fact I think throwing at a batter's head is always wrong in a way that taking PED's isn't. One endangers lives, the latter decision, pre-2004, did not violate baseball's rules. In fact you keep insisting it was "cheating" but there was no rule of baseball that was violated. What is right or wrong in many contexts is a complicated thing.
Abundant food is always at some level a "good". Killing is at some level always a "bad". But the circumstances of the killing determine how much a bad, and it may even be a necessary bad to prevent greater evils. I'm not sure that pointing out that life's nuances apply to baseball history makes one a moral relativist. A moral empiricist maybe, but relativist no. Pointing out that morality is complicated isn't the same thing as saying there are no principles.
The largest point of all here is that what counts as "cheating" is a complicated idea, not a simple one. There are rules of the game, but they exist within authority structures who not only refuse to enforce some of the rules, but in the case of Glavine etc, make up unwritten new ones. If Bonds smacks his wife around is that bad? Yep, no question. I don't think the same is unequivocally true if he uses PEDs.