For example, someone might get called a bad name and have a hysterical hissy fit; someone (perhaps someone who’s a little better-adjusted) might get called a bad name and laugh it off.
What objective sense does it make to talk about better adjustment if we are just bags of chemicals? You keep slipping. You keep talking about the world in a teleological manner, as if there was an ought. We all know this deep down, but it seems that you are willing to suppress it.
There’s nothing objectively – outside of human consciousness – “happy” or “unhappy” about any particular situation.
So you cannot see why one would be sad that they had lost a loved one? You cannot see the meaning involved when one experiences that emotion? A person would call you either emotionally damaged or heartless for not seeing that.
“Happy” and “unhappy” are labels that we put on various reactions to situations – the situations are, in and of themselves, neither happy nor unhappy.
I never said that situations are in and of them selves unhappy; but “people” are meaningfully unhappy given an evidently bad situation. Situations are good and bad in relation to the fact that we are persons and not just bags of chemicals. You are of course assuming a particular world view. It seems to me that its mostly the case that we have a meaningful response to something occurring in reference to our objective natures as persons. If we know we are going to be attacked we naturally feel fear; at least most people with a healthy mind do. We are aware of human dignity because we have had the experience of it being undermined. Of course chemicals are never undermined, but a persons dignity can be. Of course, interpretation can change how we feel, but the emotional response is always meaningful in respect of that interpretation. If you find reason to be happy in respect of some kind of hope for the future, then you will be happy in an evidently bad situation, but you must also know happiness in reference to events and also your nature as a person in respect of those events before you can interpret events in relation to what will make us happy or unhappy. I don’t think its reasonable to assume that its an accident that we feel unhappy when our natures as persons is being undermined either physiologically or psychologically. Yes some people have the strength to not let it get to them by ignoring the fact that they are in some way being oppressed; but that evidently does not change the fact that they are being oppressed. If you are saying horrible things to undermine a persons sense of worth it is not unreasonable that they will feel unhappy about that; but if they know their objective self worth without doubt, then they know that when somebody says that their lives is no more valuable than donkey poo, that they are talking about their own ideological rubbish for there own self gratification. We are all insecure to varying degrees about various things, and any honest atheism is simply an expression of that insecurity. God is freedom from that insecurity. The Jews are not suddenly free from the evils of a death camp merely because they choose to ignore what is happening to them.
Its true that an interpretation can change how we feel about an event, but nobody in their right mind would consider it irrational that people felt despair and hopelessness at the holocaust when they were being pushed in to gas chambers. My experience of despair or unhappiness tells me that it is a meaningful and appropriate response to a situation where my life is in danger or my dignity as a person is being undermined by other persons, and one should note that many of theses emotions revolve around how we perceive our selves in terms of objective “worth” or “value”. Sadness gives emphasis to the fact that we lack happiness, and through happiness we-know that their is the possibility of fulfilment. If we see hope, we may very well be less afraid or less unhappy. But hope only makes sense if we already perceive life as more valuable than death. Emotions are not just an arbitrary response to a situation. They make meaningful connections to events in reference to our being persons of a particular worth and value greater than that which is is not a person. It makes sense of people who make life and death decisions and have a deep seated desire to be fulfilled in life. Where does that come from?
The point is, the existence of emotions make sense in a world that is interactive and objectively meaningful and was
created to be that way. Being sad makes perfect sense when losing a loved one, being happy makes perfect sense in a world in which your life can be fulfilled. None of this makes any rational sense what’s so ever in terms of meaningless lifeless unconscious atoms being in a particular place at a particular time.
Experience cannot be quantified or understood in those terms. Worth, value, meaning; none of these things in principle can be quantified and yet we experience them.
So again, if you are so rational why cry over a bag of chemicals? What sense does it make for atoms to be unhappy. What sense does it make for atoms to be unfulfilled. It makes perfect sense in a Christian world in which we see that a person is more than a bag of chemicals; more than the sum of its parts. You say that emotions doesn’t make rational sense but that is only true in a world where meaningful emotions are reduced to unemotional and meaningless objects. Its not evident that this is the case. That’s the world you choose to believe in, but that’s not the world that I experience. Why ignore what emotions in general tell us about reality?