Not really, i mean it’s obvious. The authority for an atheist moral system comes from man alone, and quite honestly, humanity ain’t much by itself, it has some good points, but it also has quite a few bad. The authority from a theistic moral system is dependent on God, and God’s law, being perfect (or presented as such) is much easier to bow your head to.
Quite frankly, if you could get away with breaking the law of man, you’d do it, because there is no reason outside of being caught that you should obey it. There is no escape from God though.
Also, if you tell a man, “obey me in life, and you shall receive happiness in death” he might say, “sure, good deal”. If you say to a man, “obey me” he’d probably just flip you the finger and continue on with his business.
It’s just more assertion. You seem to be implying though, that theists are good
because they believe in God, and that if God were somehow disproved they’d all run riot, raping, killing, stealing etc. God is the only thing that keeps them in check.
Atheists, on the other hand, behave morally because that’s what people do. No god required.
So now I have to ask - who’s actually more moral? The people who need God to be good, or the people who don’t? I can’t imagine having to be
bribed to act morally - what a pitiful existence that must be!
Anyway, I got involved with a thread on morality recently, it got to the point where a single response was taking 5 posts, I’ve had enough of that for now. None of your arguments are new, and none of them are supported by evidence.
Now faith is the undeniable base of reason because to say something is fact requires faith in the five senses, in the reliability of the human mind, and of course, that other people are actually telling the truth. For example, how verifiable is that the big bang happened, you can’t personally prove it, and the system that proves it is obviously constructed so it can prove the big bang theory, one must have faith that such an occurence happened.
Faith in one’s senses is hardly the same thing as faith in a supreme being. For one thing, this ‘faith’ in one’s senses is being constantly confirmed.Unless you are an extreme solipsist then this is good enough to call ‘fact’ for practical purposes.
So yes, one needs ‘faith’ (more accurately, ‘confidence’) in one’s faculties, in order to believe the accumulated raw data for reasoning. But such confidence is easily gained through repetition and validation.
But we were talking about religious faith. You said:
Faith (in the religious context)…is the undeniable base of reason.
But religious faith has no place in the process of reasoning and rational thought. This is obvious, by the fact that scientific discovery is not the exclusive domain of theists.