I am not trying to convince my friend of anything but trying to understand what he bases his moral code upon. The problem I see with atheism is how they base any objective moral code.
They don’t. They usually believe that moral codes grow over time, through a process of trial and error as humans learn to transcend their former behaviour.
It’s a process, and it is never-ending within our lifetime(or humanities)
Catholics understand that there is a natural law or moral code that all man can know and understand what is right and wrong.
This is nice in theory. It does not work in practice. It leads to the narcisisstic human tendacy to believe we are right, because we think we “know” we are right. We think we’ve got that “code” that God has given us, and then try and teach everyone else they should follow our view of the world.
Imagine the world being run by every human, who had an epiphany.
The reason there is this natural law or moral code because God created the world and direct all things to reach some ‘good.’ Man can observe things through his reason that actions are wrong when they harm these goods.
Yes, and a natural world, without invoking gods, could explain the same eventual path that humans travel toward a path of survival.
It is not difficult to see, over several thousand years of studying human behaviour, that humans have progressively grown. The problem, is that the “reason” for this was determined to be the Gods. Those that created this “growth” hypothesis, did not know we evolved. They watched human growth and were amazed by it. It is now shown to be an element of our human evolution, making a God hypthesis redundant.
Yes, humans can learn what is good for them. No, a God is not needed to explain this.
There have been forms of atheistic moral code that have been introduced throughout history. An example I would like to bring up in Utilitarianism. Utilitarianism believes the what is good is determine upon when the most amount of pleasure and lest amount of pain is produce form the most amount of people. It is a noble form of consequentialism but there is dispute within itself. What is good pleasure? How does one determine what is a noble form of pleasure?
We don’t know. And claiming we do, by saying “God told us” doesn’t make one wit of a difference. It is just a human claiming it.
I guess my main point is that once God is taken out of the picture, it seems all moral truth or goodness becomes determined upon the majority of subjects.
It has alway’s been that way. Why do you think there is so much that we do wrong and bad for each other? People don’t do things in the name of badness, they do it in the name of goodness. They do it in the name of God…they DO IT…in the NAME of an OBJECTIVE TRUTH that should never be denied, or else you deny God.
They still hurt people, in the name of their absolute truths, and eventually those truths are challenged and humans move forward. It seems that absolute truths are not something that enhances humanity. The belief in an objective truth, hurts us.
It seems there can be no moral objective truth because the man is the highest subject and thus man does not find the moral truth but just creates it. When there is a God or high being, man is in search to find the moral truth because it was created by God.
All man has, is his own mind. When he searches for something and finds it…what he finds, has to do with him. And him alone.
Maybe, just maybe…if there is a God. He isn’t about to give you the “rules” of life. Perhaps the point of the human life, is not to sit there and think you have it figured out, but to learn. Perhaps the church was correct, in determining that human life was about transcendance.
And they were perhaps incorrect and very , very failable when they claimed they knew the absolute truth.
What kind of human, is so very arrogant, to presume that they have it figured out?