this post was submitted on 31 Oct 2023
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[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

You could argue that "moral compass" means more than just a strong sense of right/wrong. Presumably, most people have that, even if we don't describe it as such. I think OP intended something more like a "strong sense of harmony" wherein everyone has a shared common understanding of some greater good and therefore work towards it with common cause.

It's still a fairly naive notion, but for an entirely different reason. Rather than self-righteous chaos, such a wish would lead to a sort of moral tyranny imposed by one single person's preconceptions of what constitutes a moral life.

[–] sylver_dragon 1 points 1 year ago

I think OP intended something more like a “strong sense of harmony"

Or, more succinctly, the wish was "everyone has my moral compass, and can't ignore it". Unfortunately, the foundations upon which people build their "moral compass" is almost as varied as people themselves. It's one of the reasons politics exists, so that we can sort out where to draw the legal line in between differing beliefs, without resorting to the age-old practice of deciding who is right through a war which sorts out who is left.