I think you are correct to say that materialism is as much a metaphysical claim as those made by religion. I am not saying that government ought to subscribe to materialism. I am saying that in justifying laws we ought to avoid metaphysics.
What exactly would you have them based on, if not materialism and not philosophy? Or would we have to use some philosophy that avoids metaphysics? Is there one?
revert_jen;6985064:
The fact of the existance of God, and His revelation of His will for us, is a central fact of my existence and I refuse to leave it outside the polling place, nor do I desire all politicians to leave it outside the Capitol.
Accepted. No one should ask you to.
Actually, as far as I can tell, you just did. If none of my religious justifications are valid reasons for any law whatsoever, then how can I bring them to the polling place, and how can politicians use them for their voting?
revert_jen;6985064:
There is nothing in any part of the Constitution that says that people’s religious beliefs (including those of elected officials) should not inform their voting decisions on moral issues.
Agreed.
Really? Because you said:
religious reasons ought to be regarded as illegitimate in the “public square”
If the religious reasons are regarded as illegitimate, then how am I able to use them for voting? Are you saying that religious people are allowed to vote for legislation on religious grounds, but must then keep their reasoning a secret because the reasons are illegitimate?
revert_jen;6985064:
The actual effects of your position are that only atheists in public office would be allowed to vote their consciences at all times, because none of their beliefs would be religiously based. Instead they would be based on personal preference, the views of various philosophers, whatever pseudo-science they happened to pick up misrepresented in a newspaper (these are politicians still, not scientists), whatever the guy at the raquet club said yesterday, etc. While at the same time, anyone who believed in God (still a great majority here) would have to prove that his views were not based on religion before he could vote them. It doesn’t sound like the free exercise of religion to me.
I’m wondering how you think you have absolved yourself of the responsibility of your moral decisions. I can’t see ho we as individuals can avoid such responsibility simply by subscribing to a religion.
Me, I’m wondering what your response has to do with what I said. You have said that religious reasoning is not allowed. If my reasons are religious, then they are not allowed, so you are telling me I can’t vote my conscience because my reasoning is illegitimate. I am quite happy to take all responsibility for my views, of course. That is not the same as saying that I can argue all of them effectively if I am not allowed to acknowledge the reality of the existance of God, the eternal life of souls, and so forth. What I am saying is that your proposal takes away from me either the right to vote my conscience, or my right to explain my reasons for my vote. If your “utopia” were to be achieved, I would have to refuse any public office in principle, because my choices would be to either vote against my conscience in certain cases, or to underhandedly and secretly use illegitimate reasons for my vote. Currently, for example, personal financial interest is an illegitimate reason for an official’s vote on an issue. Your proposal makes voting because of one’s religious ideas comparable to voting because one has taken a bribe.
Can you be more specific about something I said that Jefferson would not endorse?
Pretty much all of it, I would think.
Thomas Jefferson: Statute for Religious Freedom:
…the proscribing any citizen as unworthy the public confidence by laying upon him an incapacity of being called to the offices of trust and emolument, unless he profess or renounce this or that religious opinion, is depriving him injuriously of those privileges and advantages to which in common with his fellow citizens he has a natural right…
…That no man shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship, place, or ministry whatsoever, nor shall be enforced, restrained, molested, or burdened in his body or goods, nor shall otherwise suffer on account of his religious opinions or belief; but that all men shall be free to profess, and by argument to maintain, their opinions in matters of religion, and that the same shall in nowise diminish, enlarge, or affect their civil capacities.
(emphasis mine) Jefferson very strongly believed both that the government should in no way inhibit the freedom of people to practice, profess, and argue their religious beliefs in public and in private. He also very strongly believed that in no way should religious practices or financial support of religion be in any way enjoined on anyone. However, as far as I can tell, he would have been very opposed to muzzling all religious arguments in favor of particular moral positions. Jefferson was very much in favor of allowing everyone to argue their own religious positions and would therefore not hold that religious reasons were illegitimate, but instead that any attempt to prevent them from using their religious beliefs to inform their moral and voting decisions would be very wrong.
Your idea and Jefferson’s ideas seem to me to be opposed. You want to have a completely secular public square by muzzling all religions. Jefferson wanted to have a completely secular public square by allowing all religions to speak unrestricted.
–Jen