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Throughout history, the noblest atrocities have been committed not in defiance of morality but under its banner. The Inquisition tortured in the name of spiritual salvation. Holy wars slaughtered millions to uphold divine virtue. Entire civilizations were dismantled because their customs offended someone else's moral code. Even today, moral convictions fuel bitter conflicts over abortion, vaccination, capital punishment, and countless other issues-not because the participants lack principles, but because they possess them with absolute certainty.
The Morality Trap proposes four rigorous laws demonstrating that morality, far from being an unassailable pillar of civilization, is an illusion-a construct shaped by culture, history, and subjective perception rather than by any absolute truth. The First Law reveals morality's illusory nature. The Second Law shows that morality becomes immoral the moment it is imposed by force. The Third Law exposes the futility of moral arguments in disputes between incompatible value systems. The Fourth Law argues that life, dignity, and well-being must stand above any moral prescription, because morality is not equal to the good of society.
Drawing on evolutionary biology, biochemistry, philosophy from Kant to Nietzsche, formal systems theory, and unflinching historical evidence, this book traces morality from its biological roots in animal behavior to its most destructive social manifestations. It integrates cutting-edge research on self-organizing systems, the structural distortion of perception, the formal architecture of deception, and the mathematical proof that totalizing ideals-pursued to their logical extreme-inevitably destroy the very values they claim to protect.
Yet this is not a call to amorality. It is a call to something higher-to a quiet, unconditional goodness that needs no dogma, no enforcement, and no self-righteous banner. A goodness as natural and necessary as breathing.
Keywords: morality, ethics, moral relativism, philosophy, evolutionary biology, social systems, human rights
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