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Morality versus afterlife
RE: Morality versus afterlife
(January 6, 2016 at 1:29 pm)abaris Wrote:
(January 6, 2016 at 1:26 pm)robvalue Wrote: Just wanna prod some brain cells and spark some thought.

Oh, well.

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I am shocked. What a bigoted thing to say. This is just religious intolerance. You think certain groups of people don't have brains. Bigoted, I say. Bigoted!!!
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RE: Morality versus afterlife
(January 6, 2016 at 3:10 pm)Old Baby Wrote: I will answer as someone who recently believed.  

The answer is no.

My primary reason for following God was self preservation, i.e. fear of Hell.

I'm not going to say that I didn't consider God's rules to be truly moral.  I did.  I just failed time and time again to live up to that standard.  Had I learned that there would ultimately be no consequences for my "dirty thoughts", I would never have put so much pressure on myself to be what I couldn't be.  Instead, I would have probably rationalized God's standard as his way of just showing us how hopelessly corrupt we are and how tolerant and longsuffering He is for letting us be that way.

I think this is true for all a lot of people, but they'll never admit it, naturally, for shame of being thought of as cowards and not true believers even by fellow Christians/Muslims. They believe in it because they're fearful, that is. And this is very hard to get out of in a world where 1)your beliefs are not challenged on a regular basis because of (FUCKING) P.C. 2) You were raised in this system of thought which taught you that to doubt is impermissible. When you take these two facts into consideration it's no wonder such a surprise that a lot of people believe in this crazy bullshit. What we can do, as non-believers, if we care enough about our fellow citizens, is first of all identify as such and then help them understand there's no good reason to think these preposterous ideas are even true. But to attack people for being the victims of a religious upbringing and for living in a vacuum of irrationality their whole lives is particularly unhelpful.
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RE: Morality versus afterlife
(January 22, 2016 at 1:59 pm)Drich Wrote:
(January 22, 2016 at 12:22 pm)SofaKingHigh Wrote: You are no different to an Islamist extremist.  Some of your views on morality and history are truly repugnant.  Yet they're justified, in your eyes at least, because God allowed it.

If you were from the Yemen, or Palestine, you would have blown yourself up a long time ago.

what are you talking about? I started out Buddhist or at least grew up in the shadow of Buddhism. I did not follow a religion simply because that was how I was raised. I would like to think I would have done the same and seek God no matter where I started out.

And as far as History is concerned WE are the authors of it. WE Demand blood, WE demand total and absolute control. WE decide to kill everything not like us. GOD Stops us.

You seem to have lied to yourself as to the nature of who is responsible for both holocausts. God lets us do our own thing, we are the evil of this world, the only problem is 'we' don't like admitting it so 'we'/you blame God.

As happens quite often Drich, you have spectacularly missed the point.
You may refer to me as "Oh High One."
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RE: Morality versus afterlife
(January 20, 2016 at 9:58 am)Drich Wrote:
(January 6, 2016 at 1:21 pm)robvalue Wrote: This is a question for anyone who thinks morality "comes from God".

If you knew there was no afterlife, that you're dead and gone no matter what happens in this life, would you continue to follow "morality from God"? Or would you then ignore it, and decide for yourself how to act?

Thanks Smile

God's Law is Righteousness, Man's 'want to do' version of God's Righteousness is 'morality.'

Keeping in mind that man's 'morality' changes from culture to culture and from generation to generation. does not make what pop culture defines as 'morality' moral or right for a lack of a better term. it is simply 'right' for those in the majority..

That said without an absolute like God's standard of righteousness what keep society grounded in any sense of right and wrong? for instance what keeps a more advanced society from pushing a more primitive culture off it's lands and drives those people off the edge of extinction? Kinda like what America did with it's Indians? Or what Germany did with it's Jews? or what the world does with unborn babies it does not want.. Without some form of God's Righteousness pushing us to act in all instances, their wouldn't be Indians in America any more, Jews in Europe, or any restrictions on abortion.

So given the two choices of living under evil incarnate/man's morality and God's righteousness I choose God's righteousness and system of redemption, eternal life or not.

So a moral standard that is fixed and doesn't change is superior to one that does? In what sense?
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RE: Morality versus afterlife
Good point.

Also, there are an infinite number of possible versions of objective morality. It could be fixed in absolutely any way you like. So you could say objective moralities "exist" (but not in a literal sense as they are still abstract concepts).

The problem comes in choosing which one out of this massive pool to follow.

Everyone who has ever lived will probably have had their own unique choice, and their choice will also have changed throughout their life. So at any given point they may subscribe to a particular objective morality, but as they live their lives this may change and they may select new ones.

So how do we pick which one? Any finite, fixed source such as a holy book can never suffice because there will always be scenarios it either doesn't cover at all, or not in sufficient detail. At this point, you're forced to decide for yourself what path to choose.
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RE: Morality versus afterlife
(January 21, 2016 at 4:13 am)robvalue Wrote:



So, just to be clear; are you saying, that one action or behavior is no more or less moral than another?  That contradictory statements can both be moral and immoral; depending on the subject?   If one (or a group or a culture) decided that it was moral to kill atheists, then subjectively it would be moral....correct?

You asked for the definition of "right" and "wrong".  I find it difficult to believe that you do not know what these words mean.  One may also substitute the words "good" and "evil", or the way one ought to behave.  I have a feeling, that you are wandering into the epistemology of morality and how we know what is "right" or "wrong".  This however is separate from the ontology of morality, and the nature of "right" and "wrong" in regards to behavior or character in which to make the comparison.  

You ask for precise definitions and then deny that they exist. You want to measure morality, as you would mass.  This however; is a category mistake.  Morality is not a physical object, that you can measure in that way.  Similarly can you provide a precise numerical value to your logic which I can reproduce, for your thinking here?  Is logic objective; or am I free to subjectively determine that you are being illogical?

You said that you care very much about morality, but also say that "right" and "wrong" do not exist. So I am left wondering how you define morality?   You gave a premise, that "your" morality is based on helping other people and animals, and not doing them harm.  However this doesn't define what the abstract concept of morality is (unless you are pressing your own subjective definition upon everyone else).  You are making the very word morality meaningless or that everyone is free to make it mean whatever they want.

With what you have said so far, it seems that you:
  • Cannot accuse others of doing wrong
  • Cannot complain about the problem of Evil
  • Cannot place blame or accept praise for moral behavior
  • Claim that anything is unjust or unfair
  • Cannot improve your morality
  • Hold any meaningful discussion concerning morality

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RE: Morality versus afterlife
(January 31, 2016 at 5:21 pm)RoadRunner79 Wrote: You asked for the definition of "right" and "wrong".  I find it difficult to believe that you do not know what these words mean.  

I always get a little leery when people refuse to define the terms they're using on the basis that those definitions are "just obvious," because what it indicates to me is that they themselves don't have a firmly worded definition beyond their intuitions. When you say that you find it difficult to fathom that Rob doesn't already know what the terms mean, I feel I need to remind you that their usage is not actually a given, and that people do use them in different ways. Have you seriously never met a christian who defines right and wrong around how given actions deviate from their specific religious interpretation? Can you just not see the difference between that usage of the term and a more secular one, based around wellbeing?

This is where the subjectivity comes in, and it's where proponents of objective morality completely fail, because everyone interprets data through the lens of their own values before they come to moral conclusions. Even the supposedly iron-clad dictates of a god go through your own personal moral filter, which leads you to then determine whether those dictates are worthy of your adherence or not. It's useless to denigrate those who can at least admit to the subjectivity of the values they use to come to moral conclusions, since it's not as though anyone has anything better.
"YOU take the hard look in the mirror. You are everything that is wrong with this world. The only thing important to you, is you." - ronedee

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RE: Morality versus afterlife
(January 31, 2016 at 7:15 pm)Esquilax Wrote:




I don't think that there is that much confusion about what "right" and "wrong" mean in this context. And I get a little leery when people start to ask definitions over and over again about fairly basic words where will it end? First I was asked to define morality, then define right and wrong. It seems that according to Rob, right and wrong don't have any meaning in this context, other than that they fit his personal preferences. Do you agree?

Also; I think, that you are confusing what is moral (along with Rob), with what it means to be moral. Do you care to define the term? You had said wellbeing. Is providing greater wellbeing synonymous with morality? Can I behave immorally and provide a greater wellbeing or is that automatically moral? Is it moral (or ought one to) deceive, if it provides greater wellbeing in their opinion? The way that people arrive at their view of what is moral, or not; doesn't have any bearing on what it means to be moral (if it has any meaning; but I believe it does).

You said, "This is where the subjectivity comes in, and it's where proponents of objective morality completely fail, because everyone interprets data through the lens of their own values before they come to moral conclusions." Isn't this true for everything (that everything comes through the lens of interpretation)? If you are interpreting them, doesn't that imply that they exist apart from your perception? I can subjectively interpret your words to mean that you agree with me. It doesn't however correspond with reality that is outside of myself. This is what it means to be objective, not just that it is my interpretation or opinion, but how closely that opinion matches what is outside of myself.

People may disagree on if a particular situation is moral. But in general, I find that they agree quite a bit on what morality is. That there is a way we ought to behave, and a character which is objectively better. That we can judge others (including cultures) based on moral choices. That good and evil, justice and injustice; that these are real things. Even when someone behaves immorally you see them trying to justify it. I have never seen someone trying to make what is clearly immoral be called moral. Not even from a hyper relativist.
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RE: Morality versus afterlife
Fine, you won't define them. End of conversation then I guess.

I suspect your meaning of the words is very different to mine, hence the question. We're discussing the very fundamentals of morality, without you being willing to even define what you personally mean by it. If it's so obvious, why not spell it out for me? We could use my definition, but you're likely to just disagree with it, so...

The problem, when discussing morality with a religious person, is precisely this point. If you can't or won't define them, then you make my point for me.
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RE: Morality versus afterlife
(February 1, 2016 at 12:06 pm)robvalue Wrote: Fine, you won't define them. End of conversation then I guess.

I suspect your meaning of the words is very different to mine, hence the question. We're discussing the very fundamentals of morality, without you being willing to even define what you personally mean by it. If it's so obvious, why not spell it out for me? We could use my definition, but you're likely to just disagree with it, so...

The problem, when discussing morality with a religious person, is precisely this point. If you can't or won't define them, then you make my point for me.

How much did you read, before you decided to make a spectacle? I discussed quite a bit, and did define them. But if you don't want to converse, then you keep acting as if morality is objective, and I'll keep believing it.

And if you think that your definition differs, then please share.
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