jonathan180iq
Well-Known Member
Well I can give this test a go around. Let us start with the OBJECTIVE FACT that every proposition can be denied. So I hope you are not going to perform that route JUST BECAUSE you can and it is legal. I am expecting you to be better than that.
So here we go. Lets us take a look a Hitler and the Nazi regime. Most humans already chime in emotionally here but still IS TORTUIRING and MURDERING sets of HUMAN BEINGS morally WRONG?
Let's state some facts. The human beings in this scenario were usually adult human beings. These adult human beings already had lives before their capture. These human beings were taken against their free will. These human being were forced to endure physical pain and other physical hardships involuntarily and could have survived without undergoing such treatment.
Let me say these combined facts lead a rational person to say the acts inflicted on the Jews were morally wrong and regardless of race, color or religion the same acts would be UNIVERSALLY wrong no matter which human beings I chose.
Let's start here.
What is it that you want to know?
Do I personally believe that the atrocities of the Holocaust were morally wrong? Of course I do.
My personal moral code is actually quite strict, considering what I'm arguing for in this conversation. But none of that matters as you're missing the whole point of this thread.
What does it matter if you or I think it's wrong to slaughter whole eithnicites through attrition? What does it matter if we agree that even one killing is morally wrong? We aren't talking about whether or not someone feels or agrees that something is morally wrong - we are debating the claim that morality is objective. I maintain that it is not.
To this point of the conversation, no one has made a decent argument for the position of objective morality, they've simply stated that it must be, usually adding a theological prerequisite to it.
Is it objectively wrong to harm others in order to achieve selfish goals? The answer to that question, almost without exception, is that it depends on who the enemy is and what one is trying to accomplish.
Morality is much more complicated than simply asking if the Nazi's were bad. (Being aware, of course, that those very same Nazis believed that they were somehow doing right.) We can look at this from a personal or social perspective, but regardless of which one you choose, you're still going to find that morality works on a scale, not in bullet points.
- Is it morally wrong to kill someone?
- Yes!
- Is killing someone always wrong?
- Yes...
- Is killing someone wrong when it can be justified by defense of person or nation?
- ....I...I don't know. It depends.
- Is it wrong to kill even when God tells you to do it?
- ...Well, that's different...
- Is it wrong to kill someone through indirect action, like supporting a society that routinely kills innocents as part of it's global peace policy?
- That's ridiculous! You're just being difficult!
If any question after the first one results in any answer other than YES, then killing people isn't actually wrong, is it? How can something that is sometimes right and sometimes wrong be considered objectively true? Apply that questioning scale to yourself and to your country. Then apply that same scale to your Nazi hypothetical... Are the answers any different?