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(You don't have to agree with my claims at this point, we seem to be bogged down in semantics. I think I can hold up my end of the discussion with any linguistic choices you'd prefer - given basic fairness.)
Look, there issue at hand is where did morals come from in the first place. Someone had to think of it. You lean toward a notion where anybody can come up with their own standards of morals on a whim. Does it mean that this is how Athiests operate?
"Expertise"? At morals? Yeah...no. Nope, uh uh. There are general judgments and consensus of right and wrong for society, but
"moral expertise"? What the heck is such a thing?
Who would claim such a thing and what makes a person so special as to claim it?
Who would decide that person has it and what gives that person or people the right?
Nope. Too many things in this world, the right and wrong of which, are subjective.
I simply don't see how anyone can claim such a standing that they know better than anyone else the final say so on what those right and wrongs should be. Such a stance...pure narcissism.
Anyone can come up with their own morals and, in fact, lots of people do, regardless of their religious beliefs. However, morality is enforced on a societal level. It doesn't matter what morality you put in your head, it matters how society holds you accountable for your actions and your requirement to follow society's laws and moral dictates.
This is how HUMANS operate. Many theists simply don't understand that.
My confusion is how you define "well being". What is your definition.Jerry -
What parts of post #94 are confusing? As far as well being... would you say that a person who lives in a safe community, has a good job, and a healthy family probably has more "well being" than another person who is homeless, diseased, and starving? Would you say that a woman in Pakistan who gets raped and is afraid to report the rape is experiencing "well being"? Probably not. Perhaps the confusion here is that people don't tend to think of "well being" as being quantifiable. Is that your confusion?
Indeed. At times it almost looks like they believe atheists exist in a separate world and are somehow subject to different laws of nature and society.
I meant happyness is outweighed by the unhappyness.I'm an atheist/daoist, and I think what is right, or wrong is based on the net happyness, or unhappyness the action creates. if you want to murder someone, then it is wrong, because your unhappyness is outweighed by the unhappyness of the person, and their loved ones.
This^^Morals come from our innate empathy coupled with our ability to reason, something all psychologically sound people possess, regardless of whether or not they believe in god.
You're not a moral person if you're only "good" out of hope for reward and out of fear of punishment.
Morals come from our innate empathy coupled with our ability to reason, something all psychologically sound people possess, regardless of whether or not they believe in god.what about culture, upbringing- your parents, grandparents and great grandparents, were they all atheists?
Morality is global. everyone has morals.We all exist in the same world and our actions have consequences that quite transcend our personal perceptions.
That alone is enough to evidence that morality must be global.
Is this to say that you believe most morals are objective?Are you sure? I think you will find out that very few actually are.
How would you measure this outside of appeal to popularity?Not better than "anyone else", but better than most people, why not? We accept that for most other intellectual skills, after all. Morality has no reason to be any different.