(May 27, 2015 at 7:34 am)Randy Carson Wrote: 38 responses overnight. Thank you.
I won't be able to respond to all of them before heading off to work, but let me says this:
I'm not asking whether atheists can be good people or whether they are good people. Despite much of the rudeness and foul language directed at me (and others) in this forum, it should be obvious that atheists may strive to be kind, tolerant, generous and respectful toward others. And they do this because they recognize that "right" and "wrong" behavior is real and not theoretical.
What I am asking is: what is the BASIS for objective moral behavior? Where does it come from?
If some feel that they have already answered, my apologies; however, I re-phrased my OP based on a quick scan of a few responses.
I will try to get through all of the posts as quickly as time permits. Sorry for the delay.
You need to define what moral behavior is specifically.
Everyone seem to default to murder, but guess what? there is a law against murder and that's an effective deterrent for the majority of people.
There's at least one honest atheist here...
http://atheistforums.org/thread-32313-po...#pid906588
(March 24, 2015 at 7:08 pm)Judi Lynn Wrote: And yeah, I don't commit murder because I AM afraid of the death penalty. That and I obey the laws because Prison Orange isn't my color. I have a list of five people who I would happily off right now if I knew that I could get away with it. So your argument is invalid.
I think we can all agree that lying and adultery are also immoral, there just (generally) aren't any laws against them. How many are guilty of those?