If there is no ultimate judgement for one’s moral actions – there’s no final accountability.
Sure. But that is neither here not there.
Well, I definitely think it is both here and there.
You judge various actions, but if there is no final arbiter, then you’re opinion or your actions have no ultimate meaning, and there’s no way to determine it. There are no final consequences, and that should be obvious. You refer to moral standards yourself, which means consequences. But they’re determined by yourself (I think) – so we need to know what kind of value you have and what authority you have to determine such things.
If you accept atheism, you declare already that you have no ultimate value.
It’s like a mathematical formula.
X*N=Y
So, we solve for Y. What is the value of Y?
X is anything at all. We’ll say a human person. That can be any number.
N is the ultimate value.
In the atheistic worldview, N=0
So, choose any value for the human. A million, a billion …
Times it’s ultimate value of zero and it is zero.
My question to all your criteria: “For whom?”. Life has value, if we make it valuable. Life has meaning if we hake it meaningful. Life has purpose, if we give it a purpose.
My answer is “for the Creator who is the ultimate good”. Necessary, unchangeable Being – who loves His creation and His creatures.
Now we know that the purpose is great and so is the value. We know the human is great, because he is created by God who is good, for a purpose which is good.
If “we” are the source of meaning and purpose, and “we” are accidental, unnecessary, a chance-by-product of unintelligent nature … then our opinion has that kind of value, namely little or none. We did not create ourselves so whatever meaning we create is illusory. It’s trivial at best – completely unnecessary.
Atheism means that – that human beings are unnecessary.
If we are unnecessary, then any “meaning” we produce is trivial and ultimately false.
Meaning and value are measured by whether something is necessary or not, and for what purpose.
You confuse “meaning” with some “undefined ultimate meaning”. Where is that “ultimate meaning”?
We recognize ultimate meaning from our origin. We were created by God for a purpose. God communicates that purpose, value and meaning to us. We can’t make it up for ourselves because we didn’t create ourselves.
No, it is
NOT pure negation of
everything. It is a negation of some continuation. It is the
affirmation of here and now.
Yes, but the here and now have no ultimate meaning. It’s the affirmation of something which is accidental, meaningless and without ultimate value. It could not exist and that would mean nothing also. So, it’s a negation of the value of everything.
And that is why atheists value what exists over what “may or may not” exist.
An atheist declares that he has no ultimate value. Then he says that he gives value to other things. That is the zero-multiplier at work.
A grain of sand cannot declare to the clouds that they are meaningful. Even if it did, we return to “so what”? It’s a grain of sand. The clouds do not care what it thinks is meaningful.
And that is why theists devalue this existence, because they believe that what exists here and now does not “really” matter in the “greater scheme” of things.
On the contrary – that’s why it is “here and there”.
What exists here determines the greater scheme of things. It matters for eternity.
That’s why God was incarnated.
If only they had some proof for their belief, they would be in great shape. But they don’t have it. All they have is their wishful thinking.
Again, you’re attacking Theism when you should be defending atheism.
