Only if your position is that morality is too complex to lay down a more-than-cursory explanation of it in a forum post. Otherwise, no. If I were to ask you the question, "How do you solve a math problem?", you couldn't answer in very specific terms. All you could hope to do is list some of the thought tools that you might use. And yet the question isn't meaningless. It has many answers. It's just difficult or impossible to take on all at once.
And again, that is precisely my point. Morality isn't cut and dry. Religion has as great a say as anything else. Moral positions are founded on basic values and beliefs. Whether they are religious or not is, for the sake of our argument, inconsequential unless you would like to try to show otherwise.
In other words, you deny that it is a difference at all.
As it relates to our argument, yes.
I will certainly admit that it is not easy to define exactly what religion is. Does that destroy the concept? Does that mean that when you say that you are religious it means nothing? It has to be more than just a set of beliefs and values. As a Catholic, you especially should recognize this, as your church is founded on the notion that it, as an institution, was specifically established by Jesus, such that another hypothetical church, even having all the same beliefs and values, couldn't be the same religion exactly.
But if we differ in doctrine then we differ in beliefs. Religion, from a secular perspective, is merely a set of beliefs and values about the world. Why should a group of people with one set of beliefs and values be barred from consideration?
The grain of truth that is misleading you is this: if we have common ground that can be used to come to agreement, it should be used. I agree with that. Where you go wrong is in thinking that the Secular constitutes that common ground for moral and law-related issues. It just doesn't, and that is evidenced by the fact that actually distinguishing between what is "secular" and what is "religious" is so hard. But I have no need to beat this into you; unless you can give a strong way to separate the two moral views that is relevant to the issue at hand, then clearly I have no reason to believe that I should not vote based on my religious views.
A religion is simply a set of values and beliefs. A secular moral position is precisely the same thing.
A secular moral position is a principle rationally derived from a human value. A religious moral position is a rule derived by fiat from an authority. That is the difference.
1. I'd say you're wrong, that both positions are derived from values and beliefs as I already noted. Certainly you would admit that your generalization of religious morality doesn't hold in every case, and I would argue that the generalization isn't even justifiable.
2. I don't disagree with the "rationally derived" part. But my point all along has been that the human values which rationality may work on are not themselves rationally derived--certainly not in the secular case. We are disagreeing on the human values themselves, the rationality you spoke of has nothing to do with it.
That's not exactly what I was getting at. Christianity has values, sure, but it is, at its core, a set of beliefs. I specifically wanted to object to construing them as if they're almost the same thing.
Okay...:idunno: I don't think you can separate values from beliefs as neatly as you would like. Whether we have to get into that is another question.
What exactly is wrong with pointing to the demonstrated historical consequences of founding a society upon religion?
I object for the same reason you would object if I noted the grossly more violent secular regimes in recent history.
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