Is the Golden Rule a Foundational Moral Principle or A Rule of Thumb?

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Yes. If the child was viable outside the womb, I would want the option to care for it.
That is good to know in terms of having a dialogue.

I see the unborn child as a separate being having the same dignity and rights that I do. I do unto it as I would do to myself.
Whether it is my child or that of another, there exists the same “rule” to love. My own kids were my responsibility, and that bond, which exists as only a potential with others, has been actualized with them.

I know abortion to be the killinbg of a person. You no doubt would call this faith. but I am giving you the heads-up.
 
This issue isn’t whether a different view is plausible, the issue is whether it is moral. Just calling a zygote an acorn isn’t an answer. You were once a zygote. The destruction of that particular zygote would have ended your life. If permissible then, why not now? You have a distinct and traceable span of existence. The only reason you don’t consider a zygote to have the privilege of existence you do is because you have the possibility of changing its future by your action. That zygote has started its existence that inevitably would become what you are now - a functioning human being. What right do you have to determine WHEN to stop the process - without adequate moral justification?

As for the acorn - if it were the last acorn in existence - if all oak trees went extinct - we would accord it the same value as an oak tree precisely because we would see it as the “last hope” for oak trees. Without it, oak trees would cease to exist. So yes, it is and would be the last oak tree, even though you have a misconception that it is not.

That is very humane of you, but the option still might come down to burning them alive under some circumstances, so that might still be the required choice. Whether you are disturbed or not is irrelevant - bringing it up is still an attempt at an ad hominem - what the scenario presumed was the burning alive was the only option to contain the virus. If it wasn’t clear enough, let’s stipulate that now - What if that was the only option and doing otherwise would result in infecting the world? Calling it utilitarianism doesn’t make the moral problem disappear. You see, there are conditions under which something morally distasteful could be the only moral option.

By the way, we don’t know how “merciful” or humane the Israelites were supposed to have been in carrying out the command, so your (and Bradski’s) imagined merciless slashing and maiming need not have been part of the OT scenario except in your imagination.
It wouldn’t have ended my life, it would have prevented it. An acorn isn’t a tree, no more that the zygote is me.

You are missing the point that I’m not a omnipotent being. If you are limiting all my choices to one. Then it isn’t a choice moral or otherwise. One option isn’t a choice.
 
It wouldn’t have ended my life, it would have prevented it. An acorn isn’t a tree, no more that the zygote is me.
On the contrary:
As for the acorn - if it were the last acorn in existence - if all oak trees went extinct - we would accord it the same value as an oak tree precisely because we would see it as the “last hope” for oak trees. Without it, oak trees would cease to exist. So yes, it is and would be the last oak tree, even though you have a misconception that it is not.
You are missing the point that I’m not a omnipotent being. If you are limiting all my choices to one. Then it isn’t a choice moral or otherwise. One option isn’t a choice.
You are correct, I am missing the point completely because you seem to be willing to judge an omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent being when it suits you, but then do not accept the same burden when THAT burden is put on you.

You called it “special pleading” before, now you positively want to engage in special pleading to excuse yourself. If you want to take on the burden of judging a 3omni Being then do take it on, don’t run for the nearest exit when you must make the difficult calls.
 
On the contrary:

You are correct, I am missing the point completely because you seem to be willing to judge an omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent being when it suits you, but then do not accept the same burden when THAT burden is put on you.

You called it “special pleading” before, now you positively want to engage in special pleading to excuse yourself. If you want to take on the burden of judging a 3omni Being then do take it on, don’t run for the nearest exit when you must make the difficult calls.
I’m not the last human. Responsible for a few new ones myself. 😃

Being finite, I am limited to finite actions. If you give me only one option. I don’t have a choice. You might as well ask me about the morality of gravity.

An infinite and omnipotent being has other options or he’s not omnipotent. He has limitations. Which isn’t infinite.

Are you saying that God is not omnipotent and infinite?
 
It wouldn’t have ended my life, it would have prevented it.
Trivial distinction.

Are you denying that you (the human being you are now) were EVER a zygote? Was that stage just incidental to what makes you a human, then? It wasn’t a necessary condition for you to exist now?

It may have prevented you from ever having an awareness of your existence, but it would have ended your life AND your existence by ending the possibility of its continuance.
You are missing the point that I’m not a omnipotent being. If you are limiting all my choices to one. Then it isn’t a choice moral or otherwise. One option isn’t a choice.
There were two options - one moral (taking the lives of those infected) and one immoral (letting the virus spread to all humanity.) You are merely restating that only one truly moral choice existed. My point exactly.
 
Are you saying that God is not omnipotent and infinite?
No I am saying that his power does NOT extend into taking away human freedom or else human moral choices are simply trivial. Our choices are real choices, but when the evil choices of some put into jeopardy the very possibility of free choice (I believe the nature of evil does just that - it takes away our free wills) for all human beings, then God can exercise a prerogative.
 
Trivial distinction.

Are you denying that you (the human being you are now) were EVER a zygote? Was that stage just incidental to what makes you a human, then? It wasn’t a necessary condition for you to exist now?

It may have prevented you from ever having an awareness of your existence, but it would have ended your life AND your existence by ending the possibility of its continuance.

There were two options - one moral (taking the lives of those infected) and one immoral (letting the virus spread to all humanity.) You are merely restating that only one truly moral choice existed. My point exactly.
All mammals go through the same stages.

If I put out my campfire, did I prevent a forest fire or did I end one?
 
No I am saying that his power does NOT extend into taking away human freedom or else human moral choices are simply trivial. Our choices are real choices, but when the evil choices of some put into jeopardy the very possibility of free choice (I believe the nature of evil does just that - it takes away our free wills) for all human beings, then God can exercise a prerogative.
So ordering the Israelites to kill babies didn’t take away their freedom? Commanding it wasn’t coercive? Are you saying the Israelites should have opposed God as his command was clearly immoral?
 
I’ve always believed that the idea of moral discourse was to arrive at an “internally” consistent position. In a very meaningful sense we should refrain from contaminating that position with our personal opinions or preferences. The goal should be working out where sound moral thinking takes us.
I agree. We should put personal preferences aside when trying to work out what is the right thing to do.
To continue to insist that how I would act in a matter is important to determining rightness of the matter is a scurrilous attempt to create an ad hominem.
I agree again. But that is not, however, what I am doing. If someone declares a moral position on any given matter, then it should be quite easy to see if they truly believe what they say by checking to see if they are consistent in their views. For example, we all know of instances where some women who are ardent anti-abortionists end up having abortions themselves. The personal position they hold is inconsistent with reality.

I have never had a problem with sex outside of marriage. So when my wife said that my daughter wanted to have her boyfriend sleep over, there was a lot of huffing and puffing on my part until she pointed out what my position on the matter has always been. Was it the case that it was OK for everyone…except my daughter? Well, naturally not. I had to be consistent. And it’s been the same with all moral matters. Drugs, contraception, homosexuality, abortion…I have to be sure that I have the courage of my convictions.

So if you believe that something is morally correct, I want to know to know if you would actually back it up personally. How you act has no bearing on ‘determining rightness’, but it will tell us if you have the courage of your convictions. It will tell us that the position you hold includes yourself as well as everyone else.
The problem, Bradski, is that my endeavor has not been to claim that it is right because the Bible says it. That would be an example of the genetic fallacy.
I’m not sure why you brought the bible into this. No-one has suggested it’s right simply becuase it’s in the bible. The only time the book has been mentioned is when PR asked where it might be found that religious people do evil things.
Your entire argument, concerning you having the moral courage or fortitude to always do what you believe, is also problematic regarding the genetic fallacy because your claim boils down to, “it is right for me because I am consistent in doing it.”
No. You have it backwards. It’s not right because I am consistent. But being consistent shows that I believe I am right.
That has been my intention through this debate. My claim is that a consistent moral position should supercede a determination of “What I would do.”
But what you would do must be an example of your moral position. How could it be any other way? If a woman says that abortion is wrong, but has one anyway, her position is completely untenable.
Your point of view then, is this: It is wrong for God to permit the Hebrew people to kill babies…
To permit? I think you’re wrong there. This isn’t a case of someone taking the law into their own hands and God allowing it. They were following God’s commands.

cont’d
 
I am not interested in being set up for another ad hominem. What I would personally do regarding the issue is not an important consideration in determining the logic or truth of the argument. In fact, neither is what you would do.
But it will tell us if you think that it was OK for other people to obey God, but that you might somehow be an exception. This is like the woman saying that abortion is wrong and then saying that whether she had one or not is irrelevant and has no bearing on her position That doesn’t sound very logical to me.
My position, which I have argued consistently, is that child killing is not permissible except for morally justifiable reasons.
So if it is morally justifiable (because God has commanded it), then it is permissible. But are you the exception to this rule? Does it apply to everyone except you? Or would you have swung the sword, seeing as it’s entirely justifiable.
What I am saying is, what IF something very much like it was the case? Could God under conditions similar to the virus scenario have been justified in issuing a command?
In that He only had the one option? Seeing that He’s omni this and omni that I’d say He’d have as many options as He chose. I’m sure you don’t believe that. Unless you think that somehow…in some way…hacking them to death was the best one.
Killing is also “frowned upon” by God and the Israelites, as well. That does not mean killing never can be justified. It sides mean that when it is not justified, it shouldn’t be done.

This would hold with babies (in the street or otherwise) and with fully grown humans as well. God, consistently, frowns on unjust killing. That does not entail justified cases of killing are necessarily “frowned upon,” not desireable perhaps, but duly permitted should the circumstances make it the only “moral” option.
So it wasn’t the best one. God ordered it (not permitted it, as you have already said before) because, as you said, it was ‘the only moral option’. I would normally say that you didn’t really mean that, but you keep suggesting it:
You see, there are conditions under which something morally distasteful could be the only moral option.
So was it the only moral option for God, as you keep on saying?
By the way, we don’t know how “merciful” or humane the Israelites were supposed to have been in carrying out the command, so your (and Bradski’s) imagined merciless slashing and maiming need not have been part of the OT scenario except in your imagination.
‘By the way, it might not have been as bad as you’ve imagined’. You think?

But I’m still not clear on your position. Here’s an example of why that is:
…a determination by God (using the faculties of omniscience and omnibenevolence - note omnipotence is not required for making a moral determination, which is the reason I left it out) might provide a morally justiable reason.
You are saying that if something is determined by God, then as far as you are concerned it might, repeat might provide a morally justifiable reason.

You’ve spent I don’t know how many posts stating quite categorically that the Israelites were morally justified simply because God had commanded it. Now you are saying it might have been justifiable.

And we still don’t know whether you count yourself as an exception to God’s commands. This is NOT some convoluted ad hominem. It is simply an attempt to know, on the assumption that the massacre took place, whether you think that killing the children was morally justified because it was commanded by God and if you think that God’s commands are valid for everyone or whether you consider yourself an exception.
 
Except they had spent years in the culture of Egypt. So perhaps we could thank Egypt, maybe even Isis and Horus.
Indeed.

So perhaps it was the Egyptian pagan culture which fostered this false belief of tribalism and genocide, yes?
 
Huh? How does “they were a kingdom” conclude with “so they didn’t have any examples of genocide”?
It was two thoughts combined with a conjunction. A compound sentence.

You were suggesting that the Israelites learned their tribalism and genocide from the Egyptians. It was not likely. Egyptian society was based centered around a monarchy. It wasn’t tribal. Also there was not history of genocide. I offered a link that attested to that fact.

If we are to believe that the bible is inerrant the Israelites learned it from God.

Deuteronomy 20:17

You must doom them all - the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites - as the LORD, your God, has commanded you,
 
You are saying that if something is determined by God, then as far as you are concerned it might, repeat might provide a morally justifiable reason.

You’ve spent I don’t know how many posts stating quite categorically that the Israelites were morally justified simply because God had commanded it. Now you are saying it might have been justifiable.

And we still don’t know whether you count yourself as an exception to God’s commands. This is NOT some convoluted ad hominem. It is simply an attempt to know, on the assumption that the massacre took place, whether you think that killing the children was morally justified because it was commanded by God and if you think that God’s commands are valid for everyone or whether you consider yourself an exception.
For the sake of clarity and, perhaps, because I have not made this clear enough…

Do you recognize the difference between “in principle” and “in fact?”

In principle means, essentially, that “it is always the case that.”
In fact means, essentially, “if certain requisite conditions obtain in this case, then…”

What I am claiming is that “in principle” if the 3omni Being (and there can only be ONE but that is an entirely different line of argument) makes a moral determination, then that determination always supercedes a determination that a limited human being could possibly make. The access a 3omni being (aka God) would have to all relevant facts and knowledge of all future and past implications, together with infinite goodness would mean, by definition, our judgements would be inferior. So, “in principle” we would always be obligated to doing what is determined by God. I am claiming that is an a priori truth just as a triangle having 3 sides is necessarily true. I don’t even see how that could be disputed. It is self-evidently true from the definition of God as having the 3 omni traits.

The "in fact” question is whether God actually did command the Israelites to carry out the conquest of the Canaanites in the manner claimed in the Old Testament.

That is an entirely different question from the “in principle” one. Merely because someone claims God has commanded something, does not mean that is true. A mere claim is never sufficient to make it so. In a real sense, it is a wide open question that we can only give opinions on based on the relevant facts. We were not there.

The reason I bring up this distinction is to counter the typical atheist contention that the Old Testament passages necessarily show the Israelites were wrong in doing what they did because God “could not” command such behaviour.

I am claiming that the “in principle” answer to the question shows that under certain conditions (after weighing the detrimental effects that permitting the Canaanites to practice their abominable rituals would have down through all history), a 3omni God could have been justified in making a determination to destroy the culture, for much the same moral reasons a surgeon might have for amputating the leg of a cancerous patient.

The athiest argument then, is reduced to contending the “facts” of the case because s/he cannot argue the command is wrong “in principle.” It isn’t.

Whether the Israelites actually did carry out a command determined by God is not one we can absolutely determine. They COULD have because “in principle” it is possible for God to have given the command (as the “in principle” argument shows.)

Did God actually do so?

I would argue that given the entire context of Judaism and Christianity, including the Incarnation of God as man, a case can be made that something very critical had occurred when the Israelites failed to carry out the command. That failure led, according to prophetic writings and Christ’s own teaching, to God taking the unprecedented step of “becoming man.” Why would God, himself, become man except for cosmically important reasons?

If Judaic and Christian history are true, then it is very plausible that something very important hung on the Israelites carrying out God’s determination.

The question of what I would have done has been, and continues to be irrelevant. Would I have been morally obligated to carry out the command? If God commanded it, yes, and for the same reason that a surgeon would face the unsavory necessity of removing a cancerous patient’s leg. I think I have shown that.

To put myself back in time and make a judgement about whether I would carry out what the Israelites claim they were compelled to is a completely different question. I am not completely in possession of all the relevant facts, but I can say, following the “in principle” argument that had ALL the relevant conditions obtained and absolute certainty existed that God commanded the act and that this God was, indeed, the 3omni God, then I would have been obligated to do so.

Would I have had the moral courage or strength to have carried it out? I don’t know. But, clearly, it would not have been an easy decision, as, I suppose, amputating a leg is never an easy decision. An atheist might bear “hard feelings” against God or the Israelites for contemplating such an act, but that may more reflect the hard feelings or anger of the cancer patient left without a leg than it does unbiased moral clarity about what was necessary, though regrettable.
 
It was not likely. Egyptian society was based centered around a monarchy. It wasn’t tribal.
Are you claiming tribal groups did not have a leadership structure? Or that just calling it a monarchy makes all the difference?
 
It was two thoughts combined with a conjunction. A compound sentence.

You were suggesting that the Israelites learned their tribalism and genocide from the Egyptians. It was not likely. Egyptian society was based centered around a monarchy. It wasn’t tribal. Also there was not history of genocide.
Not likely? That seems to be a faith-based statement, Roscoe.

You cannot assert that the Egyptians had no experience of genocide.

Incidentally, did you know about the Egyptian/Hittite conflict?

Also,where did Pharoah get the idea to kill all the Hebrew baby boys? :hmmm:

I think you are professing some ideas that you get from faith alone, which is, BTW, something that is contravened in my Church.
 
Not likely? That seems to be a faith-based statement, Roscoe.

You cannot assert that the Egyptians had no experience of genocide.

Incidentally, did you know about the Egyptian/Hittite conflict?

Also,where did Pharoah get the idea to kill all the Hebrew baby boys? :hmmm:

I think you are professing some ideas that you get from faith alone, which is, BTW, something that is contravened in my Church.
I never been accused of having a faith in the Ancient Egyptians. That’s a new one. 😃

I provided a link. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genocides_in_history#Before_1490
Adam Jones explains, in his book Genocide: A Comprehensive Introduction, that people throughout history have always had the ability to see other groups as alien; he quotes Chalk and Jonassohn: “Historically and anthropologically peoples have always had a name for themselves. In a great many cases, that name meant ‘the people’ to set the owners of that name off against all other people who were considered of lesser quality in some way. If the differences between the people and some other society were particularly large in terms of religion, language, manners, customs, and so on, then such others were seen as less than fully human: pagans, savages, or even animals. (Chalk and Jonassohn, The History and Sociology of Genocide, p. 28.)”[9]
Jones continues by saying that the less a people have in common with another group the easier it is for the aliens to be defined as less than human and from there it is but a short step to an argument that says if they are a threat, then they should “be eliminated in order that we may live (Them or us).”[10] But after making this assessment Jones continues “The difficulty, as Frank Chalk and Kurt Jonassohn pointed out in their early study, is that such historical records as exist are ambiguous and undependable. While history today is generally written with some fealty to ‘objective’ facts, most previous accounts aimed rather to praise the writer’s patron (normally the leader) and to emphasize the superiority of one’s own gods and religious beliefs.”[11]
Scholars of antiquity differentiate between genocide and gendercide, in which males were killed but the children (particularly the girls) and women were incorporated into the conquering society. Jones notes that “Chalk and Jonassohn provide a wide-ranging selection of historical events such as the Assyrian Empire’s root-and branch depredations in the first half of the first millennium BCE, and the destruction of Melos by Athens during the Peloponnesian War (fifth century BCE), a gendercidal rampage described by Thucydides in his ‘Melian Dialogue’.”[12]
Jared Diamond has suggested that genocidal violence may have caused the Neanderthals to go extinct.[13] Ronald Wright has also suggested such a genocide.[14]
The Old Testament describes the genocides of Amalekites and Midianites,[9] the latter taking place during the life of Moses in the 2nd millennium BC. The Book of Numbers chapter 31 recounts that an army of Israelites kill every Midianite man but capture the women and children as plunder. These are later killed at the command of Moses, with the exception of girls who have not slept with a man. The total number killed is not recorded but the number of surviving girls is recorded as thirty two thousand. Jones quotes Jerusalem-based Holocaust Studies Professor Yehuda Bauer: “As a Jew, I must live with the fact that the civilization I inherited … encompasses the call for genocide in its canon.”[15]
Ben Kiernan, a Yale scholar, has labelled the destruction of Carthage at the end of the Third Punic War (149–146 BC) “The First Genocide”.[12]
The Anasazi civilization in the American Southwest was destroyed in a genocide that took place circa 800 AD, suggests a 2010 study.[16][17]
Quoting Eric Margolis, Jones observes that in the 13th century the Mongol horsemen of Temüjin Genghis Khan were genocidal killers (génocidaires)[9] who were known to kill whole nations, leaving nothing but empty ruins and bones.[18] He ordered the extermination of the Tata Mongols, and all Kankalis males in Bukhara “taller than a wheel”[19] using a technique called measuring against the linchpin. Rosanne Klass has referred to the Mongols’ rule of Afghanistan as “genocide”.[20]
Similarly, the Turko-Mongol conqueror Tamerlane was known for his extreme brutality and his conquests were accompanied by genocidal massacres in the cities he occupied.[21] William Rubinstein wrote: “In Assyria (1393–4) – Tamerlane got around – he killed all the Christians he could find, including everyone in the, then, Christian city of Tikrit, thus virtually destroying Christianity in Mesopotamia. Impartially, however, Tamerlane also slaughtered Shi’ite Muslims, Jews and heathens.”[22]
If you have evidence of a Genocide by the Ancient Egyptians I’d be happy to read it.

Interesting read about the Egyptian - Hittite conflict and treaty.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian%E2%80%93Hittite_peace_treaty
 
Not likely since they were a kingdom and didn’t have any examples of genicidee.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genocides_in_history#Before_1490
Not sure how a non-mention merits being cited to support your claim.

Here is a mention, however, from the Bulletin of Ramses II:
His majesty slew the entire force of the wretched foe from Hatti, together with his great chiefs and all his brothers, as well as all the chiefs of all the countries that had come with him, their infantry and their chariotry falling on their faces one upon the other. His majesty slaughtered and slew them in their places; … He took no note of the millions of foreigners; he regarded them as chaff.
Cited in: mandm.org.nz/2011/01/god-and-the-genocide-of-the-canaanites-part-ii-ancient-near-eastern-conquest-accounts.html
 
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