RE: The difference between ethical atheism and nihlism is that ethical atheists have more faith
March 1, 2013 at 10:00 pm
(This post was last modified: March 1, 2013 at 10:45 pm by jstrodel.)
Quote:What I said here addresses the overarching problem of these questions. Secular morality looks at the effects certain actions have upon other people, by individuals and groups.
No, what you consider "effects" are just social constructions and linguistic categories designed to capture certain things that some people thought were worth capturing. Any conception of what the "effects" of things are is purely phenomenological. You actually have no business talking about what the effects of your actions are because if you are honest about your methodology, you will realize you know next to nothing.
Quote:The right to live stands, in this context, on the fact that as atheists, we believe that there is nothing after we stop living, therefore removing one's right to life removes each and every other right they have as well. And it's irreversible. Once they're dead, there's no returning their rights to them.
We ascribe rights to people because we ourselves want them, and feel bad when they're taken away, and the best way to not have them taken from us is to make sure no one else feels like they're getting their taken away.
What do you call this process of ascribing rights? You havn't answered the question of why it is wrong to believe certain things upon insufficient evidence as it relates to theology but not according to something like ascribing rights.
You have not said where any of the rights come from. It is true that peoples rights leave them when they die, if atheism is true and they have rights, but you have not demonstrated that people have rights at all.
I believe that you have insufficient evidence to believe that people ever have rights that they can lose. You have not demonstrated that people are more important than rocks. If you were consistent with your extremely important ethical views, you would consider if the probability of deism or Christianity was greater than the probability of total nihilism.
Quote:We're biased towards our own kind. Is that so unusual in the human race? We show preference for individuals we share sympathies with all the time. We have little in relation to amoebas, so we don't consider them as important.
You have not begin to deal with the issue of normative claims and why that sort of bias should result in them.
Quote:You're missing out the fact that according to your theology, god made that divine order, so it is still just him saying something and it being so. There's no reason behind it, it's just god's arbitrary say-so
No, this is an extremely superficial view of something that shows you have probably never read a book on Christian apolgetics from start to finish.
The that God wills something entails that the things basic nature can be understood by recognizing the will of God. It is typical of the culture and attitude of the atheist, typically under 25, proud and haughty, who takes pleasure in things like pornography and filthy language to question "God's arbitrary say so". It is the sort of spirit that comes from rebellious adolescence, not a real philosophical difficulty.
God made the divine order and the nature of the order is understood in understanding God. To understand the will of God is to understand why everything is what it appears to be. God's will is the essence of the universe, its telos, it is the noumenal world. It is much, much more real and clear than what people see, and as such, it forms not only a normative claim for morality but also for understanding the nature of life.
Quote:Believe it or not, the religious categories were arbitrarily created too, by the people who wrote the holy books. The only difference is that secular morality updates itself, where as religious morality has an annoying habit of staying constantly the same whilst the rest of society has moved on.
As I said before, secular morality is created, yes, I acknowledge that, it's not always just been here. but it's a testament to humanity in my opinion that we have taken the time to actually give ourselves morals, to stand up and say that murder is wrong, that stealing hurts others.
To invent a god and make it the reason we have morality instead of our own compassion and empathy is in many ways lazy and cowardly.
You have not made a single argument. You are just like other atheists, relying on propaganda tricks instead of actually making real arguments. How do you define "move on"? You have not even begun to show how morality can progress. How can morality progress if there is no anchor? You acknowledge it changes, you have more or less acknowledged the main point of the message: that secular morality is just peoples opinions. If people want to be more consistent about the way that they use language, which suggests that it is NOT merely peoples opinions, why not consider Deism, or Christianity? Then you are not living out of irrational linguistic constructions that imply certain things about the world that violate the atheist epistemological rules of basing all beliefs on evidence. There is no evidence that the social norms you refer to are more than different peoples opinions. You can choose between Aristotle or Nietzsche, but you cannot be an ethical atheist.
Quote: I can't decide if you have your head in the clouds or up your ass. But in this you are on the same level with plenty of atheists. You insist on placing morality under the domain of reason, but that is not where morality comes from. No one responds to morally reprehensible behavior involving cruelty to others in a purely intellectual way. "Gee, don't they realize that their actions, if adopted by everyone, could one day result in harm to me or mine?" That isn't the way it works. It is empathy for others which makes us recoil against cruelty, and empathy operates at the level of feeling, not rationality.
There is no need to justify an assignment of value to people objectively, for either theists or atheists, if you recognize that empathy and not rationality is the basis of morality. One need not have a reasonable justification for rejecting cruelty in order to avoid what one finds unpleasant. In the same way I need not have an objective basis for rejecting store-bought mayonnaise in order to leave it off my sandwiches. In both cases I avoid what I don't like and pursue what I do. That isn't to say that rationality doesn't come into play to sort out conflicts in our empathy or tastes or preferences or desires generally. Of course it does. That in fact is the proper use of rationality, to serve feeling and come up with strategic goals for maximizing that which one is drawn to and avoid that which one is repulsed by. One just needs to keep rationality in its place.
What you said is something that you have not spent more than 50 hours of your life thinking through, which is too bad because it is the most important thing in life, how to be a good person. You are saying that the ultimate ground of morality is in our feelings? I agree with you about the role of feelings in mediating knowledge, but it is because peoples sense of empathy is designed to promote a certain response. What you are saying actually really has no bearing on this debate at all, you have completely trivialized my point.
If empathy is the way that you know how to live a good life, that still raises the question that what is it that grounds empathetic emotions and makes them ethically normative. It sounds like you are really confused yourself, because you acknowledge the role that reason could have in assessing empathetic emotions. In reality, you have not solved the problem at all, what is the ultimate ground of morality. Your response seems to be "peoples opinions". How does this avoid the dangerous trap of nihilism? You think that you can take one feeling "empathy" and assign it a place of ethical primacy over other feelings such as "anger" or "sexual arrousal". This is typical liberal sophistry. No civilization in history has ever survived based on the shallow, childlike conception of morality that you have, saying "it is better to be empathetic but sometimes you have to use reason". The fact that some emotions are more correlated with violence and others more strongly correlated with anger does not provide any sort of justification whatsoever for any of them. They are all human nature, I would argue that empathy, along with all other human emotions are vital for morality. But they are vital because people are created to use them that way. The ground of morality is not in the feelings themselves, it is in the interrelation between the feelings, the people, the societies, the world around and the ultimate plans and intentions of God.
Why should I believe that empathy is the basis of morality? I do not believe that reason is the basis of morality, I believe that God is.
What you are doing is similar to what fidists do when they think that belief in God is justifiable not because of evidence for God's existence is true but because of a will to believe. You think because of some sort of will to show empathy or a will to create empathetic beliefs or wills confers some sort of ethical justification. How are you not violating the atheist principle of proportioning beliefs to evidence? What evidence is there for empathy carrying in itself the moral action and what is the ground for that?
You are like other atheists who would rather dance around the issue than get to the substance of it. How does what you have said avoid moral skepticism? Why should anyone feel that their empathetic beliefs should take primacy over others. But you avoid these questions and instead just repeat propaganda and ad hoc answers. I have seen God and I know that there are answers to these questions. But they won't come to people that are afraid to seriously question the philosophical unity of their beliefs.
(March 1, 2013 at 5:20 pm)Ryantology Wrote: This is a fairly simple problem to solve.
1. Deny the existence of the reality of any morality at all - a human being is no more valuable than an amoeba
I accept the existence of the only kind of morality which has ever existed: arbitrary, subjective morality. To argue from a position of objective morality is meaningless: no such thing has ever existed. Even if we assumed that God existed, morals attributed to God are no less subjective and arbitrary than secular morals, and there is no justifiable basis to assert that God's morals are of any greater value than secular.
The fact that you made this point shows you have never seriously studied Christian philosophy. Of course there is a reason that God's choices represent a higher morality than peoples: God created everything. Everything around the world bears the mark of something created by God. God judgements about things describe the essential nature of things. He created things moral nature and destiny at the same time he created their physical nature, the two are related.
This line of inquiry resembles a little boy who looks at his family and questions his "intrinsic duties to obey his parents". The only reason that it can survive because this is the best ferment of atheism, the 13-20 year old demographic.
Quote:Morals are, to put it most simply, guidelines by which society can best function and people can most amicably co-exist, and as such, arbitrary secular morals are demonstrably far superior to arbitrary God morals (which, as we all know, are loaded with all kinds of terrible, destructive and divisive tenets). Secular morals are also superior in that they are flexible, and subject to improvement and refinement, whereas God's morals are rigid and unbending. Society, economics and politics never saw any substantial improvement until Godly morals began to give way to secular morals. Theists love to take credit for such developments as the abolition of slavery, the Enlightenment and the fostering of science, but the reality of it is that slavery, ignorance, and opposition to science were (and in many ways continue to be) the result of applying Biblical morality.
Western civilization is intimately connected with Christian history. Your concept of morals has very little to do with the way that almost every civilization in world history has understood morality. You understand morality to mean something like "what the present culture accepts". This has very little to do with Biblical morality.
Why should you be able to apply your arbitrary stick of morality to the Bible? If it is appropriate for you to make up a standard of morality and apply it to morality, would it be equally appropriate to simply make up a standard of morality and judge you by it? What would that mean, exactly.
Quote:The value we place on life has pretty much everything to do with how deeply we can empathize with it. Most people value cats and dogs, because it is possible to form relationships with them. Few people value amoeba because that's not possible. We have a hard time empathizing with creatures which we perceive to be threats, and this is not always justified. What sets us apart from you is that an honest secularist can admit this. You're just lying to yourself.
You are reducing morality to feelings and you are calling me dishonest. Why don't you go evangelize to Christians and tell them they must obey your beliefs. Use normative language and emotions that signify absolute values and sort of snicker to yourself as you know inside the values are no more real than your preferences. The fact that you are relying on empathy to define morality shows that you have some residue of teleological ethics. This does not fit with naturalistic evolution. Empathy is no more or less significant than anything else, if atheism is true. But in Christianity, as in most of the world religion, love triumphs over all. You don't see this much in atheist circles though. You see a lot of talk about empathy, but a lot of cold, mean, proud people. Perhaps it is because there is very little epistemic weigh attached to the concept, as an atheist.
Quote:2. Ascribe some sort of arbitrary value to human beings
As above, it is impossible to apply an objective value to human beings. Religions claim otherwise, yet one needs only to open to any random page in a history book to find some sinister example of religion, or religious-driven people, arbitrarily deciding that some humans are less valuable than others, examples being the African slave trade, the subjugation of women as second-class citizens, and the brutal oppression of the Jews. Secularists are, of course, guilty of this as well, but again, we can be honest about our shortcomings. You're pretending that yours don't exist (or, popularly, that those among your number who are guilty of it are not True Scotsmen).
You are not dealing with my claims, but instead offering a pop-historical, pop-ethical smear of Christianity. I will not even respond to the strawman about me pretending I'm not guilty and the lies about Christians not being honest about their shortcomings. Typical atheist drivel.
Quote:The morality of Christianity is brutal, selfish, sycophantic and hateful. On all levels. Even many of the 'good' parts are sinister if you examine them closely. There are many decent Christian people, but the reason they are decent is because they pay lip service to their faith. They cherrypick the Bible and discard all of the horrifying commandments which are not acceptable in an enlightened society (or just discard it altogether and stick to a highly-sanitized Hippie Jesus ideal). A Christian who sincerely tries to live by biblical morality is a bad person because they glorify and endorse the worst kinds of evil.
You probably spend more time watching political shows then you spend thinking about how to be a good person. Politically, Christians have built the most free societies on earth, including the ones that permit you to advance your nihilistic faith. But you equate morality with politics, which shows the depth of your understanding about morality. Have you ever really cared about anyone? What have you ever done for others in your life? What was the most noble deed you have ever done?
And what is the justification for your ethical categories? You treat your approach to ethics as having some sense of absolute value, but you just mentioned above that it does not. You are making up a system of morality, but you have never ran a nation. You do not know what it is like to fight a war, or organize and economy. You consider yourself free to invent your own absolute ethics and impose them over the Bible. I would't be surprised if you have never even owned a house, and you a probably ready to make all these judgements and sweeping statements about Christian values.
Quote:Nothing makes me laugh harder than a Christian who assumes he occupies the moral high ground. Your morality is based on lies and is primitive and savage. It is just barely above that of animals. I'm not impressed by your presumptions.
I don't make assumptions. I have seen thousands and thousands of events in my life that confirmed the reality of God and the Holy Spirit. I have seen miracle after miracle. Once I prayed and asked God if I should change my name from Jay to Joseph, a symbol of a new life. God responded by giving a prophetic word to a prophet - "Your name is Joseph". Then someone confirmed the prophecy about a week later.
I used to be an atheist. I used to go on the internet and talk to people all the time and try to prove how smart I was. I used to base all my beliefs about things that I believed in my head. And then I got out and exactly experienced religion and saw the reality of God.
How many religious people do you know? Probably right now you and your atheist friends are smoking weed, watching porn and playing video games. That is what atheists typically do with their morality. Not all of them, a lot of them. They take serious topics, like this one, and make adolescent sexual references. They try to get young people to accept their beliefs using the allure of freedom from religious restrictions as well as sensuality and arguments delivered without even the most basic understanding of theology. The average vocal internet atheist does not know what the word "exegesis" means, but he is so full of himself and so full of vices that come from his nihilistic worldview he has no problem debating with people about the most significant issues in life as if they were trading warez on irc.
In contrast, most of the religious people I know are married, are not drug users, give and serve and help others, and while there is a diversity of intellectual knowledge, most Christians have a sense of humility and responsibility to not really get into things they don't know much about (not all the time).
You can say a lot of words about Christian morality, but if you want to prove it to me, show me one atheist who is a decent human being, who doesn't watch porn and tell Christians they are anti-feminist, who doesn't lie, ever, who has some sense of regularity to his life that flows out of a carefully considered walk in which being a good person is most important of all. I will show you 10 atheists who think being a good person is the same as being smart.
I see that you guys are debating whether pedofilia is ok on this forum. There is your proof: Christians are way behind. You need to look to the future.