Jesus was right. He was not referring to isolated events in our life but our basic attitude towards Him.: acceptance or rejection.
Our basic attitudes exist along a continuum with many shades of mixture of acceptance and rejection. This is still a false dichotomy. This kind of rhetorical device is a logical error used to motivate people to action.
It is not rhetorical but realistic if - as you seem to suggest - good is distinct from evil. “along with” gives the game away! There comes a stage - if you believe in moral responsibility - when innocence is distinguished from guilt and when co-existence becomes impossible.
If you don’t even allow for the possibility that there are other persons you beg the question of whether we are the authors of morality.
When you provide empirical evidence of rational life with morals, then it will be relevant to this discussion. I certainly don’t exclude the possibility, however speculative it might be. Your “God” might also be a total fiction. How many speculative possibilities must we entertain here?
It is speculative to assume that we** alone** are rational beings. In both science and philosophy it is impossible to make discoveries unless possibilities are considered. They are ruled out only when falsified. Your reference to God is a red herring.
1. Is the distinction between good and evil artificial?
What do you mean by “artificial”?
Please refer to question 4.
2. Does goodness enhance or impoverish life?
Usually enhance.
When not?
3. Does evil promote or destroy harmony in society?
Usually disharmony.
When not?
4. Can you specify a case where one should be evil rather than good or destructive rather than creative?
“Creative” in what sense? I think you are asking for a logical impossibility. This is asking, “Can you name a case when doing good is doing bad?”
Then you agree that there is an objective distinction between good and evil?
5. Is it positive or negative to reject the need for virtues like faith, hope, love and courage?
What does “reject the need” for these mean? I don’t understand the wording of this question. And, moreover, I do not consider “faith” a “virtue.” Your question is loaded with assumptions that I do not accept.
Do you believe hope, love and courage should be promoted in society and encouraged in every child’s education - or not?
6. Should you always do what you are convinced is right?
Pretty much, yes. But the “convinced” part is what I object too. When one is “convinced” is easy. But life is often much murkier than this. Just see all the threads here at CA for advice, and how varied the answers are!
It may be easy and life is often problematical but it remains an absolute truth that you should
always do what you are convinced is right. I’m sure you would never deliberately disregard that principle and continue to have a clear conscience…