I think we’re on the same page about life being ontologically prior to morality. I was just thrown off by your terminology and wanted to make sure that we actually were in agreement on this.
Then it should be plain that when we deal with life itself, we are dealing with a moral issue of a higher order than most.
Do you care to explain how he does that in your view? I also don’t see how this relates to my point that it is possible to have a range of views on morality and be a theist or to have a range of views and be an atheist. And of course, once you know the correct atheistic or theistic worldview, the morality of that worldview is the morality you should follow, and it is not true that any moral views are equally good.
There has been no convincing secular rebuttal of Hume’s distinction between “is” and “ought”. There never will be in my opinion. Hume rightly showed that nothing in the natural world accounts for the nearly universal human belief that “is” does in fact lead to “ought”.
Since this is the case, it follows that if no natural explanation can link “is” and “ought”, even the connection is recognized in one form or another by nearly everyone, then the only other option is a supernatural explanation.
Yes, but you have yet to give a reason that even a non-believer should attach moral significance to this life when it is still a zygote.
You gave the reason in nascent form yourself. We should avoid undue harm to life, especially human life as the highest yet known.
You can reframe it as a desire not to cause harm or suffering, but you still haven’t escaped that life is ontologically prior to morality, harm, suffering, etc, and hence rises to a higher moral order.
You say it’s morally reprehensible but you don’t explain what you find morally reprehensible about it. Also, even If disagrees with your intuitions, if it is a true moral theory, than it is true. If I became convinced that the Catholic God exists, but some of the Church’s teachings disagreed with my intuitions, that would not mean that I should ignore the Church’s true moral teachings.
You’re making my point for me. Moral truth is true of itself, not because of popular assent.
If you are truly arguing for the morality of the simple majority, then you must, if you are to remain consistent, agree that enslaving black people in the American south was okay because it was held to be moral by a majority of those in the south. Same is true for Nazism, the subjugation of women, the whole sale slaughter of heretics, etc, because there have been times and places where these views were held by a simple majority.
If we’re going to continue this conversation, I’d like you to try to explain yourself better so I don’t have to try to guess at your meaning. Which stated desires of mine would be thwarted by abortion?
Your stated desire not to cause undue harm, and your belief that moral consideration should be commiserate with sophistication/intelligence/whatever of life.
So? I think we’d both agree that Hume was right about some things and wrong about other things. While I think the overwhelming majority of modern moral philosophers hold to ‘ought implies can’ at least in some sense, there are probably some who disagree. I do not think this is the place for a completely comprehensive defense of my moral theory since the truth of the theory I subscribe to is not relevant to the issue being discussed. If I had no moral theory at all, I could still say that you have yet to present any moral or pragmatic reasons that atheists should oppose abortion in all cases.
I’ve presented a very solid reason atheists should oppose abortion, arising from your own stated philosophy. Maybe you disagree with that reason, but to say I didn’t present one is a lie.
No, I just explained why even if every single person on earth thought slavery was moral, it would still be immoral.
Please quote the passage in which you did this because I don’t see it.
Earlier in the very same post I am replying to, you scoff at my notion that morality by simple majority is reprehensible, but now you say that even if everyone on earth thought that slavery was moral it would still be immoral. That is not consistent.
That speaks to the fundamental flaw in desire utilitarianism. All desires are treated as if they are morally equal, which they are not.