Secular principles can be agreed upon without all of us converting to one faith.
A nice relevant clip:
I have avoided these questions but will try to answer now.
Same sex erotic love is completely foreign to me. Years ago, a gay friend of mine said that heterosexual erotic love was completely foreign to him.
Marriage is a civil contract. It guarantees certain protections under the law to the party's involved.
Our country enforces separation of church and state. So, if the state decides to legalize same-sex marriages I have no quarrel with it.
I believe that religious denominations have every right to bless only those nuptials which conform to their stated requirements.
A certain percentage of the world's population is born with sexual orientation which is outside of the norm.
Marriage ought to be restricted to consenting adults.
I am opposed to polygamy which has older men amassing hareems of young girls.
The family is, I believe, the foundation of society. I like to keep it simple.
Rather, I noted it can be but isn't necessarily. I even set out an example of a law without any discernible moral foundation.
Not particularly, which is rather important and goes along with my part that equity and not a particular religious morality is at the heart of our intentionally secular compact....With religion written into and between every line
We'd have to talk about that, but you're the only one advocating either of our notions should control the other's in law.What is the difference between my moral idea and your own?
We, the people, of the United States. I'm ready to argue we are the best expression and are the latest to take those ideas and run with them substantively.
Again, not my argument.What objective standard of morality are you appealing to?
No. The logical conclusion of my argument is found in the Constitution and the ongoing illustration of its principle through application.Was Hitler at the latest and best? The logical conclusion of your position in this thread is to try to set up a moral system apart from God, which is oddly enough precisely what you poke fun of atheists for.
Simply not the case. I've set out my understanding and illustrated it more than once. I invite you or the reader to peruse our dialog. Prego.You still haven't given any reason whatsoever other than "that's the way it is now." Bell-bottoms were cool in the 60's. Things change.
So as to not waste time, how do you mean this, particularly?But considering the answer you did give, how do we settle that difference between men within society?
Which wasn't his stated aim at all... and objective in what sense?It isn't rhetorical at all. It is absolutely necessary if one wants to try to uphold any sort of objective morality
No reference to Christ in those documents. No calling on Allah, or Yaweh. That's important. That is, your particular notion wasn't supported and neither was mine or the Rabbi's, etc.It doesn't matter if his concept was different, the fact is the founders saw that God was required.
I'm no more interested in debating Aristotle on his notions than you felt required to debate the merit of Locke.
You haven't presented it and I don't need to address it to make or sustain my part. If you need it to attempt to counter me then you'll have to do more than suggest you have a big brother who can clean my clock.
We're born into the same state, as equals.Why is one man equal to another?
By what claim do you establish an inherent inequity of right?
I'm not attempting it.Do you honestly believe you are able to give a sound secular basis for morality?
Good for them? I differ.Except many thinkers would argue that the "state of nature" is precisely where we are unequal, and therefore we form society to protect us from such a state of nature.
Horsefeathers, you king-o-declaration you. :chuckle: I've been setting out exactly that from beginning to end.Again, you've given no argument.
In right. I am born free and with my own will.In precisely what way do you believe we are equal in a state of nature?
:e4e:
Secular principles can be agreed upon without all of us converting to one faith.What is the relevant difference between a secular moral principle and a religious moral principle?
Against same-sex marriage, but I get enraged by some of the arguments some otherwise worthy opponents use:
One of our Australian Episcopal Archbishops recently announced that gay marriage would lead to incestuous marriage becoming legal. Can anyone find any logic in this?
Sure I did. Only just.Well, no you haven't.
Not necessarily and one man may imply immorality in the notion while the next counts it a virtue, approached that way. All equality before the law requires is the understanding I set out, which isn't a moral argument at all, in foundation or execution, though it doubtless has moral resonance for those impacted.Equality is a moral notion, is it not?
Maybe you ought to come up with an actual counter/response. Else, answered.Maybe you ought to read it again :idunno:
In order: it's demonstrably true (I demonstrated it); it isn't "my notion" but the law's; no idea what you mean by "but not my notion of marriage" since I'm arguing your posit advances inequality and should be an offense to that same law; and horsefeathers.It's simply not true. You argue that your notion of "equality" should control the other in law but not my notion of marriage and have consistently failed to give a reason separating them.
Go back and read the post prior. Prego.Best expression of what exactly? :liberals:
Well, no. You think the law should be a popularity contest, deny equity in its principle with the stand and seek to enforce your version of a moral compass upon it. I stand with equity of right and the law as that instrument.Then you've already forfeited.
No, but I understand why you need for that to be the case. Else, I set out the contrary and illustrated it more than once.You are appealing to moral law in your idea of equity (and a number of other notions unnamed).
Short of literally reducing this to pictograph I don't know how to be any clearer...And I've asked you at least four times now to elaborate on what that notion precisely is.
Complete and utter nonsense. Like suggesting that if I say a prayer before dinner it is transformed into a religious celebration.Looking at the Constitution reveals it is religious,
Errant on its face, supra and prior.you've done nothing to show otherwise, nor have you given anything resembling an argument for equality absent religion.
I have. Repeatedly. :chuckle:You haven't. At all.
I don't agree with your premise (that the law is only an extension of moral argument). I've set out what the law is and preserves between men. Again, we differ in the foundation and function and there's nothing for it.Men have different views on what is moral and therefore what should be enforced by the law. How do we settle that difference? I propose a vote. :idea:
Just so you don't think I skipped reading it, but you're hammering that same error. Supra.Sure it was.
Never said it was.Stop being difficult. The appeal to an overreaching authority with respect to law and morality, God, is not inconsequential.
I already did in my born to equality/distinguished by operations of will bit, to shorthand it. I omit the next part, which is raised and answered above and prior. The point of my answer was to note a convenient selectivity on your part in declaring Locke done without particular effort or evidence then suggesting I should do more for the next fellow.The only logical reason we are equal is because of God, and the Constitution reflects that. Attempt to show otherwise if you'd like.
Just a note: you have this backwards.Neither have you :idunno: In fact I simply followed suit.
He wasn't offered as a final authority. You wanted background. I gave you an illustration from nature independent of that note. And you're mistaking the necessity of agreement in foundation of a compact with a conference of truth. That wasn't the Founder's understanding. It isn't mine.My point is made by the fact that Locke simply isn't considered a final authority on the subject; even your basis comes down to a vote.
No. It's an observation. I set out more particulars earlier. I am born with my own mind and will and the ability to exercise them. That's the beginning for any man. The relation and distinctions that flow from that exercise begin the division among us but is preceded by that indisputable fact.That's another mere assertion. Equal in what way?
I'm noting what the law is, how it functions, and how you mean to alter that.I claim no secularly derived right. I'd say the fact is obvious both from historical ethics and political philosophy. You are the one making a positive assertion.
Dealing with the itchy inquisition in waiting?There's your problem!
Self interest, at the root. Or, because they're confusing right and principle with biological function, mostly.And why ought we take your side and not theirs?
About as wrong as you could get it. Noting Locke isn't appealing to him. I set out my part and did so again within this post. I haven't claimed, I've set out how we are born equal prior and above. I omit the last because it's answered above/prior here.:chuckle: You simply haven't, you oughtn't even deny it. You've appealed to Locke and claimed that we are born equal, without explaining what you mean by that or giving a why at all.
The same logic is used in the States, sounds just as silly. If it's not that tired cliché, it's paedophilia or bestiality.
It's called "Shotgunning" and it does manage to influence many of the dullards out there. Some have even fallen off their bar stools in outrage!
We are talking about law and morality. To take any stance in this realm requires a non-value-neutral origin. Logic doesn't map cleanly to morality. We don't disagree on the law of non-contradiction but we do disagree strongly and often on moral issues.
So a relevant difference would be one that qualitatively separates a secular value axiom from a religious value axiom.
Your folly is the same as TH's along with the average modern. You've somehow convinced yourself that morality is "secular" (derived strictly from logic rather than personal non-logical/provable values). Once you realize that morality (and therefore law, such as the law that makes us equal in this country) cannot be purely secular, your whole house of cards falls.
Against same-sex marriage, but I get enraged by some of the arguments some otherwise worthy opponents use:
One of our Australian Episcopal Archbishops recently announced that gay marriage would lead to incestuous marriage becoming legal. Can anyone find any logic in this?
Actually it makes perfect sense if you look past your bias. Why should the government prevent cousins from marrying if that is what they want to do? It is the absolute logical conclusion of your position, he is just stating an obvious fact. "Why should cousins be denied the right to marry!" The same is happening elsewhere with polygamists. Clearly marriage has nothing to do with reproduction or reproductive status according to those who want gay "marriage."
I can't think of any significant case that can be made against cousins marrying at all--the "ick" factor is irrelevant and the genetic risks involved have been greatly overblown.
Pretty sure God doesn't have a problem with cousins marrying. Don't see any mention to the negative in the bible anyway.
I'd take a close look at those genetic risks. Have we, and to what degree, degenerated genetically since the days those biblical laws addressing this subject were written?
But then I'm a Christian, so I have kooky ideas about laws and what they're supposed to do.
Is the risk high enough? So that government should step in and say, "Yeah. We're not going to do that."The risk of genetic deficiency amongst consanguine couples exists, it's simply not as bad as it's been stereotypically made out to be.
:thumb:This much is certain.
Is the risk high enough? So that government should step in and say, "Yeah. We're not going to do that."
Um, yeah. Homosexual marriage. No such thing.
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