A
AntiTheist
Guest
I’m a moral skeptic, and I think I should point out an important point that you’re overlooking.The question we’ve been raising about value judgments is a normative one. Through reasoned analysis we are capable of changing our values. We all ask the question, “what is the right thing to do.”
A moral skeptic says, “there is no objective right or wrong. There is no good or bad.” Thus, a moral skeptic says of religion, “I don’t believe in religion, but there is nothing wrong with it, because there is no good or bad in anything.”
I don’t believe in objective right or wrong, but I do still evaluate things according to my values. It’s not “objectively bad” to believe in god, but it is 1) holding a belief not in accord with reality and 2) holding a belief that can potentially lead to actions that are deemed bad according to my values (and the values of many others in my society).
But my objection to the belief in god isn’t that it’s “bad” – which would require an appeal to my values – but rather my objection to the belief in god is that it is not demonstrably true – which requires an appeal to evidence.
You’d have to ask the individual author.Hitchens, Dawkins, ThomasToo, and many other atheists are not moral skeptics. In addition to their moral/value judgment about religion, they occasionally make objective moral/value assertions. Perhaps I’m mistaken, but I have read these statements to be statements of objective truth in the opinion of the author.
I’ll repeat what I’ve been saying: if you have a number of broad values shared in common – like the value that we all place on an orderly society – you can generate a more or less objective set of rules in the context of those values (nothing supernatural required)To moral skeptics, I say, I wonder if you are really a moral skeptic if you have been engaged in moral/value discussions in this thread, else you are taking great delight in playing with us.