brewmama
New member
That's a religious casting of it, I suppose. But even on its own terms, Paul is observing something apart from religion.
He's observing God.
That's a religious casting of it, I suppose. But even on its own terms, Paul is observing something apart from religion.
He's observing God.
Paul might have agreed with that, but that's just confirmation of his existing beliefs, as well as yours. And he would have lacked the vocabulary to describe it otherwise. Even today, we sometimes struggle with it.
I'll grant you that. But you can no more prove that secular morality pre-existed religious thought, or that religious thought piggybacked onto secular thought than what you refuse as our proof.
It's at least as hard to prove that religion originated morality, really. Religion may claim to have done so, but that isn't proof.
What is undeniable is that our species predates the current slate of religions by orders of magnitude. And if we didn't have morality until we had our current religions, I don't think we would have survived as a highly-cooperative species. And why would there be common moral precepts, like a respect for life, that transcend religious traditions?
I think it's presumptuous to conclude that just because our current religions weren't around earlier in the history of the species that there was not a religious impulse.
And you can hardly claim that respect for life is a hallmark of secular morality! There's way too much evidence to the contrary.
In what specifics?
Like I already said, French Revolution, Mao, Stalin, Pol Pot, euthanasia, abortion...
Crusades, Daesh, persecution of LGBT people, colonialism of most of the world, forced conversions, the Inquisition...
What's your point?
I am showing how secular morality has little value on human life.
Other than Islamic barbarism, your examples pale in comparison to secular killings, not even in the same ball park...
ummm ok. You stated, verbatim: "atheism can form no moral argument against murder."
I then proceeded to answer your unsupported accusation with several specific examples of morality that need not a religious/dogmatic justification.
Exactly where along this path did I lose you?
You gave examples of emotion and instinct. Nothing about morality, which involves absolutes. A person feeling empathy and having an instinct to survive doesn't translate to any kind of universal moral law that all of mankind is obligated to follow.
Well, first provide some universal evidence for this universal moral law then provide some proof of my universal obligation to it.
After that, we'll talk about the fantasy entitled absolute morality.
Pinning down the phantasmal seem quite the herculean task..hope you're up to it.
Get back to me when your task is either complete or dispelled.
That religion also produces acts of incredible violence and disregard for life.
...by the application of a very based standard.
No it doesn't. And it's just a few examples off the top of my head. There are a lot more. Christians in Europe fought a 30-year war over which type of Christianity was the right one.
I never said that Christians and other religious people have not conducted wars, etc.
I was replying to your statement:
"It's actually the opposite. To the degree that religions condemn certain acts, like murder, it's because they get those principles from the people who created the religions. Nietzsche was mistaken. Religious morality piggybacks on secular morality, even as it often distorts and corrupts it."
I still don't see how you have any basis for saying that.
Well, you can't use a laundry-list of atrocities committed by allegedly secular groups as disproof of secular morality without allowing the same logic against religious morality. It's hypocritical.
What part of it? I feel like I explained my understanding.
This part. "And why would there be common moral precepts, like a respect for life, that transcend religious traditions?" I don't see respect for human life in secular morality, as I've already shown.
And since many of those killed by secularists and those who fight against secularists abandoning respect for life as in abortion and euthanasia are religious, I don't see how you can equate it as a universal precept in all people.
Ah, finally. I was trying to get you admit you don't believe in moral absolutes.
Not evidence at all of murder but of war. So "nope." Your worldview is flawed, I have aced all my history classes and taught it. You really are going to lose this before you even get out of the gate. You are flat wrong simply to favor your atheist opinion. It literally makes you have to lie to yourself to maintain it. Atheism is untenable on many fronts.Crusades
Not Christian so really doesn't touch Christianity or Atheism. It is rather about a religion that devalues humans that are not Muslim as disposable infidels.Daesh
:nono: Exactly the opposite of what you think/suppose. Rather, it is the evolution mindset that allows anything-goes mentality and stops treating fellow human beings as brothers/sisters and starts treating them as objects for personal gain and satisfaction. Exactly the opposite.persecution of LGBT people
The difference is the 'reason' war and killing happened. We are seeing more and more 'meaningless' killings because we are being told more and more by secularization, that we are merely animals. In fact, if you were 'not created in God's image' there is no moral problem with you and I killing each other off. None of it matters. I'm dust, you are dust and it is a pie-in-the-sky reach to say that 'cooperation' is beneficial. Why? Because it doesn't matter. Nothing can matter but our own inflated senses and desires and being as the conflict between mine and yours stops each of us from getting all we want, there would be nothing wrong with one superimposing over the other, even to death. Death would be meaningless and so not wrong as well. It is only a recognition of value, brotherliness, and these indelible values that 'can' impart a societal value, and they necessarily must reach well beyond Darwinian thought and observation. If it does not, we are well headed backwards, not forwards.colonialism of most of the world
Since I believe in a morality based on God's word, I agree. Since there is really no way of knowing whether I (or you) would agree if religion had never occurred, it's a moot point.How about this? Agree of disagree: The only reason I don't kill people is that I don't think God wants me to.
If you go to China, they have different language, different writing, different traditions, and different religions. But they still recognize that you can't just kill someone.
It's not that there are some well-defined, clearly-specified rules. In fact, the details and the exceptions vary greatly between cultures. But there is a consistent recognition of the humanity of others, and with that recognition comes empathy, and with empathy comes a desire not to do harm. Usually.