K
Khalid
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thomism.wordpress.com/2013/01/27/a-critique-of-a-secular-morality/
James Chastek:
James Chastek:
Leah Libresco disputed whether Secular Humanism has any coherent set of core moral beliefs, and Darren responded by laying out what he thought they were. Though I liked some things in his account of morality (it was very analytic, clear, and orderly, for one) I ultimately disagree with it for three reasons:
1.) Here’s Darren’s first principle:Code:1.) His first principle is incoherent and his morality does not follow from it. 2.) His morality is radically inadequate since, in principle, it cannot provide answers to the sort of questions we most need a moral theory to answer, and as a subset of this: 3.) His is morality cannot show us the way to human excellence.
Darren, however, has a problem that the minister does not: for while we can dispute whether any God exists to sit on a throne, we know that no “Man” exists to sit on it. So, from Darren’s point of view, all his move can consist in is swapping out one non-existent ruler for another. After all, if we can put “Man” on a throne, why not put “Justice” or “Happiness” on the throne, since these would be far better and more direct ways to ensure Justice and human happiness? If the principal act of our morality is the exaltation of an abstract being which need not exist in itself, then there is no contradiction in even an atheist morality that states that the first moral act is to believe in God. But this suggests we’ve made a wrong turn somewhere.Code:As a fundamentalist Christian minister once said to me, “Secular Humanism is what you get when you take God off the throne, and put Man in his place.” When thinking of what Secular Humanism stands for and how it is different than other ‘isms that one might encounter, this sounds like a pretty good place to start.
This may seem unfair since Darren qualifies how he understands his first principle:
But this claim must be qualified: after all, humans were responsible for their affairs even on theism! Christians and Muslims, for example, were responsible for how they managed their affairs and knew that they would be ultimately judged as responsible for them. And so Darren’s claim must be far more radical and controversial, sc. human beings must freely create their own moral code and ground it only on their own say so. But it is precisely in light of this that the crisis of his first principle comes to the fore. As desirable as it might be to have “Man” create, promulgate, and enforce these new values, no such being exists or can exist. So how is moral action possible? Darren has two options: he can either take for granted some time when all human beings rationally believe in the same values, or he has to say that some person(s) by right must impose their values on others. What’s more, given his first principle, they must impose these values from the very throne on which God once sat. The first option is ridiculous, and the fact that Darren is only presenting these views in the context of a moral dispute is evidence that the first option is not a live possibility. This leaves Darren stuck with a divine ruler or rulers with absolute authority to impose their values on others, which stands in manifest contradiction to the morality he wants to advance. In Darren’s list of Secular values, for example, “Equality” is mentioned first, and his first virtue is “freedom”, that is, the ability of every person to determine his life so far as is possible.Code:By putting Man on the throne in place of God, Secular Humanism simply claims that we humans are responsible for our own affairs. We get the credit for our triumphs; we get the blame for our failures. For good or ill, the reins are in our hands.
2.) Any Christian reader is struck by the ways in which Darren’s list of moral commands is congruent with the Ten Commandments. Since by definition he have only pull from the last seven (and the last two are so similar) he basically borrows half of the second-tablet morality. We cannot murder (V) or steal (VII) or bear false witness (VII). This is admirable (especially his prohibition on lying, though he does not take it as absolute). That said, the commandments he leaves off speak volumes: he apparently does not believe that sexuality is a sphere of activity that falls under a basic moral principles, and he has nothing to say about coveting, that is, the morality of the heart and the interior man. One is left with the sense that this morality, such as it is, views anything having to do with sex as such as morally licit (if not commendable). If we condemn some act with a sexual aspect (child prostitution, say) we can only critique those aspects of it that are not sexual (say, the violation of consent). But why is this? One suspects that the idea behind this is that sexuality is so personal that it cannot fall under a moral law. We simply like what we like, and that is the end of it. This sort of belief also makes clear why this moral code has nothing to say about coveting. Coveting is done in the heart, and the heart wants what it wants. But the upshot of this is that his morality is entirely superficial and extrinsic. Someone who would look to for morality to inform him about what is most profoundly important and innermost to him finds that the Secular Humanist can only shrug and insist that he has nothing to say on the matter… (CONTINUED)