M
Mirdath
Guest
And that would be the social contractWell, you did say " I don’t believe in an absolute ‘source’ of morality." And without an ultimate source everything and everyone being equal, no one can say what or who’s version of morality is superior to the other.
He was a great one, though I don’t know about the greatest. I’d suggest Kant and Hobbes for an introduction.Bickering? Ha, never.Research whom? Jesus was the greatest philosopher ever. Now I could research him.
All, yes, if by that you mean all wrong. I do not believe in God, and I certainly do not believe ‘everything is allowable’.Yes it was Dostoyevsky. His statement essentially says it all.
Hm, six years together, was it? Sounds pretty gay to me.Prove that these penguins who displays this behaviour is outright gay.
Then show it, but remember you won’t have the support of the APA.And I can show you that being a homosexual is a mental disorder in human beings. But did I say that we shouldn’t respect them?
You could relax a little and remember that the religious and the civil are two separate spheres here in AmericaDebate is much better than literal fighting. Why must we argue? Well this isn’t a utopia. I would like to agree as much as you would. Do you know how to make that happen?
I think you’ve found your own plausible example: slavery. It was also a religious precept – the Israelites were told by God to take slaves in Canaan. And many people sought to justify it by claiming that black people were the descendants of the accursed Ham.You’re close to making a good point. I think that maybe the perceived implausibility of your example is keeping it from hitting home with me. Have you got an example from a real American law that was at one time passed? I will say in advance that sometimes the system fails - its a human system, it will fail. Slavery is an obviously example of this. But in general I believe that the more people we get voicing their full opinions the greater the chance for freedom. The more we try to limit people to purely politically correct ideas, the greater the chance of oppression.
And all that’d be fine, if the Catholics were the only people being represented by the government. They are not. So, to suit the needs of all citizens, the government must needs have a more general definition.It’s not, in the Catholic mind anyway, about making a vague outline so that everyone entertain their own best guess as to what’s behind the curtain.
Actually, it kinda is, by the tenth amendment: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved for the States respectively, or to the people.Something isn’t a human right just because it’s not banned. Yes you’re allowed to do pretty much whatever society doesn’t prohibit, but that doesn’t mean its a human right.