Section IV: Deconstructing Morality

Introduction

Once truth and power have been reimagined, morality is the next domino to fall. If there is no transcendent God, and if all social structures are suspect, then on what basis can we claim anything is right or wrong? This section explores how modern thinkers answered that question—often by deconstructing morality itself.

From Freud’s plumbing of the unconscious to Kinsey’s statistical normalization of behavior and Singer’s utilitarian calculus, the foundations of traditional ethics were systematically eroded. Morality was reframed as a product of psychological repression, social convention, or a cold calculation of outcomes.

The result is a world where “good” and “evil” are replaced by “healthy” and “unhealthy,” “authentic” and “inauthentic,” or “useful” and “harmful.” Here, we trace the intellectual moves that led to our current state of moral fragmentation.

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