justify
My mind
and yet you do not see how making god an exception invalidates your whole argument?
The apparent logical contradiction that results from having an uncaused cause is solved by understanding the definition of God. There we go.
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and yet you do not see how making god an exception invalidates your whole argument?
nice cop out.The apparent logical contradiction that results from having an uncaused cause is solved by understanding the definition of God. There we go.
So god is stationary, right?Now I will futher add something else: some things in this world are in motion, all things that are in motion have been put into motion by another thing and so forth and so on nothing can cause its own motion. and by logic we cannot have an infinite regression of movers there must be a first mover, this first mover all men know as GOD.
I have seen absolutely nothing to even hint that morals are caused by god.Ok I think we can get back on topic with the morals caused by God.:angel2:
I have seen absolutely nothing to even hint that morals are caused by god.
Yours or anyone else's.
The apparent logical contradiction that results from having an uncaused cause is solved by understanding the definition of God. There we go.
all true morals came from religion.
Allow me to clarify. A statement is moral if and only if it is normative and objective. By "normative" I mean it imposes a standard of behavior. That standard is more than prudential. It doesn't merely say what is advisable to do in this or that situation given what your goals are (if you really want to have a good retirement, you ought to save as much as possible during your working life). Rather, the standard is deontological, carring the force of "must", "have to", "must not", "don't have to", and "may." So "You must not murder" is such a statement, for example.
By "objective" I mean that the authority of the standard is independent of culture or individual opinion. I really musn't murder even if in my society murder is considered okay under certain circumstances. Even if I'm not inclined to conform to the standard, the standard applies. And even if I have my doubts about whether the standard applies to me (I'm above this whole "good" and "evil" thing), it applies to me.
What I claim is that a statement that is not both normative and objective is not a moral statement. If you think that no statements properly have these qualities, you believe (in effect) that there are no moral statements. If so, you're probably left with emotivism (which retains normativity without objectivity) or utilitarianism (which retains objectivity but loses normativity).
Here you already deviate from your original statement. Now you look for a connection between consequences and deontology. As i tried to say before already, there is none. Deontology s act/rulebased consequentionalism is based on the consequences and not on the act itself or the rule.An action is judged based on its conformity to the rule. This does not preclude judging it based on its consequences as well. ....
Now I must sit here and shake my head. When you wrote that text didn't you see how incoherent much of our moral discourse throughout our history actually was? You make exactly my point.Well, if morals were not deontological, most of our moral discourse for most of human history would be incoherent. ......
Does it make sense to say that there are no objective moral standards? Were the Nazis right at Nuremburg when they claimed that the Allies had no right to impose non-German (non-Nazi) standards?
So things really qualify as moral when you determine this to be so (by whatever subjective means you want to use). How then does this relate to the objectivity claim?By "count" I mean "qualify as". I determine this by my conscience and that of most of humanity for most of its history.
Well this is a difficult topic. Difficult because I do NOT want to start some bible bashing here and i fear that any discussion could lead to my text being interpreted in such a way. Let me just state that in the bible acts of violence bloodshed, murder and rape are found. Partially they were ordered by prophets, partially by God himself.What? You're insane!
Any Christianity you'd care to mention. I know of no Christian sect -- certainly nothing mainstream -- that gives permission to the sort of activities you speak of. ...
As I already said animals also have morals. So it couldn't have been morals that Adam and Eve sought on the tree (if they had existed at all). Neither could morals be the part of the image of god that we got.Although I can agree with b) -- with qualifications -- I don't see why a) follows. Part of the Christian story involves our fall from grace.
then all over the world people would have access to the same truth. Thus it would follow that all over the world we would find people with the same realization of such truth.Christianity holds that humankind has a conscience and hence, a moral view of the world and access to moral truths.
Well, if science has an explanation that needs no more, then there is no reason to invoke some external entity.Christianity agrees, although we don't accept that this is all there is to it.
I think this was a lengthy explanation that ended in exactly what I stated before. In the end the unbeliever is either misinformed, deluded or plainly evil/revolting. By definition he can't ever be reasonable and equally justified in his ideas.Well, the moral psychology implied by Christianity is a bit more complex than you characterize it. ....
But look at what you say.That's the situation for all humankind. Making matters more complicated is that Christianity holds that the believer is fallen, just like unbelievers. We affirm only that God, by his grace and for reasons that elude us, effects a repair to his image in some people, and in so doing calls them to communion with him and community with each other. The repair is not total (nor is the communion or community) but it is sufficient for us to be able to know and follow God and to live harmoniously. Our fallenness hampers our efforts but the Holy Spirit has been provided for our comfort (when we fail) and empowerment (so we need not fail).
Well science in that case says the same. A truly independent moral system however shouldn't or what do you think?Science doesn't tell me this; my own experience does.
Just some points:I will trow this in:
According to Aristotle ....
And this all men know as God:yes:
all true morals came from religion.
Now I will futher add something else: some things in this world are in motion, all things that are in motion have been put into motion by another thing and so forth and so on nothing can cause its own motion. and by logic we cannot have an infinite regression of movers there must be a first mover, this first mover all men know as GOD.
Ok I think we can get back on topic with the morals caused by God.:angel2:
i can prove that you are wrong about this. If i say "the colourless dream runs attentively while relaxing", you know that it is nonsense, but that it is gramatically correct. Right? Ok, now, can you tell me the grammar rules that make it correct? Probably not. If you can, you have to think about it, right? But you knew it was grammatically correct, even though you don't know why. That's because we have a language faculty of the brain that works unconciously.
Now, morality is exactly the same. If i ask you "is it your obligation to save a person from dying if you are able to?" you probably say "yes" right away, and before you even know why. Just like grammar, you just know it, regardless to whether religion has a teaching about it. So, if i then follow up by saying "each time you ignore a unicef commercial, you are letting people die", do you suddenly feel as strongly about your obligation to save lives? No, and you probably can't explain why. That's because religion has nothing to do with morality. Morality is a human instinct and is therefore unconcious.
It sounds like our conscience is more than something to get us "in touch" with morality. The way you put it, it seems like our conscience is the source of morality.
Why? Is my faculty of sight the "source" of physical objects?
Hello Dunemeister,
good post. I rearranged the topics a bit (most important first)
As said: If one were to accept this definition then of course we would have to say that there can't be morals without a god.
But you didn't actually reason this with a chain of arguments.
I also think that you will run into many problems with that definition.
One of those is that in my view according to your statement you can't ever effectively have morals.
But for the record: IF that were the definition (polished a bit of course) then of course no morals really could exist without a god.
Essentially what this means is that we need to debate the claim that you made, namely that a statement that is not both normative and objective in your sense can't be a moral statement.
When you view something with your vision, it forms a percept in your mind. A percept, an object of perception, is a mental representation of something in the physical world. Morality is not something that actually exists, as it were, in the physical world. It is a concept. It is a mental construct.
For me (absolute) morals are normative, semi-objective and valuebased.
Now what do i mean with semiobjective?
Now we do have some objective parts in the sense that our genetic programming preconditions us for certain things that we like, dislike, see as good or bad.
In your view morals would have to have some higher, human independend quality. However you can't possibly know if your values are not exactly that: human based.
Actually it is rather probable that you, being an emotional and subjective being with values do exactly have human morals and not some divine ones.
To use your example... You proposed a society where killing might be allowed and you think then that objectivity means it is not despite what that society says.
Which brings me to the third point: valuebased.
I hold it rather with ideas similar to ethical subjectivism. I can't go into details now but I think it is sufficient to state that the core values that we have are based also on biological reactions to some things.
Hence it is perfectly natural to state that morally good things can be said to be those things that produce positive reactions while morally negative things are those that produce negative reactions. Please do not pick on this as I know myself that I should make a more detailed definition here. For lack of time I don't.
We have two homosexual people that live in harmony together. For me these two people do not commit any immorality for as long as BOTH are consenting, nobody is harming the other and no other harm is done to anybody else.
For you they are immoral when having sex because God supposedly said so.
a) A core system where all three points are valid for all humans. We find that with for example the golden rule or other basic things like our resentment to killing or torture. This system is relatively stable throughout time as it is based mostly on our social-genetic heritage.
b) A supplementary system that is culture specific and adds more details or special things that we do not share across the globe. And here I would simply say that any rule of b that does not contradict a is equal to the corresponding rule of another culture.
So I would also say bye-bye to the idea of an absolute moral system valid for all times and independent of us.
Morality is essentially a value system that we have made BY ourselves and actually also often FOR ourselves. If it were independent of us or our minds then it would be universally valid. Yet obviously even according to your religion animal behavior is neither immoral nor do they have the same morals (and I did notice that you avoided my point about animals being moral beings as well).
Another nice difference:
For a normal theist supposedly life is sacred and killing is morally evil.
Some people (many nontheists) think that animal life is also of a high value and also should not be taken lightly. So they do not eat meat for example. For those you are immoral and not consequent because you do kill. For me it is a valid supplementary moral addition.