Perhaps you misunderstand. Nihilists reject morality as a concept. Some go so far as to present a yearning for a post-apocalyptic society (or lack of).
:doh: Rejection of morality is a moral standard. It's just a very permissive one. What makes your moral standard any less arbitrary?
But that's taste in drink. Not morality. Your taste in drink affects no-one. What you think you ought or ought not do within the context and consideration of others does not.
Shall I give you the definition of analogy?
Taste is relative to the taster. Morality, absent a higher authority, is relative to the moral agent. There is no measuring stick for either morality nor taste, absent God, and I'm thinking that he likes the medium-roast African coffee with cream
I understand the point of view, and I was criticising the analogy as if it was an incident that happened. I understand you were trying to make the frivolous point that people have different standards. It doesn't change who was right in that circumstance though.
But it does. You only picked the more altruistic of the two because your taste runs toward the altruistic. Another man might prefer the egoistic track, so to him, the altruist was in the wrong. It's all a matter of taste unless there is something
intrinsically wrong with selfishness. And if there is something
intrinsically wrong with selfishness, we must ask ourselves why. I would say that selfishness is intrinsically wrong because it is contrary to the nature of God. What reason would you give?
Have you ever been the victim of crime? Have you ever been required or felt obliged to report a crime you have witnessed or suspect could have/be happening? Do you have any consideration whatsoever for the liberty that you benefit from every single day guided by the ideal of personal autonomy?
You have forgotten, I think, that we aren't talking about my sense of morality (which is all about the character of God), but rather about the immeasurability of morality derived from any source but God.
By your logic, anyone who advocates the changing of legislation on anything ever is attempting to impose themselves on others.
They are. What else is the purpose of discussing morality if not to gain a society that
suits our tastes?
I advocate and support some law changes based in part on my moral understanding. I don't however support all of my opinions on morality to be codified into law.
I'll bet that you do more than I do. I'm a conservative nut-job - I like for the government to keep it's hands off as much as possible to obtain a generally safe society (which is
to my liking).
Only someone completely contemptuous of human rights or completely ignorant of it would deride and use legislation designed to protect liberty and life as examples of oppression. It should not be regarded as a right of others to oppress or murder who they like.
But they are oppression. Any suppression of the rights of a person is oppression. We do it, eyes-wide-open, to do the best job we can to establish a society that is
to our liking. Every government oppresses its citizens in ways designed to obtain the sort of society that that government
likes.
I like life. Remember I am not anti-humanity. Remember I have relationships and interests in this world that I will not forsake based on some depraved nihilism. You believe in an eternal life. I do not. Our priorities are different.
Your
liking of life is only a matter of
personal taste if there is no God and no afterlife. Why should you prefer 80 years to 30 if there is no remembering? What difference does it make in a practical sense? After your 80 years or so are up, what have you got? The same thing as you would have if you ended it at 30. Nothing. Absolute nothing. So in saying that you like life for 80 years more than for 30, you are really saying that you prefer the nothing to the nothing. :rip:
So all of your interaction here is simply a means to an end. Everything you do and the reasons you do it for is nothing more than acting in your own position in the afterlife.
Padding my treasure :greedy: God is the source of all things good. I do the good that I do because He does it through me for the benefit of others as well as for me. The things I do here on Earth are very important to the One who matters most. That I am reaping eternal reward for yielding to His guidance only speaks to God's grace - His desire to give me delight.
That still sounds bleak to me.
There is no accounting for taste. I love living for God. I get to be the wife of a generous and affectionate husband, the mother of 6 very different kids - each one a delight, the daughter to hopeful and helpful parents, the sister to two Christians and an atheist, the friend of some really inspiring women. I also get to argue with people who are logically challenged here on TOL
I find that mostly fun
but at least I'm pretty good at it, and when I lose all patience, there are so many others here to take my place, that I have no worries that the chronically illogical will be taken to task for their failures
All-in-all a great life full of fun and adventure and romance and mystery.
What I took issue was with your conspiracy theory saying that all scientists are willfully ignoring and oppressing to keep out supernatural origins for our conscience.
It isn't so much conspiracy as desperation. You don't have to read very far into their writings (the quote that started this one is an example) before you find their desire to eliminate God from the equation - to negate the need for a creator or the supernatural.
Is this referring to the overpopulation thing? Do you have any modern-day advocates of mass murder to reduce the population of earth? By that I also mean serious advocates and not authors creating a fictional dystopia, but people who seriously contend it.
Honestly, why don't you just admit that you were being hyperbolic and drop it?
It is the rejection of philosophy. It holds that life has no meaning.
The notion that life has no meaning is the basis of this philosophy - ask any philosopher. It's a whole branch of philosophy all by itself.
Check it out.
Are you following any of my links, btw?
The supernatural if demonstrated to exist would become entirely natural.
:doh: Good job butchering the English language.
su·per·nat·u·ral
–adjective
1. of, pertaining to, or being above or beyond what is natural; unexplainable by natural law or phenomena; abnormal. |
It would become a known idea.
It is a known idea - it's just not measurable by natural/material means, because it's ... "above or beyond what is natural" and "unexplainable by
natural law or phenomena" - it's
supernatural.
Regarding the use of 'supernatural' as an explanation for what we don't understand is self-defeating. It answers absolutely nothing. Replacing one unknown with another unknown.
Only if the supernatural is unknowable, which it isn't. Your trouble is that you deny the supernatural and so have blinded yourself to its influences.
It is plain logic that if something is not explainable by natural/materialistic means, it might well be because that something isn't natural/material