Nope. It is NOT a false analogy.
Yes it is. You are trying to analogize between something immaterial and conceptual and material physical objects. Those things are
fundamentally different from each other.
A thing either exists or it does not. Whether you're talking about a physical object or not. Unicorns do not exist as real animals but they do exist as ideas and as little ceramic figurines at the gas station/gift shop. Likewise, an objective standard of morality either exists or it does not.
First, you're simply repeating the fallacy.
But overall, you are correct.....either an objective standard of morality exists, or it does not. So far, no one has provided evidence that one exists
Your opinion has nothing whatsoever to do with it. Whether you like it or not has nothing whatsoever to do with it. Whether you follow it or not has nothing whatsoever to do with it. Whether a nations laws are consistent with it has nothing whatsoever to do with whether it exists.
Agreed.
You've gone from making one argument from silence to making two arguments from silence and you've contradicted yourself from one sentence ago.
Not at all. What you seem to be presenting is that everyone should just assume everything they and anyone else can imagine, exists. Otherwise, what exactly is your point other than "Just because you see no evidence for something, you shouldn't conclude that it doesn't exist"?
A man is hiding in your coat closet. When you walk into your house, there's no sign of him whatsoever. No foot prints, no odor, you can't hear him breathing, he doesn't clear his throat, nothing. You have no evidence that he exists. Is the lack of evidence of his existence, remove him from existence? Is your lack of any knowledge of any evidence whatsoever that there is a man hiding in your coat closet provide even a rational argument in support of his non-existence? Does the fact that no one has shown up to make an affirmative argument for his existence stand as an argument against his existence?
This is what I'm talking about. Do you assume there's a man hiding in your closet every time you come home and every time you enter a room? Do you say to yourself, "Just because I've seen no evidence that a man is hiding in my closet doesn't mean there's not one there, so I should assume there is"?
And why stop at men? Maybe there's a leprechaun hiding in your closet? Or a suitcase full of cash? According to the logic you've laid out, none of us are justified in concluding that those things aren't in all our closets.
This is stupidity on parade!
There's no way that you even believe this.
See above. Do you assume that everything imaginable by anyone exists? If not, then by what standard do you conclude that something doesn't exist?
There was a time when not one single soul on Earth could provide a single syllable's worth of evidence that the Earth was round or that it orbited the Sun or that lightning was electricity or that there was even any such thing as electricity. It wasn't two hundred years ago that no one understood that electric motors where even possible and no one had ever built one, never mind provided even the slightest scintilla of evidence that there were billions of them running 24/7 in every living cell in your body and every other living body. All of those things and a hundred thousand more were all extant and working before any human being ever thought of the concepts required to describe them, much less provide evidence for their existence.
So again, do you assume that everything imaginable by anyone exists? If not, by what standard to you conclude that some things don't exist?
No, but I don't make the stupid mistake of making an affirmative argument for their non-existence based on that. There is a reason why an argument from silence is a logical fallacy.
Then by what standard
do you conclude that some things don't exist?
No it doesn't. Not in the moral sense. You are conflating morality with legality. They aren't the same thing.
I didn't say they were the same thing. Legality is typically based on morality, and we can get a good idea of a society's moral values by looking at their legal codes.
You said that if a nation changes a law and makes an act of killing that previously was "murder", into "not murder" that nation is still guilty of "murder". My question is, according to who? Who decides that the nation is still guilty of "murder"?
It's according to the definition of the word murder.
For the umpteenth time....."murder" is the illegal/unlawful act of killing a person. What acts of killing are and aren't labelled "murder" differs by society and across time.
Murder, in the moral sense, is the unjustified killing of a person.
There are several instances when killing someone is justified. In defense of the innocent or the execution of a convicted murderer or during a just war, etc.
And who determines what is and isn't justified?
Liar.
There's no way you're not a liar now. You either lied before or you just lied now.
Oh grow up Clete. I was brought to church 3 days a week from the time I was literally 1 week old until I was 15. So you can take your accusations and.....well, you know.
On what basis would you propose to convince me to continue discussing the topic of morality with a liar?
What's most amusing to me is how you apparently think you know anything about me and my background.
Explain to me why I should continue with someone who just throws around empty accusations and has no sense of obligation to back them up with anything. Explain to me why I should continue with someone who masks their insecurities with ridiculous, laughable, and pathetic hubris?
Any accusation of murder against God is blasphemy. If you wish to continue, you'll drop it - now.
I will not warn you again.
Pay better attention. I said nothing about God committing murder.
God is moral.
Morality is not defined by what God does, as the Calvinist would have you believe. If that were the case, it would be meaningless to say that God is good (morally).
What God does is objectively moral.
So there is no act that any human can commit that is objectively immoral or wrong. No matter how seemingly heinous the act, if God told the person to do it, it automatically becomes moral and right.
Thank you for illustrating my point for me so well.
Do you have the right to defend yourself and the right to private property or not?
Why? Based on what?
The law.
My right to life as well as to private property is based on an objective standard but is not absolute and does not extend to "no matter the circumstances". I, for example, forfeit my right to life if I murder someone else.
What objective standard, and where is it?
This answer, however, is in contradiction to your position. If it's okay to murder so long as one has the sanction of the society in which you live, why wouldn't the same apply to raping your daughter or stealing your car?
The same applies to you. Apparently it's ok to murder, rape, and steal so long as one has the sanction of God.
Was it immoral for the Nazi soldiers to rape Jewish women during WWII? It certainly wasn't illegal and the whole crowd standing around was probably cheering it on, right, so why, according to your view, would it be immoral?
Was this?
They fought against Midian, as the LORD commanded Moses, and killed every man.
The Israelites captured the Midianite women and children and took all the Midianite herds, flocks and goods as plunder. They burned all the towns where the Midianites had settled, as well as all their camps. They took all the plunder and spoils, including the people and animals, and brought the captives, spoils and plunder to Moses and Eleazar the priest
Moses was angry with the officers of the army
“Have you allowed all the women to live?” he asked them. “They were the ones who followed Balaam’s advice and were the means of turning the Israelites away from the LORD in what happened at Peor, so that a plague struck the LORD’s people. Now kill all the boys. And kill every woman who has slept with a man, but save for yourselves every girl who has never slept with a man.
It would seem that your "objective standard of morality" is nothing more than "whatever God says".
And that makes me wonder....if a man came to your house and told you God had commanded him to kill you and your wife, take whatever possessions he wanted, and take your daughters, would you let him? If not, then your "objective moral standard" is not the slightest bit objective and is no different than any other religion's moral code.
So what is it Clete? Is whatever God commands good and moral, or isn't it?