TheKnight
Guardian of Life
Because, if I based my system on "harming people is bad" then harming Johnny would be bad, even though it leads to good. It may work, but it's still inconsistent.Why not?
I disagree. However I do realize that it would depend on what you base your moral system off of.If you believe in morals then there is no problem with that.
I suppose. But then at what point is the line drawn between bad that can be done in order to accomplish good. Suppose a parent kills their children. Their justification being "I could have let them live, but if I let them live and encounter harm (which would have inevitably happened) then I would be DOING something. I would be letting them get hurt. So instead, I killed them painlessly which is a lesser harm than having to go through the pains of life."Of course you are right using that limited credo. In reality of course we are always balancing things out and i think I mentioned that already. We are balancing between the evils and good that we do.
For example if Sally is being killed by Johnny and we do nothing then we actually DO something. We let harm happen. If we stop Johnny we harm him but safe her. Now the question is simply which is the greater harm and (in my view) obviously forcing Johnny to stop is the lesser harm, especially since he (by starting to commit moral evil) is less "worth" in the calculation than Sally anyway.
I didn't really get this part.Thats not different from non theists.
You see all societies regardless of the religion they adhere to have such morals. If they only came from religion, especially the abrahmitic ones then one would expect this behavior not to be present in lets say "Zululand".
I agree that morals are necessary for the establishment of a successful social structure. In a world that consistently denies Godly moral values, then they would have had to evolve over time.Well then you have agreed on the idea that morals obviously had to evolve anyway.
That quote is not from my scriptures as I don't believe in the NT (I am not a Christian).Of course morals are more complex than my simple rule. I mean i wrote that down in a forum in some 2 minutes. What would you expect.
Generally however I think stating what you stated above means that you either haven't read all the morals in your scripture OR that you pick and choose. For instance something as
is in my view not moral. The only way to declare scripture as moral is
a) to actually believe such statements are moral
b) to not know of such statements
c) to "interpret" such statements differently than what they actually (literally) state.
However, there are similar troubling statements in the Torah. And in those cases, the problem is often interpretation due to translation. Things are lost in translation.
If one were to read the Torah in Hebrew, they'd probably get a few verses into Genesis 1 and then go this doesn't make sense.
A simple reading of the text in Hebrew would show that an interpretation other than what's written is necessary. Not to mention that the Torah alludes to the Oral Torah many times.
I believe the moral system I adhere to is an eternal moral system given to mankind by God. That being said, I fully believe that God has the wisdom to forsee any possible situations that may arise and design a legal system that would be able to deal with those situations without going too far from the original idea.No disrespect meant, but only a fool thinks their moral system addresses all.