V
Vonsalza
Guest
When confronted with “for-instances” concerning right and wrong, atheists will often appeal to “common sense” as a metric for providing a solution for resolve.
However, how does an atheist explain when my “common sense” yields a different answer from their “common sense” for the same problem? And when that exists, how can it possibly be a valid metric by which we determine what’s morally “right”?
Is an appeal to “common sense” merely a more authoritative-looking version of “well, I think…”? After all, it was “common sense” to the Aztecs that human-sacrifice was the solution for a poor harvest.
How do I confirm the truth of “common sense” in a way that is more independently and materially reproducible than the way I confirm religious truth that atheists eschew?
However, how does an atheist explain when my “common sense” yields a different answer from their “common sense” for the same problem? And when that exists, how can it possibly be a valid metric by which we determine what’s morally “right”?
Is an appeal to “common sense” merely a more authoritative-looking version of “well, I think…”? After all, it was “common sense” to the Aztecs that human-sacrifice was the solution for a poor harvest.
How do I confirm the truth of “common sense” in a way that is more independently and materially reproducible than the way I confirm religious truth that atheists eschew?