If God does not exist, then everything is permissible

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What do you mean I’m not accountable? If I do these things, I am accountable to the law of karma. If I kill someone, I could go to hell. (Naraka) If I just totally ignore the rules my whole life, I could be reborn as some sort of angry spirit.

Or, I could be reborn as an undesirable animal instead of something better. All of our actions in this life come back to us in the next life.
If that’s you’re belief, then you’re right: that would be ultimate permissibility and impermissability. Few Westerners believe in reincarnation, so we tend to have simplistic and/or dismissive attitudes for it. My apologies on our behalf, and my apologies for not considering Buddhist conceptions of ultimate consequences in my original post.

So it should read: If God does not exist, and if no system of reincarnation exists, then everything is permissible. 👍
 
If that’s you’re belief, then you’re right: that would be ultimate permissibility and impermissability. Few Westerners believe in reincarnation, so we tend to have simplistic and/or dismissive attitudes for it. My apologies on our behalf, and my apologies for not considering Buddhist conceptions of ultimate consequences in my original post.

So it should read: If God does not exist, and if no system of reincarnation exists, then everything is permissible. 👍
:rotfl:

That’s fine. I just wanted to ask where you got this idea. You’re right though, I do not fit the typical bill of a nontheist. (As I believe in the metaphysical)
 
No, it’s not a preference, it is a conclusion.
How does one conclude whether something is justified or not? One may or may not refer to rules in this sort of effort, but how does one determine that the rules they consult are justified? Eventually, you reach a dead end.
On what would you base your justification for criticizing anothers choice other than someone was doing something that affected you personally?
In a sense, all actions I am aware of affect me personally, because I will inevitably form an opinion about those actions that will cause me to feel a certain way. This is one aspect of being a social animal, after all.
This is a little loosely worded: when you say “subjectivism is the case” are you speaking of a subjectivist living in our world (where the existence of God is unknown) or of everyone living in a subjectivist world (where God does not exist)?
By “subjectivism is the case” I mean “it is the case that moral claims possess no truth value”; that is, we cannot prove or disprove them as we could with empirical, mathematical, or logical statements.
In any event, I don’t think the question is really about whether ethical decisions are important but whether (for the subjectivist) they logically exist.
Your phrasing here is confusing. Talking about the importance of ethics is futile, because ethics are supposed to tell us what is or isn’t important. It’s like talking about which ethics should be the case: since ethics are “should” statements, making “should” statements about them is pointless. You would, in essence, be saying, “It should be the case that it should be the case.”
If morality no more exists for us than for animals then how would our decisions differ from theirs - e.g. both of us would be acting strictly in our own best interest. The claim that no ethical opinion matters is not an ethical opinion, it is a conclusion that is either correct or incorrect but there is no ethical component to consider.
How do you objectively determine the importance of something? If what is important is shone to be a matter of opinion, then clearly what matters and what doesn’t matter is also a matter of opinion.
Slow down, that’s not what I meant to imply. For both the theist and the atheist all moral restrictions are self imposed; there is nothing compelling either of them to act in any particular way beyond their own choosing.
What about social conditioning?
As as far as that goes both could wake up any morning and completely rewrite their moral codes.
Nonsense. That would be like waking up and choosing to rewrite one’s personality.
The implications of doing so, however, are significantly different. For an atheist it seems that change would be a natural response as one grows in experience and wisdom: what yesterday he believed to be harmful he now realizes is not and therefore is free to indulge that desire. Am I mistaken here?
That is assuming, of course, that this particular atheist’s morality doesn’t condemn harmless actions. Many atheists do condemn such actions, however.
For the theist, change is not so simple as the rules are laid out and he doesn’t get to change them; he either plays by the rules or finds a different game. Change requires scrapping a world view and starting over.
Or the theist could merely bend the worldview by joining an allied denomination. The rules are hardly “laid out.” Any theist could just use “God said” or “I had a revelation!” to justify any change of opinion. If your worldview allows you to believe in something without evidence, then it is very malleable. After all, how could another religious person oppose you without evidence?
If it makes you feel better to see others happy then that would be your reason for making them happy: because it makes you feel better - but would there ever be a reason for you to do anything that was harmful to your interest?
Since I always act based on my own choosing (“in accordance with my preferences”), all of my actions are necessarily done in my interest.
 
Since I always act based on my own choosing (“in accordance with my preferences”), all of my actions are necessarily done in my interest.
Translated, does this mean “Since I always act on my own preferences, all of my actions are necessarily done according to my own preferences”? Just asking. 😉
 
Well, actually, modern psychology has a lot to say about the frailty of witness statements, not only to the point of discrediting lies, but discrediting obviously false beliefs that the witness believes actually took place as well.
quite right, it would be entirely possible that an individual was mistaken, or that a common group of people suffered a mass illusion. thankfully we are immune from such things in that we have thousands of witnesses over thousands of years. what you are refering to is individual cases of eyewtiness testimony, or mass illusions. not to a string of unrelated people from different cultures and faiths who did not know eachother or live within centuries of one another. all describing the essentially the same realationship with G-d.

so i dont think that is a reasonable rejection of the witness testimony.
The moonlanding has verifiable documentation and was witnessed my millions.
no one but the astronauts involved witnessed the landing. everyone else saw pictures on TV. we haved the same evidence to believe the moonlanding exists as to believe that marines are attacking the planet pandora.

hence the loons who claim it was done on a sound stage in houston.
I don’t see how the Magna Carta represents knowledge aquired by witness.
they dont have the original, only copies. but no one discounts the exitence of the people or the events that led to the magna carta or the general contents of it.
And Alexanders conquests are as debated as Christ’s (ironically enough). The bible has second, third, and forth-hand witnesses to events that have never been replicated (e.g., miracles) or have ever aligned with the rest of the natural world.
i dont know about your chain of witnesses out too the fourth degree there. but the moonlanding would be a miracle to someone unaware of the processes used right? they would say it was impossible by the knowledge they have. in the same way, unaware of the processes involved you are denying the validity of those miracles.

so this defense doesnt hold water either.
Vague prophecies prooving a vague God, all.
well thats a great big baseless assertion. you should take another look, i gave you the things to google. some prophecies are rather vague, some are very specific, but there are dozens and dozens. they are after all the reason Christianity exists. the mathematical odds are irrefutable. google “messianic prophecies” peter stoner, ot josh mcdowell. stoner is the most famous because he he was the first mathematician to work it out. there are a great number of sites devoted to the subject.

you do want to know the Truth, right?
No, every faith has something like it. And many more faiths have things exactly like it.
another assertion. please tell me what faith has the mathematical certainty of dozens of fulfilled prophecies? not just one or two, but the great many that you will find on those websites?
Well yes, but only for the benefit of seeing how easily such truth is believed under false premises.
come now, that is classical truth seeking behavior. you dont know if its true or not, so you dont know if the premises are false. a rational examination of the issue should be done. not an out of hand dismissal.
I’ve been there a thousand times before; disappointment was my reward for each such endeavour.
then try a thousand and one. most people i know personally who say that complain they didnt recieve some sign. the Scripture states quite clearly that you shall not test G-d, you shall not ask for a sign. i did the same thing myself when i was younger.

then it occured to me. who am i to ask the Almighty for some sign to prove anything to me? the entire idea is hubris. i have no more a sign from G-d than you. yet i know He exists rationally.
No, if theism loses, they will have been vain martyrs for an incorrigibley pedantic cult, subjecting themselves to silly propositions, ordinances, self-loathing, and will have put a kibosh on their otherwise much-enjoyed free-thinking.
what silly propositions? what self loathing? (its very telling that you say that, do you loath yourself? why? what are you doing worthy of that? why cant you stop? no one said Christianity was easy. especially the sexual morals to be followed) as to free thinking, religion in no way prohibits that.
I don’t consider that such wagers should be made unless the probability of each event is approximately 50-50. If there is an equal chance of death or nothing happening to me as I leave my front door, then I shall stay in today. If the chance of me dying by stepping out my door today is 1 in 1 000 000, I’ll take my chances (although I don’t think the ratios are even that high for believing in a supreme being - but that’s just me).
i dont think the odds have a thing to do with it. no matter the odds, if you are wrong the result is permanent. if i am wrong, i will never know it.

its kind of like choosing to step on a deactivated land mine. the odds may be one in a million that you wont set it off. but the one time your wrong, youre dead. i dont think that the odds would matter to most people, the alternative is permanent, they simply wouldnt take the risk.
In any event, I should not have been so foolish as to be even baited into discounting claims such as “God said so.”
as you see, it wasnt so easy to discount. ive had this argument a few dozen times.
 
You are equating selfishness with self-interest - which is a mistake. It would be insane to attempt to ignore your own interests completely for the sake of others. It would amount to self-destruction. What is the point of having a self if you reject its value? You are also forgetting that virtue brings its own reward. A selfish person alienates others whereas an unselfish person attracts them - often for the wrong reasons, but that where discretion has to accompany unselfishness. If we believe this and act unselfishly does it detract from the value of our unselfishness? Of course not. We are simply being reasonable. In fact being virtuous amounts to being reasonable - in the long run. Every vice incurs its own punishment, in accordance with the Greek concept of nemesis and the Indian belief in karma. So it is fatuous to accuse the Christian promise of reward as based on selfishness. Individual Christians often distort the meaning of that teaching by the way they live but their stupidity does not alter the truth that those who sacrifice themselves for others deserve and obtain a reward…
But you have nonetheless borne out my point (my failures of expression notwithstanding!), that the Christian conception of morality is not essentially selfless. Thus, any attempt to argue its superiority to secular morality on that basis is invalid. We are self-interested - and often selfish - creatures; it’s part of our nature, to varying degrees. I think we all agree, however, that it’s a happier world if our self-interests tend to harmonise with the interests of others.

The person who sacrifices herself for others raises an interesting point. Would they do it if they didn’t believe there would be a reward? I guess this means the ultimate sacrifice, of course, as opposed to any act of altruism, simply because in most cases, we’re around to appreciate the personal satisfaction that comes from making others happy. But unless a person is completely selfless, it’s a big gamble to give up one’s life for another. Some people have done it because they firmly believe that their sacrifice will lead to better conditions for those they leave behind. Others have done it because they believe in an afterlife. Would the latter group have done so if they did not believe in an afterlife? This is something I have often wondered, but of course I’ve never come close to an actual answer.

,
You are mistaken. In totalitarian regimes people are forced to live in harmony whether they like it or not. In all societies there has to be an element of compulsion but it should not infringe the basic rights of the individual - which cannot be accounted for by the need for harmony. Harmony could be achieved by executing anyone who disturbs it! Social harmony is not the sole object of the law, let alone morality.
A totalitarian regime is never an honest attempt to create harmony, regardless of political spin. It’s an attempt by a powerful figure to bring everyone else into line with their own goals. That ain’t social harmony. Genuine social harmony is achieved by finding the balance between self-interest and altruism.
It is fanciful to suppose that morality can be explained entirely by the fact that we are social beings. In a democratic society people have the right to protest and demonstrate without violence even to the extent of disrupting normal activity. Why? Because the freedom of the individual is valued in addition to social cohesion. When confronted with an unjust regime we are morally justified in attempting to overthrow those have imposed harmony by force. Morality cannot be explained solely by the fact that we are social beings. You believe we are animals but in fact we are persons… and that makes all the difference…
See above, regarding totalitarian regimes and social harmony - to assume the two are in any way compatible is a misrepresentation. Balance between individual interests and social interests is key. We are all individuals with our own interests, but social animals by nature - indeed, often the only way we can achieve our individual goals is by working with others. What could possibly provide a more all-encompassing explanation for morality than the need to achieve a balance between these two aspects?

(As a side note - we are neither vegetable nor mineral, therefore animal. I believe the appeal to ‘personhood’, especially when it involves denial of our animal nature, is erroneous. It is a device put in place to justify the way humans have seen themselves in relation to the rest of the world - usually as exploitative masters of all they survey. It’s a way of denying our essential connection to the rest of nature. We are animals through and through - highly complex, sophisticated animals, I grant you, but animals nonetheless.)
 
(As a side note - we are neither vegetable nor mineral, therefore animal. I believe the appeal to ‘personhood’, especially when it involves denial of our animal nature, is erroneous. It is a device put in place to justify the way humans have seen themselves in relation to the rest of the world - usually as exploitative masters of all they survey. It’s a way of denying our essential connection to the rest of nature. We are animals through and through - highly complex, sophisticated animals, I grant you, but animals nonetheless.)
our taxonomical identification aside. we arent animals simply because of our biology, we can seek to improve ourselves, exercise free will, violationg the laws of the universe. i have never seen an animal seeking self improvement, at any level. horses dont practice mooing, but i speak spanish. i have never seen an animal act outside of its social programming. i have never seen an animal do anything that seems to be an exercise of free will. all their actions can be attributed to instinct, determinant and unwavering. ours however cannot. i play the ukulele for fun. i dont do it in front of others. i do it solely because i like to learn new things and thereby improve myself.

we are not the same as animals.
 
**warpspeedpetey: **

Well no, scripture is extremely fragmented in what is proposed of God and how it’s proposed. Mass illusions and even individual illusions over mass area and time would not be uncommon in the general sense, and certainly in a time where essentially nothing was known in about the way the world works.

“If I can’t know that the witnesses in the bible are true, I can’t know that the witnesses to anything are true!” It’s a tired argument. The moonlanding has documentation that differs signficiantly from the kind of documentation that the bible serves. Let’s not waste time on this discussion, please.

There’s no reason to start discounting something (as in the moonlanding) unless there’s good reason for doing so. If the magna carta had people walking on water and healing blind people with mud, there would be good reason to question it’s authenticity.

The bible is a detailed excerpt of the processes by which the things in it happened. By prayer and fasting and faith and claiming Christ’s authority you can cast our a demon - horray! Yet no one has ever replicated the types of things alleged of jesus in the bible (and said to be repeatedly done by his believers). No one was sitting at these events with a pen and quil writting down things verbatim. They were all fantastic accounts told and retold and retold and written down and recopied and recopied and recopied and altered and lost and damaged. So let’s not pretend that we’re looking at the same kind of evidence as the moonlanding (even the magna carta doesn’t fall victim to the number of crippling problems involved with the bible’s cannonization)
well thats a great big baseless assertion
Prove me wrong with a hardy example.
another assertion. please tell me what faith has the mathematical certainty of dozens of fulfilled prophecies? not just one or two, but the great many that you will find on those websites?
Prove to me first and only that the prophecies are direct and I promise I will fall onto my knees and worship any god of your choosing.
then try a thousand and one. most people i know personally who say that complain they didnt recieve some sign. the Scripture states quite clearly that you shall not test G-d, you shall not ask for a sign. i did the same thing myself when i was younger.
Victim-blaming. I didn’t pray to *test *God, I prayed because I believed in Him. I was disappointed because, after some consideration, I had never felt a single thing in prayer that extended beyond my own rambling thoughts.
then it occured to me. who am i to ask the Almighty for some sign to prove anything to me?
This, to me, is an obvious religious safeguard built into the system to protect it: “Don’t ask God to proove himself because he won’t be able to.” How convenient!
the entire idea is hubris. i have no more a sign from G-d than you. yet i know He exists rationally.
If that’s what you know of God, you certainly can’t know anything else about him. at least not other than by bronze-age conjectures.
what silly propositions?
Use your imagination - I can’t do all the work for you.
what self loathing? (its very telling that you say that, do you loath yourself? why? what are you doing worthy of that? why cant you stop? no one said Christianity was easy. especially the sexual morals to be followed)
It’s not telling of anything. And there is no self-loathing because I was never very good at it (just the way God made me? ;)) Christianity demands a level of guilt and contrition that makes it pretty unbearable if you want to follow the religion by the book.
as to free thinking, religion in no way prohibits that.
Oh no, there’s thought-crime. That there isn’t, let no one gainsay. I can’t sit here thinking about what a jerk that guy was that cut me off today; I can’t think erotically about my wife-to-be; I can’t think outside of belief (atheism). That’s not free-thinking.
i dont think the odds have a thing to do with it.
Yeah, they really do (see below).
its kind of like choosing to step on a deactivated land mine. the odds may be one in a million that you wont set it off. but the one time your wrong, youre dead. i dont think that the odds would matter to most people, the alternative is permanent, they simply wouldnt take the risk.
Using the example of a landmine is a manipulative tactic (even when you’ve stated 1 in a million) because the odds are typically known to be so variable as to whether they’ll go off. There is a greater chance of the electrical wiring in my house to malfunction and start a fire, but that doesn’t mean I’m going to shut off the circuit breakers each time I leave my house or go to sleep or whathaveyou.

I love when people play Pascal, because as far as I’m concerned, they’ve already admitted that there is some very real probabilty that God does not exist. If it’s not a compelling argument for you, it’s not going to be for me either.
as you see, it wasnt so easy to discount. ive had this argument a few dozen times.
It’s plenty easy to discount - that doesn’t mean you’re not going to have more of the same objections.
 
By “subjectivism is the case” I mean “it is the case that moral claims possess no truth value”; that is, we cannot prove or disprove them as we could with empirical, mathematical, or logical statements.
Isn’t this a confirmation of the OP’s statement that absent God (e.g. in a subjective world) everything is permissible in the moral sense because, as you stated, moral claims possess no truth value? The entire concept of morality would be as meaningless for us as it is for clams. We can talk about behavior that is helpful, harmful, acceptable or unacceptable to the law or to our particular society, but we can’t talk about any action being immoral because the word applies to something that doesn’t exist.
That is assuming, of course, that this particular atheist’s morality doesn’t condemn harmless actions. Many atheists do condemn such actions, however.
An atheist may certainly condemn any action, but he cannot do so on the basis that the action was immoral, only that he personally doesn’t like it.

Ender
 
Translated, does this mean “Since I always act on my own preferences, all of my actions are necessarily done according to my own preferences”? Just asking. 😉
Yes. I assumed that “done in my own interest” meant “acting according to my preferences.” It might mean something else, but since nobody on this thread bothers to provide definitions when I ask (ahem), some guesswork is involved on my part.
 
Isn’t this a confirmation of the OP’s statement that absent God (e.g. in a subjective world) everything is permissible in the moral sense because, as you stated, moral claims possess no truth value?
This is the same tired old argument I’ve been talking about. You can’t make moral claims about the nature of morality under normal circumstances, and especially not in this case. Here, you’re saying that all ethics are worthless if all ethics lack truth values. However, the ethical claim “Ethics are worthless” would then lack a truth value, so your point is moot. It’s the ethical equivalent of the claim “All propositions are false.”
The entire concept of morality would be as meaningless for us as it is for clams. We can talk about behavior that is helpful, harmful, acceptable or unacceptable to the law or to our particular society, but we can’t talk about any action being immoral because the word applies to something that doesn’t exist.
Personally, I find ethics useful because they indicate how particular people feel about certain circumstances.
An atheist may certainly condemn any action, but he cannot do so on the basis that the action was immoral, only that he personally doesn’t like it.
As my peers would say, “Same difference.” What else could “immoral” indicate? Really, I would like a definition, a derivation, and everything.
 
**warpspeedpetey: **

Well no, scripture is extremely fragmented in what is proposed of God and how it’s proposed.
how so? i dont know of anything major.
Mass illusions and even individual illusions over mass area and time would not be uncommon in the general sense, and certainly in a time where essentially nothing was known in about the way the world works.
so, thousands of different people, living thousands of miles apart, thousands of years apart, speaking different languages, living in different cultures, and practicing different faiths all suffered the same illusions?

that doesnt seem reasonable too me. if that happened today, it would be all over the news. people would freak out.
“If I can’t know that the witnesses in the bible are true, I can’t know that the witnesses to anything are true!” It’s a tired argument. The moonlanding has documentation that differs signficiantly from the kind of documentation that the bible serves. Let’s not waste time on this discussion, please.
its not a waste of time. you cant prove the moonlanding happened anymore than i can prove the miracles of the Bible are true. im pointing out it is hypocritical to have 2 standards of evidence.
There’s no reason to start discounting something (as in the moonlanding) unless there’s good reason for doing so. If the magna carta had people walking on water and healing blind people with mud, there would be good reason to question it’s authenticity.
i would say that to a roman slave, the magna carta, and the moonlanding would be ridiculous enough to question their authenticity.

because you do not know the process by which the miracles were performed, does not give you any better reason to reject them, than a roman slave would to reject the moonlanding, or the magna carta.

you are both in the same position.
The bible is a detailed excerpt of the processes by which the things in it happened. By prayer and fasting and faith and claiming Christ’s authority you can cast our a demon - horray! Yet no one has ever replicated the types of things alleged of jesus in the bible (and said to be repeatedly done by his believers).
believers have done it through the centuries. i dont see where you get the idea that demons are no longer cast out, or that miracles no longer occur? happens everyday. im sure you can google some events.

if you mean a scientist hasnt replicated them, of course not. then it would just be the pure mechanics of science.
No one was sitting at these events with a pen and quil writting down things verbatim. They were all fantastic accounts told and retold and retold and written down and recopied and recopied and recopied and altered and lost and damaged. So let’s not pretend that we’re looking at the same kind of evidence as the moonlanding (even the magna carta doesn’t fall victim to the number of crippling problems involved with the bible’s cannonization)
people didnt sit around verbatim for a great chunk of historical events. my point is the double standard being used, because you dont understand the process by which a miracle may occur.

this is called the fallacy of incredulity.
 
Voice of Reason;6209405 said:

and I promise I will fall onto my knees and worship any god of your choosing.

what do you mean by direct?

godonthe.net/jewish/odds.html
christianarsenal.com/Apologetics/MessProphecies.htm
jewishvoice.org/site/PageServer?pagename=Who_is_MessianicProphecies
allabouttruth.org/messianic-prophecy-2.htm
jewsforjesus.org/publications/havurah/11_02/01
Victim-blaming. I didn’t pray to *test *God, I prayed because I believed in Him. I was disappointed because, after some consideration, I had never felt a single thing in prayer that extended beyond my own rambling thoughts.
how are you a victim? and how is this different than a test? He didnt perform to your standards so you rected him right? you wanted to feel something and He didnt do it.
This, to me, is an obvious religious safeguard built into the system to protect it: “Don’t ask God to proove himself because he won’t be able to.” How convenient!
that was written when everyone was a witness to G-ds deeds, i dont think so. though its a fair feeling to have.
If that’s what you know of God, you certainly can’t know anything else about him. at least not other than by bronze-age conjectures.
what do you mean?
Use your imagination - I can’t do all the work for you.
i can tread minds.
It’s not telling of anything. And there is no self-loathing because I was never very good at it (just the way God made me? ;)) Christianity demands a level of guilt and contrition that makes it pretty unbearable if you want to follow the religion by the book
.

thats the Truth righ there. Christianity is hard, difficult and demanding. you cant escape that by becoming an atheist. its just an excuse to stop trying. its just an excuse to give in to temptation. we all do it, we all fail, and we all feel guilty.
Oh no, there’s thought-crime. That there isn’t, let no one gainsay. I can’t sit here thinking about what a jerk that guy was that cut me off today; I can’t think erotically about my wife-to-be; I can’t think outside of belief (atheism). That’s not free-thinking.
no, your not allowed to hate the guy who cut you off. youre not allowed to treat your fiance as a an object solely for your sexual gratifications. and being an athiest and a Christain are mutually exclusive.

what youre talking about here isnt free thinking, its sin.
Yeah, they really do (see below).
Using the example of a landmine is a manipulative tactic (even when you’ve stated 1 in a million) because the odds are typically known to be so variable as to whether they’ll go off. There is a greater chance of the electrical wiring in my house to malfunction and start a fire, but that doesn’t mean I’m going to shut off the circuit breakers each time I leave my house or go to sleep or whathaveyou.
I love when people play Pascal, because as far as I’m concerned, they’ve already admitted that there is some very real probabilty that God does not exist. If it’s not a compelling argument for you, it’s not going to be for me either.
the reasons the odds dont matter is because there is no payoff for stepping on a landmine. just as in poker there is no payoff for bluffing at a tiny pot.
It’s plenty easy to discount - that doesn’t mean you’re not going to have more of the same objections.
lets see if you can then… i do this all the time, an original argument would be a treat for m
 
because G-d said so, what other argument do we need? what other basis for morality can there be? when humans try to form their own morality, you wind up with the genocide of innocents like stalin, mao, pol pot. we have had our fill of non-theistic moral structures. what you espouse is already a failed system, and we have the bodies of a hundred million inocents in jus tthe last century to prove it. human beings left to their own devices are rather vicious.
And when people follow your god’s morality, they end up with the genocide of non-Jewish populations (according to the OT), the crusades, the inquisition… People, to generalise over the course of history, just are vicious by nature, but if that was all we were, we would have destroyed ourselves as a species long ago. Because we also possess reason and empathy, social cohesion is possible - but there have to be agreed-upon rules and at least some common values - that’s what morality is, regardless of how it is worked out.
what contradictions? what unsavory dealings? the "source " of Christain morality isnt the Bible, it is G-d. big difference4.
So you have some other source for Christian morality than the depictions of your god in the bible? Love to know what those are, and on what basis you give them any credence. The unsavoury dealings referred to are the mass slaughter of whole populations of people, including women and children, in order that the Israelites would have somewhere to settle; Lot offering his virgin daughters to be raped by the people of Sodom, then later impregnating them (albeit in a drunken haze which the daughters had deliberately induced); enslavement of the Israelites for ‘disobedience’; the notion that the sins of one generation should be visited on the next several generations, and that this somehow constitutes justice… The list goes on, but alas there is limited posting space.

As for contradictions - according to Genesis, God created the world twice, in two slightly different ways. Which is the correct account? In Leviticus, it states that a man must not marry his dead brother’s wife; in Deuteronomy, it states that a man must marry his dead brother’s wife (this one apparently caused Henry VIII some consternation). Did you ever notice that the four Gospels give four different accounts of the life and words of Jesus? Which one is correct? How can we be sure what Jesus actually said? And let’s not forget the overarching contradiction - the fact that God completely changes his nature from the OT to the NT, not something that ought to be possible for an immutable god to do.
what you call “laborious apologetics” is just the rest of the story that people generally ignore when they accuse G-d of some wrong doing. it never seems to occur to the accuser that G-d had a good reason for his actions.
No matter what those reasons are, the fact remains that it is impossible to reconcile an all-powerful, all-knowing and all-good god with the sheer scale of suffering in the world; suffering for which an omnipotent creator god, if such a being there is, bears ultimate responsibility. No amount of apologetics or appeal to inscrutability can get around this.
what is wrong with reverence for G-d? what is wrong with G-d being jealous or vengeful? nothing. nothing at all.
Nothing is wrong with reverence for your god, per se - you’re entitled to worship whatever disembodied and undetectable entity you wish, so long as you don’t let that reverence lead you to treat others badly. What’s wrong with god being jealous and vengeful is that the pathological jealousy and vengefulness attributed to the Bible’s god are not qualities that we generally associate with goodness and benevolence (unless we engage in Orwellian doublethink). You might say that we don’t know the mind of god (which is a bit of a twinkie defence, if you think about it) - but that doesn’t really leave us on very solid footing if we believe it is morally acceptable to be understanding and forgiving.
i suspect that you follow the ten commandements and then call it your “value system”. you hang out with us all the time. its not to educate us, you like us. you like what we believe. you want to be one of us. why dont you quit fightinng with G-d and accept Him as He is, not how you want Him to be?
Show me some unequivocal evidence for your god, and I will concede that you have a point. I enjoy honing my argumentative skills, and having the opportunity to consolidate my own ideas - that’s why I keep finding myself back here. I’m familiar with what you believe, since I was raised as a Catholic, but over the course of about 15 years, I gradually came to the conclusion that atheism is a far more reasonable default position than theistic faith.
values or morals? their is a big difference in the way these two are used by the non-theist community.
Values form the basis on which the morality of actions is determined.

ever hear the story of the prostitute? ye without sin, throw the first stone? (this must be the laboriuos apologetics)

It’s a good story, but tragically, Christians have historically not been amongst the last to cast stones.
how does ones hand literally offend? do you seriously believe that to be literal?
I don’t believe it to be literal, but I’m not a fundamentalist Christian!
Jesus never accepted slavery. your concept of slavery seems to be chattel slavery, the outright owning of a human being. that has always been wrong.
The phrase, ‘slaves, obey your masters’ doesn’t make that distinction. In any case, I’m pretty sure indentured servitude is also frowned upon these days.
 
error upon error/confusion upon confusion hinges on the three letter word GOD even resulting in a sort of ban here.So for God’s sake lets substitute a four letter word MIND and individual human minds.Here we truly have MIND over matter but alas matter over minds.MIND and minds are not something or thing but no thing - more later - twinc
 
How d’y’figure?

Now ask yourself if the way in which you figure this to be true is acceptable as a form of knowledge.

Now tell us why everyone should find it to be a savory and unquestionably truthful explanation.

Then tell us why the thousands of gods and moral suppositions that have gone before you and your God are unsatisfactory as explanations.

Finally, omit no detail in your reasoning, however slight, that would lead us not to accept your explanation.

We don’t ask much, but we do indeed ask.
:love:
 
I never said that there weren’t rules that people make for themselves, often rules with good reasons behind them. It’s just that, ultimately, if you did one of the above things when no one else could know, you aren’t accountable – unless you are accountable to God.
In an attempt to get back to addressing the primary concept of your OP, an interesting notion has just occurred to me (it may well have occurred to others before, but I must confess I haven’t read the entire thread…)

The very question of whether the lack of a god means a lack of morality implies that divinely-imposed principles are more powerful and more compelling than self-imposed principles.

Certainly there is the assumption that the divine being is more powerful than the merely human being - however, that doesn’t change the fact that unless moral principles are accepted and owned by each individual, moral regulation can at best be undertaken against individual will, and at worst, ignored altogether.

Most of my friends are atheists (as you might expect!) and are amongst the most caring, genuine, principled people I have ever come across. How can this be, if they don’t defer to theistic morality? At the end of the day, we, and those with whom we share our lives, are the arbiters of the morality and acceptability of our actions. It must be so, even if we lift our morality from religious texts and teachings.

Oh, and to Mystic Banana - the finite life is still too long to be spent wallowing in misery and aimlessness. If I die knowing I have done my best to realise my own potential, and have contributed to the happiness of others, I will be perfectly content, even if there’s nothing to go to afterwards.
 
our taxonomical identification aside. we arent animals simply because of our biology, we can seek to improve ourselves, exercise free will, violationg the laws of the universe. i have never seen an animal seeking self improvement, at any level. horses dont practice mooing, but i speak spanish. i have never seen an animal act outside of its social programming. i have never seen an animal do anything that seems to be an exercise of free will. all their actions can be attributed to instinct, determinant and unwavering. ours however cannot. i play the ukulele for fun. i dont do it in front of others. i do it solely because i like to learn new things and thereby improve myself.

we are not the same as animals.
At what point have we been able to override the laws of the universe?!

What scientific and technological developments we have made have been solely for the purpose of improving our quality of life. All animals seek - consciously or otherwise - to improve their lot in life, to do what accords to their preferences more often than not. Epicurus knew this, well before any Christian philosophers took up Ancient Greek philosophical ideas - all creatures naturally seek pleasure.

Stray dogs in Moscow have even learned how to use the subway…

I think you will find that the complexity of human social interactions means that none of us act outside of our social programming.

What benefit would it be to a horse to practice mooing? No other horses moo. However, horses and cows pastured together seem to manage quite well, through nonverbal signals. I can see how it might be useful for us to be able to speak dog, or cat, or chicken - but I can’t see it happening any time soon. All we have are nonverbal, behavioural signals - which are interpretable in the common language of animal understanding.

No animal is the same as any other animal. No cow is the same as a fish. However, in terms of human treatment of other animals, a cow might as well be a fish - we disregard their needs in equal measure.
 
But you have nonetheless borne out my point (my failures of expression notwithstanding!), that the Christian conception of morality is not essentially selfless. Thus, any attempt to argue its superiority to secular morality on that basis is invalid.
Christian morality is superior to secular morality because it does not stake everything on this life. We are prepared to sacrifice everything in the hope that justice will be done but hope is not certainty. We can choose to be selfless in this life because we are prepared to take the risk that we are mistaken. It is not our fault if we are right! You cannot take that risk because you don’t believe there is an afterlife. Nor do you believe it is possible to be completely selfless because you believe we are animals whose behaviour is caused by events beyond our control. We are just cogs in the machine of nature, no different in that respect from any other animal - to your way of thinking. Belief in moral responsibility is incompatible with materialism because it infringes the law of the conservation of energy. As Kant noted, ought implies can. Animals quite simply cannot act rationally and independently of the ways in which they have been programmed.
I think we all agree, however, that it’s a happier world if our self-interests tend to harmonise with the interests of others.
The fact that it would be a happier world has no bearing on the ultimate nature of morality - which implies that we can choose and act to make it so. It’s a fact which is of merely hypothetical interest in a world where all activity is predetermined…
The person who sacrifices herself for others raises an interesting point. Would they do it if they didn’t believe there would be a reward? …This is something I have often wondered, but of course I’ve never come close to an actual answer.
Given that human beings are irrational to some extent (regardless of what we believe about our origin) there is no reason why some people can opt for the folly of the Cross. It is a form of insanity because it implies to valuing another more than oneself rejecting the principle that we are all equal. It amounts to virtually committing suicide and is certainly madness in the eyes of the world which has no explanation for totally selfless love.
You are mistaken. In totalitarian regimes people are forced to live in harmony whether they like it or not. In all societies there has to be an element of compulsion but it should not infringe the basic rights of the individual - which cannot be accounted for by the need for harmony. Harmony could be achieved by executing anyone who disturbs it! Social harmony is not the sole object of the law, let alone morality.
A totalitarian regime is never an honest attempt to create harmony, regardless of political spin. It’s an attempt by a powerful figure to bring everyone else into line with their own goals. That ain’t social harmony. Genuine social harmony is achieved by finding the balance between self-interest and altruism.

You take it for granted that the goals of autocrats are inferior to those of democrats! Why should they be?
It is fanciful to suppose that morality can be explained entirely by the fact that we are social beings. In a democratic society people have the right to protest and demonstrate without violence even to the extent of disrupting normal activity. Why? Because the freedom of the individual is valued in addition to social cohesion. When confronted with an unjust regime we are morally justified in attempting to overthrow those have imposed harmony by force. Morality cannot be explained solely by the fact that we are social beings. You believe we are animals but in fact we are persons… and that makes all the difference…
See above, regarding totalitarian regimes and social harmony - to assume the two are in any way compatible is a misrepresentation. Balance between individual interests and social interests is key. We are all individuals with our own interests, but social animals by nature - indeed, often the only way we can achieve our individual goals is by working with others. What could possibly provide a more all-encompassing explanation for morality than the need to achieve a balance between these two aspects?
“often” is the key word. When it comes to the crunch we can be more successful by not working with others. Why should individuals cosider the interests of others when it is not in their own interest?
As a side note - we are neither vegetable nor mineral, therefore animal. I believe the appeal to ‘personhood’, especially when it involves denial of our animal nature, is erroneous. It is a device put in place to justify the way humans have seen themselves in relation to the rest of the world - usually as exploitative masters of all they survey. It’s a way of denying our essential connection to the rest of nature.
Not at all. It is absurd to deny that we have a body with instincts and physical desires. Do you reject the concept of personhood altogether? If not why not?
We are animals through and through - highly complex, sophisticated animals, I grant you, but animals nonetheless.)
If we are animals through and through there is no reason why animals should not have exactly the same rights as us. Nor any reason why we should be more valuable. Nor why we should be responsible for our behaviour (unless they are too!). This is your dilemma! 🙂
 
Not in the absolutist sense, no. It is a valued system though. At least where values cannot be absolute, they can be largely agreed-upon or refuted collectively.
In that case, agreeing upon whatever you want them to be does not necesarily constitute reasonable value, but collective social inclinations.
Well, it’s not non-existent; it’s foundation is within the people who hold the values. Values and moral precepts held in personal favour are typically held on the collective level as well. Value-making is a democratic process; it’s foundation may be in simple fancy, but most people fancy at least the prospect of continuing existence and in a way that is non-oppressive. It’s a good base, even though there is no aboslute moral position from which to derive such a notion. I say ‘good’ because it’s something that I value, but it’s probably the most ubiquitously held value there is (and so let the democratic value-imputing system continue on, I say).
Value making is hardly a democratic process - any evaluation of politics, social, economic, religious, academic and other idealogical forces demonstrate that.
I don’t hold that the net gain is always, finally, zero, but that’s only because I find values which produce said gain to be intrinsically good, despite any future reward (obvisouly I do in any event, since I don’t think the reward extends beyond what is here and now).
Can you explain why?
It is a morally relative world, because there is no higher or absolute authority from which we can first, determine that certain things are essentially moral, and second, what exactly constitutes a moral action. If you worry that one person’s subjective moral authority might trump another’s arbitrarily, you can see my concern of one person’s ancient revelation trumping my own (in fact, I have had no revelation of such a moral authority - which is why I claim moral relativism).
Again assumption, and, even if you believe there is no God, I’d say the general evidence behind the likelihood of one is sufficient to base morality upon that concept and that of permanence, largely because, as your arguments emonstrate, everything else doesn’t have any reasonable basis beyond being whatever everyone feels like at the time
If notions of right and wrong are whatever you want, then it follows that notions of meaning are whatever you want. Call it meaningless if you want, but it won’t give you any more reason to invent a moral law-giver.
Luckily, I don’t need to invent one, and your assumption that the rather hefty human experience of the same is such invention is I’d say simply an issue of the ideologies you follow, which still fail to demonstrate the values you define as being anything resembling what make sense as being ‘moral’ - just what we decide we want, based on a conception of reality we can only find purpose in at all by defying the inherent logical nihlism and inventing illogical purposes to keep ourselves occupied
No, in that sense, **non-permanent **things don’t have permanent value; no, not if that’s your starting point. Thanks for clearing that up for us :rolleyes:.
But that’s the point - humanity does not act as if it is only serving the short term. Making life fulfilling in the short term has drastic consequences in the long term, the realisation of which shows how our moralities and goals only really get us anywhere when we act in the long term. And yet in the long term, if you assume a finite existence, it’s all…

…pointless
If notions of morality are subjective, so are notions of purpose. It’s hardly fair that you reduce everyone elses ascribed meanings regarding values, life, and love as nothing because they one-day cease. Your idea of “purpose” necessitates some absolute law-giver; my idea of “purpose” does not, nor does it entertain any fantasies of eternity for it’s fulfilment.
Not neccesarily - the two do not follow. Morality could be subjective based, but without reasonable purpose, it is meaningless. However, you can still have meaningful purposes, and yet have a subjectivity of morality, although I’d say that subjectivity would simply be based on personal limitations.situations rather than merely inclination. And you are wrong - my idea of purpose does not require a lawgiver - it requires eternal life of one form or another, however.
 
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