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ddarko
Guest
Alright Innocente, you didn’t answer ANY of my questions to you or address my argument.The definition I used is here.
We can, and almost always do, make moral choices without having to determine the nature of our existence and how we know that we know what we know that we know. We seem to use a process analogous to Rom 2:15, a combination of emotion and rational thought.
My argument is this: If we take a contentious moral issue such as the homosexual act or artificial contraception and look at how it is debated, for example here on CAF, no one takes a blind bit of notice about the chapter and verse wheeled out by the other side. Debaters will also try for absolutes from tradition on one side and science on the other. Again, none of it changes hearts and minds. It turns out that no one can point to a truth written on everyone’s hearts. We all have principles to live by but in the real world moral absolutes seem at best superfluous to the way we make personal moral decisions, and at worse can be dangerous if we put our own beliefs (in science, philosophy or religion) before the welfare of our fellow man.
Do you, or do you not agree that there are something in this world that you consider like the Principle of Contradiction, the Empirical method, that Other Minds and Persons exists as TRUE objectively? Now that is from human experience. You might have misunderstood the term “human experience” as observation. That is incorrect.
My argument is that Morality is such a truth that is from human experience. Now what is your counter argument?
As for truths written in all our hearts, you are again talking about objectivity in the Normative sense. That is not what is meant by objective morality. What objective morality means is that regardless of whether it was written in your heart or not, whether the entire population believes it or not, some actions are MORAL and others are IMMORAL. You do not seem to have understood this according to what you have written above.
God Bless