RE: Atheism and morality
July 7, 2013 at 6:06 pm
(This post was last modified: July 7, 2013 at 6:09 pm by paulpablo.)
(July 7, 2013 at 5:30 pm)Inigo Wrote:But you're calling morality a thing then saying I'm being instructed by a thing.(July 7, 2013 at 1:04 pm)genkaus Wrote: Its funny how despite your claims of delusion and poor formal reasoning, you seem to be one of the few on this forum capable of rationally challenging my preconceptions. While I still believe that every known morality has an intelligent (or in many cases, semi-intelligent) instructor issuing its tenets, I realize that that need not be true for any hypothetical morality.
If we assume that the karmic law is true and a part of the universe, then the nature of morality becomes quite different. The instructions contained within it would be rationally derived from the facts of nature - not issued another hypothetical entity. For example, if we take it as a fact of karmic law that if you torture puppies in this life, then you'll be reborn as a puppy and be tortured in your next life, then the instruction that "you should not torture puppies" is not issued by anyone but acquired all the same by the instructee by joining that fact with his own self interest.
Such a morality would be about as "rationally inescapably authoritative" as Inigo's god-given one. You can still torture puppies if you don't care about being tortured as one in your next life and you can still torture them if you don't care about being tortured by the hypothetical vengeful god.
As a matter of fact, within the context of moral realism, this position would be even better than morality being issued by an agent. Not only does it remove the need for what has become a superflous extra, it'd also explain the existence of multiple moralities. If karmic law is a fact of nature and our moral sense something that we perceive this aspect of nature with, then each morality and moral theory would become the philisopher's explanation of it to the best of his perception. If an agent was issuing instructions, then many garbled versions of those instructions would indicate his incompetence at communication. But if it is a fact of nature, then we are simply taking our time in completely understanding it.
On a side not, the increase in human population would also suggest the validity of karmic law. In past, when our understanding of the law was worse, most humans would be reborn as bugs or flies. But now that we are being more moral, a lot of us are being reborn as humans - thus leading to higher population.
Even the first conclusion would be wrong. Even if there is an aspect of reality - like a natural law - that applies to human behavior, the instructive aspect of morality still wouldn't necessarily require an instructive agent. For example, the law of gravity would simply indicate that if you jump off the balcony, you will die. The instruction "don't jump off the balcony" is inferred by the instructee simply by combining that fact with the desire to live without the need for another agent. Similarly, all the moral law would require is statement of a fact like "if you are a dick then no one will talk to you". My desire to talk to others would automatically turn this into the instruction of "don't be a dick".
A Karmic universe that lacks any god in it does not contain morality. Morality instructs and favours. That's absolutely essential to it. And a law of nature - or supernature - does not instruct or favour. How can they? They are not agents. They have nothing they want you to do. They are just descriptions of what happens. THey enable us to make predictions (or can do). But they don't make the predictions, we do!
This simple point destroys the karmic view. Morality's instructional nature is essential to it, and the Karmic view cannot capture it. So it doesn't even get out of the starting gate.
(July 7, 2013 at 11:08 am)Creed of Heresy Wrote: That's the problem with deism. It's a claim of something existing without even a claim. It's the most clear-cut version of "goddidit."
As a certain creator of the planetary orrary is credited with saying... "It works just fine without that hypothesis."
You clearly haven't been paying any attention. The god that I am arguing morality presupposes is not a god who created the universe. The god is posited in order to account for morality's features. That is all. What created the universe is another matter. And indeed, given that the god whose instructions and favourings constitute morality seems to be very pro-benevolence etc, it seems reasonable to assume that she is quite benevolent herself. Why on earth would a benevolent person create a place like this? The evidence isn't there. IN the absence of any, it is unreasonable to suppose that the author of the moral law was also the creator of this world. More reasonable to suppose she had nothing to do with it.
(July 7, 2013 at 5:30 pm)paulpablo Wrote: [/code]
No because morality is a word, it hasn't instructed me at any time. My parents my teachers and my own empathy towards other humans is why I don't hurt people all the time, I do believe people who play their music too loudly on public transport or some greedy people should be hurt, but I wouldn't hurt my own family members, my feelings of who should be hurt are just a combination of learned cultural behavior, and my general animal instincts, the same as every other human out there. There's no need for a god in any of this no matter how you define words or how many times you repeat yourself.
You're just not addressing my argument or any of the points that I made in that reply to you.
Saying 'morality is a word' is just silly. There is a word 'morality'. But morality itself is the thing the word is being used to refer to.
Ok so how did this thing instruct me of the things that are wrong or right, when did the thing instruct me, and what about the seemingly plausible things which I mentioned which are where I believe I have got my sense of right or wrong from?
And when i say it's just a word I mean this directed towards normative morality which you keep on mentioning, it is used to describe morals which every reasonable person would have, but this is totally flawed because it does presuppose the existence of a supernatural being who can detect what is truly right or wrong or what is reasonable.
Are you ready for the fire? We are firemen. WE ARE FIREMEN! The heat doesn’t bother us. We live in the heat. We train in the heat. It tells us that we’re ready, we’re at home, we’re where we’re supposed to be. Flames don’t intimidate us. What do we do? We control the flame. We control them. We move the flames where we want to. And then we extinguish them.
Impersonation is treason.