Religious 'Nones' are now the largest single group in the U.S.

15,460 Views | 250 Replies | Last: 9 mo ago by kurt vonnegut
kurt vonnegut
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Bob_Ag said:


This is really quite simple. Relative morality is a reductio ad absurdum argument. All you have to do is take it to its logical conclusion to see the fallacy.

If we are to individually determine what is moral, or more accurately, what is ethical, then everyone's claim is equally valid. If I say rape is good and you say rape is bad, on what basis am I wrong or you right? Without the presence of a standard, then there is no possible basis for saying what is good and what is wrong. As I mentioned previously, it is not a logical argument to say societal standards are the basis for right and wrong because they too can't be relative. Societies are often called out for war crimes or crimes against humanity, but by what basis are we able to say what they are doing is wrong?

If I have a blue lollipop and you call it purple, how do we know who is right? Well we objectively have a color spectrum of visible light and the reflection of light into our eyes allows us to objectively determine the color based not on ourselves, but on an external standard. Without that standard, there is no basis of objectively determining the color of the lollipop. Without that standard I can't tell you you are wrong.


All of your post boils down to a view that "morality must be objective, because I don't like the implications involved if that isn't true." You've done nothing to show that morality cannot be relative.

Who gets to decide what is absurd? Maybe I think its absurd for a God to send bears to murder children, or to tell people to stone to death heretics, adulterers, witches, and people working on the Sabbath, or annihilating a town (women and children included) for some of their sins, or drowning the entire planet (women and children included) in a flood, or killing Egyptian babies, or telling His favorite people to burn a civilization to the ground, kill all the men and children and older women, and take the younger women as sex slaves. I'll stop here, because there is no point in listing all of the horrific things that OG God apparently did. Do these set of morals not apply to us today? Maybe I think its absurd for a God to give moral direction to some people and then different moral direction to other people.

I know, I know. . . . Old Testament doesn't count, right? Lets talk about Jesus, who threatens us with eternal punishment. Maybe I think the morality of Hell is absurd. Infinite punishment for finite crimes is absurd.

And maybe I think its absurd for God to have an objective morality and to disseminate that information to a few illiterate bronze age people only in one region of the world with the hopes hat the message spreads to 30% of the world over the next few thousand years - including vast stretches of time where most of His own followers believe in and practice slavery, genocide, religious war, torture / murder of non-believers, and all forms of bigotry.

None of the above is evidence against objective morality. But it is evidence that, if objective morality, Christians haven't the slightest clue what that is. You are a man, just like me. So is every other Christian poster here. And every priest, deacon, bishop, and pope that has ever lived. None of you are God (I don't think). And I don't believe that any of you get to claim that you speak for Him either.

Yes, relativistic morality is uncomfortable. If you say rape is good and I say its bad, I have no objective external basis to tell you that you are wrong. I can make a case and argue why I think its wrong based on experience, empathy, and philosophical arguments - but you don't have to agree.

The lollipop analogy is prefect for why I believe you are wrong here. Repeatable, testable, tangible, predictable experimentation and observation will tell us the frequency of the visible light associated with the lollipop. There is no equivalent mechanism with morality. Provide for me an experiment we can (hypothetically) perform to prove what is moral or immoral - without appeal to emotion, religious moral presupposition, or opinion. One of the problems with your position, in my opinion, is that there is no reliable way to reference or receive feedback from the claimed source of objective morality. As I type this, I am imaging a Gary Larson drawn comic with God behind a kiosk and a line of people coming to ask him questions to further their understanding of right and wrong. Wouldn't that be great if we had that? But, we don't. What we do have is ancient texts, many of which we don't know the author, that were hand selected by a committee, translated, rewritten, retranslated, and that is now interpreted differently by everyone who reads them. Again, even if objective morality exists, you have zero basis for claiming to understand it.


Quote:

However, when you look at our world empirically, morality is not actually relative. There is general consensus that things are morally wrong. We all agree that rape is immoral. But that's not possible without an external objective standard. Morality can't be relative because human society can't function in that manner or it would be chaos.

Does general consensus make things morally right or wrong? This paragraph is directly contradictory to your position, no? There are things that have been generally considered moral for most of human history (including by Christians) that you think are wrong today. Is rape wrong? How can you claim that it is? God orders it to be done in Judges 21:10-24 and Numbers 31:7-18 and Deuteronomy 20:10-14 and Zechariah 14:1-2. In Deuteronomy 22:28-29 God instructs that raped women should be forced to marry their rapist. In Deuteronomy 22:23-24, a women is put to death for not yelling load enough while being raped.

Do you claim these things - these instructions from God - to be immoral?

And in your last sentence - are you seriously arguing that efficiency of societal function is a good judge of morality? How should I interpret this as anything other than brutally utilitarian?

So again, maybe objective morality exists. If it does, religion offers nothing helpful toward understanding it any any sort of absolute, repeatable, definitive way. You've just got a bunch of people that say they talk to God and they all offer a different message for us. When everyone has a different subjective opinion on what is objectively true, it sure sounds to me like we don't understand what is objectively true.
Bob_Ag
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Sapper Redux said:

Bob_Ag said:

kurt vonnegut said:

What is the moral degradation of our current society?
Speaking specifically about the US, it is our further removal from adhering to God's moral law.
Were we adhering to the moral law as a slaveholding republic? Or during Jim Crow? When, specifically, were we more moral?

Like I said originally, its pointless to sit here and try to have a subjective debate about events in history. Instead, my point is that the rise of secularization in this country is a clear indicator of moral decay because we are disregarding the very thing that gave us our ethical framework to begin with. The original post in this thread is about the rise of the 'none' category. There are also several other polls that show there is general consensus there is a rising morality problem in our society. I don't think there is any great mystery in reconciling these two things.
BluHorseShu
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kurt vonnegut said:

Bob_Ag said:


This is really quite simple. Relative morality is a reductio ad absurdum argument. All you have to do is take it to its logical conclusion to see the fallacy.

If we are to individually determine what is moral, or more accurately, what is ethical, then everyone's claim is equally valid. If I say rape is good and you say rape is bad, on what basis am I wrong or you right? Without the presence of a standard, then there is no possible basis for saying what is good and what is wrong. As I mentioned previously, it is not a logical argument to say societal standards are the basis for right and wrong because they too can't be relative. Societies are often called out for war crimes or crimes against humanity, but by what basis are we able to say what they are doing is wrong?

If I have a blue lollipop and you call it purple, how do we know who is right? Well we objectively have a color spectrum of visible light and the reflection of light into our eyes allows us to objectively determine the color based not on ourselves, but on an external standard. Without that standard, there is no basis of objectively determining the color of the lollipop. Without that standard I can't tell you you are wrong.


All of your post boils down to a view that "morality must be objective, because I don't like the implications involved if that isn't true." You've done nothing to show that morality cannot be relative.

Who gets to decide what is absurd? Maybe I think its absurd for a God to send bears to murder children, or to tell people to stone to death heretics, adulterers, witches, and people working on the Sabbath, or annihilating a town (women and children included) for some of their sins, or drowning the entire planet (women and children included) in a flood, or killing Egyptian babies, or telling His favorite people to burn a civilization to the ground, kill all the men and children and older women, and take the younger women as sex slaves. I'll stop here, because there is no point in listing all of the horrific things that OG God apparently did. Do these set of morals not apply to us today? Maybe I think its absurd for a God to give moral direction to some people and then different moral direction to other people.

I know, I know. . . . Old Testament doesn't count, right? Lets talk about Jesus, who threatens us with eternal punishment. Maybe I think the morality of Hell is absurd. Infinite punishment for finite crimes is absurd.

And maybe I think its absurd for God to have an objective morality and to disseminate that information to a few illiterate bronze age people only in one region of the world with the hopes hat the message spreads to 30% of the world over the next few thousand years - including vast stretches of time where most of His own followers believe in and practice slavery, genocide, religious war, torture / murder of non-believers, and all forms of bigotry.

None of the above is evidence against objective morality. But it is evidence that, if objective morality, Christians haven't the slightest clue what that is. You are a man, just like me. So is every other Christian poster here. And every priest, deacon, bishop, and pope that has ever lived. None of you are God (I don't think). And I don't believe that any of you get to claim that you speak for Him either.

Yes, relativistic morality is uncomfortable. If you say rape is good and I say its bad, I have no objective external basis to tell you that you are wrong. I can make a case and argue why I think its wrong based on experience, empathy, and philosophical arguments - but you don't have to agree.

The lollipop analogy is prefect for why I believe you are wrong here. Repeatable, testable, tangible, predictable experimentation and observation will tell us the frequency of the visible light associated with the lollipop. There is no equivalent mechanism with morality. Provide for me an experiment we can (hypothetically) perform to prove what is moral or immoral - without appeal to emotion, religious moral presupposition, or opinion. One of the problems with your position, in my opinion, is that there is no reliable way to reference or receive feedback from the claimed source of objective morality. As I type this, I am imaging a Gary Larson drawn comic with God behind a kiosk and a line of people coming to ask him questions to further their understanding of right and wrong. Wouldn't that be great if we had that? But, we don't. What we do have is ancient texts, many of which we don't know the author, that were hand selected by a committee, translated, rewritten, retranslated, and that is now interpreted differently by everyone who reads them. Again, even if objective morality exists, you have zero basis for claiming to understand it.


Quote:

However, when you look at our world empirically, morality is not actually relative. There is general consensus that things are morally wrong. We all agree that rape is immoral. But that's not possible without an external objective standard. Morality can't be relative because human society can't function in that manner or it would be chaos.

Does general consensus make things morally right or wrong? This paragraph is directly contradictory to your position, no? There are things that have been generally considered moral for most of human history (including by Christians) that you think are wrong today. Is rape wrong? How can you claim that it is? God orders it to be done in Judges 21:10-24 and Numbers 31:7-18 and Deuteronomy 20:10-14 and Zechariah 14:1-2. In Deuteronomy 22:28-29 God instructs that raped women should be forced to marry their rapist. In Deuteronomy 22:23-24, a women is put to death for not yelling load enough while being raped.

Do you claim these things - these instructions from God - to be immoral?

And in your last sentence - are you seriously arguing that efficiency of societal function is a good judge of morality? How should I interpret this as anything other than brutally utilitarian?

So again, maybe objective morality exists. If it does, religion offers nothing helpful toward understanding it any any sort of absolute, repeatable, definitive way. You've just got a bunch of people that say they talk to God and they all offer a different message for us. When everyone has a different subjective opinion on what is objectively true, it sure sounds to me like we don't understand what is objectively true.
I think youre conflating the argument that we are all born with a moral tendency that is mostly objective, with trying to justify infinite punishment for what you perceive as finite immorality. This also assumes that the immoral act is only against another person/persons and not the Divinity that imparted the morality in us.
Bob_Ag
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Kurt, I don't think you are arguing against my position.

Quote:

All of your post boils down to a view that "morality must be objective, because I don't like the implications involved if that isn't true." You've done nothing to show that morality cannot be relative.
I'm not sitting here trying to explain why one outcome is better than the other. I'm saying there is only one outcome. There is only one possible scenario. If morality were to be relative, then there quite simply is no such thing as morality. It simply doesn't exist.

I think its easier to grasp this when we talk about truth. How can anything be true if truth is relative, or intrinsic, to ourselves? If I say something is true and you say the opposite is true, well what is actually true? Nothing. Nothing can be true in that scenario because it has no firm foundation on which to base truth. Just like morality, when we take that to its logical conclusion we see its just not possible.
By definition, truth only has meaning if its objectively true. Otherwise its not truth.

I never said you have to like the Christian God as your basis for moral standard or truth. What I said is that the standard has to be external to us which means it has to come from God (I'll let you decide which one you want).

Quote:

And in your last sentence - are you seriously arguing that efficiency of societal function is a good judge of morality? How should I interpret this as anything other than brutally utilitarian?
I think your presupposing something I'm not advocating. I'm saying that society can't function without morality or truth that is based on an objective standard. Society breaks down when these are removed.
kurt vonnegut
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BluHorseShu said:


I think youre conflating the argument that we are all born with a moral tendency that is mostly objective, with trying to justify infinite punishment for what you perceive as finite immorality. This also assumes that the immoral act is only against another person/persons and not the Divinity that imparted the morality in us.

Bob didn't make the argument we are born with some inherent moral objective understanding. If he had, I would have happily argued against that.

And, is there something about a sin against God versus a sin against another person that justifies eternal torture? Eternal punishment for 'rejecting' God is still absurd in my opinion. Or maybe a better word would be 'sadistic' instead of absurd. But, all of this is still just my opinion. I'm still looking for the spiritual equivalent of scientific experiment that proves that there even is an objective standard and that we understand it. Until that happens, everything being stated is assertion without evidence.
kurt vonnegut
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Bob_Ag said:

Kurt, I don't think you are arguing against my position.

Quote:

All of your post boils down to a view that "morality must be objective, because I don't like the implications involved if that isn't true." You've done nothing to show that morality cannot be relative.
I'm not sitting here trying to explain why one outcome is better than the other. I'm saying there is only one outcome. There is only one possible scenario. If morality were to be relative, then there quite simply is no such thing as morality. It simply doesn't exist.

I think its easier to grasp this when we talk about truth. How can anything be true if truth is relative, or intrinsic, to ourselves? If I say something is true and you say the opposite is true, well what is actually true? Nothing. Nothing can be true in that scenario because it has no firm foundation on which to base truth. Just like morality, when we take that to its logical conclusion we see its just not possible.
By definition, truth only has meaning if its objectively true. Otherwise its not truth.

I never said you have to like the Christian God as your basis for moral standard or truth. What I said is that the standard has to be external to us which means it has to come from God (I'll let you decide which one you want).

Quote:

And in your last sentence - are you seriously arguing that efficiency of societal function is a good judge of morality? How should I interpret this as anything other than brutally utilitarian?
I think your presupposing something I'm not advocating. I'm saying that society can't function without morality or truth that is based on an objective standard. Society breaks down when these are removed.

Are you telling me this is a semantic argument from your point of view? That if no objective standard exists, you simply object to the use of 'morality' as term being used to describe relative subjective right / wrong?

Would you feel better if I used the term 'flergemship' to describe my subjective views of right and wrong?
Bob_Ag
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kurt vonnegut said:

Bob_Ag said:

Kurt, I don't think you are arguing against my position.

Quote:

All of your post boils down to a view that "morality must be objective, because I don't like the implications involved if that isn't true." You've done nothing to show that morality cannot be relative.
I'm not sitting here trying to explain why one outcome is better than the other. I'm saying there is only one outcome. There is only one possible scenario. If morality were to be relative, then there quite simply is no such thing as morality. It simply doesn't exist.

I think its easier to grasp this when we talk about truth. How can anything be true if truth is relative, or intrinsic, to ourselves? If I say something is true and you say the opposite is true, well what is actually true? Nothing. Nothing can be true in that scenario because it has no firm foundation on which to base truth. Just like morality, when we take that to its logical conclusion we see its just not possible.
By definition, truth only has meaning if its objectively true. Otherwise its not truth.

I never said you have to like the Christian God as your basis for moral standard or truth. What I said is that the standard has to be external to us which means it has to come from God (I'll let you decide which one you want).

Quote:

And in your last sentence - are you seriously arguing that efficiency of societal function is a good judge of morality? How should I interpret this as anything other than brutally utilitarian?
I think your presupposing something I'm not advocating. I'm saying that society can't function without morality or truth that is based on an objective standard. Society breaks down when these are removed.

Are you telling me this is a semantic argument from your point of view? That if no objective standard exists, you simply object to the use of 'morality' as term being used to describe relative subjective right / wrong?

Would you feel better if I used the term 'flergemship' to describe my subjective views of right and wrong?
I'm not arguing semantics in the slightest, but if you want to, here is a useful definition.

The word just, as defined by the Oxford Dictionary: based on or behaving according to what is morally right and fair.

Describe how a society can have justice when morality, or right and wrong, is relative? Describe how its possible to have a rule of law, which is the implementation that allows for civil society, if justice is not based on objective morality?

In your own words, define injustice.
BluHorseShu
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kurt vonnegut said:

BluHorseShu said:


I think youre conflating the argument that we are all born with a moral tendency that is mostly objective, with trying to justify infinite punishment for what you perceive as finite immorality. This also assumes that the immoral act is only against another person/persons and not the Divinity that imparted the morality in us.

Bob didn't make the argument we are born with some inherent moral objective understanding. If he had, I would have happily argued against that.

And, is there something about a sin against God versus a sin against another person that justifies eternal torture? Eternal punishment for 'rejecting' God is still absurd in my opinion. Or maybe a better word would be 'sadistic' instead of absurd. But, all of this is still just my opinion. I'm still looking for the spiritual equivalent of scientific experiment that proves that there even is an objective standard and that we understand it. Until that happens, everything being stated is assertion without evidence.
Well, if you don't believe in God then the absurdity of eternal punishment is a moot point. If you did believe in God, you accept the framework of his covenant.
Sapper Redux
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Depends on the God you believe in. Jews don't believe in a Hell and it's supposed to be the same God.
kurt vonnegut
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Bob_Ag said:


I'm not arguing semantics in the slightest, but if you want to, here is a useful definition.

The word just, as defined by the Oxford Dictionary: based on or behaving according to what is morally right and fair.

Describe how a society can have justice when morality, or right and wrong, is relative? Describe how its possible to have a rule of law, which is the implementation that allows for civil society, if justice is not based on objective morality?

In your own words, define injustice.

I think I want to first distinguish 'ultimate justice from God' from a more accessible legal definition of justice - which is the thing that permits for civil society. Since you've asked about the latter, I'm going to not address ultimate justice from God.

Every society on this planet can be described as a group of people with differing view of morality living with shared common laws which are intended to serve as the objective standard against which legal justice is measured? There is no society that I am aware of that allows for all of its individuals to govern themselves based on their own subjective sense of right and wrong - nor has anyone in this thread suggested that societies ought to be set up that way.

Societies like ours implement rule of law by appealing to the collective views of its citizens to create those laws. 'Legal' justice can be defined as the implementation of said law. Citizens need not appeal to the same source for their objective morality - what is important is that the objectives are generally agreed upon. For example, I think murder is wrong. You think murder is wrong. We both think murder is wrong, even though we appeal to different source to arrive at that conclusion. Our society is built of people who generally consider murder to be wrong and who have reached that conclusion through various paths. There may be some people in society that think murder is okay. You'll never have a society where everyone agrees on everything.


I don't know if I can define injustice without a little bit of context. In a legal context, injustice is a violation of the enacted law. In a more personal context, injustice can be defined as a violation of my personal sense of right and wrong. For example, someone that smokes weed in Texas has violated a law, but has not violated my sense of right and wrong. Enforcing the law and penalizing the person would be legal justice, but that doesn't appeal my personal sense of justice. Living in a society means compromise. Always has and always will.
kurt vonnegut
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BluHorseShu said:


Well, if you don't believe in God then the absurdity of eternal punishment is a moot point. If you did believe in God, you accept the framework of his covenant.

Ultimately, my point here is not that Hell is objectively absurd. My point is that there is disagreement on what is and is not absurd. And just as I cannot prove, absolutely and objectively, that your views are absurd, neither can you prove that mine are absurd. Stating that objective morality exists, does not grant you magical access to God's brain. So . . . of what practical use is it?
UTExan
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Meanwhile in Israel, the Messianic Jewish movement (Christian) is growing:
“If you’re going to have crime it should at least be organized crime”
-Havelock Vetinari
Martin Q. Blank
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kurt vonnegut said:

BluHorseShu said:


Well, if you don't believe in God then the absurdity of eternal punishment is a moot point. If you did believe in God, you accept the framework of his covenant.

Ultimately, my point here is not that Hell is objectively absurd. My point is that there is disagreement on what is and is not absurd. And just as I cannot prove, absolutely and objectively, that your views are absurd, neither can you prove that mine are absurd. Stating that objective morality exists, does not grant you magical access to God's brain. So . . . of what practical use is it?
The entire justice system? It assumes objective morality exists.
Rocag
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Explain that. I don't see that it is necessary for objective morality to exist for a national justice system to function. It's not even necessary for all members of that nation to share the same moral beliefs, no matter if they are claimed to be objective or not.

The people who created our justice system were well aware that they had some serious disagreements on what was and wasn't moral. Even if they could agree that an objective standard existed (which they didn't), they still couldn't agree on what that standard was.
Martin Q. Blank
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How do you punish someone for breaking a law without believing that law (and the morality by which it was created) is objective? Someone can't just "disagree" with murder and expect to get away with it.
Rocag
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Because law isn't morality.

Is it immoral to drive 70 mph in a 60 mph zone? Most people would probably say no. There's no objective moral reason for that law to exist. God did not come down from on high to say "Nine over is okay, but ten over is out of the question." It's much more subjective than that. We put in speed limits to try and make driving safer for all parties involved. You're free to argue that any law on the books shouldn't exist, but that doesn't mean the government won't still hold you accountable for breaking them.

Or are only some laws morality based? What's the difference then in how they are actually enforced?
Bob_Ag
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kurt vonnegut said:

Bob_Ag said:


I'm not arguing semantics in the slightest, but if you want to, here is a useful definition.

The word just, as defined by the Oxford Dictionary: based on or behaving according to what is morally right and fair.

Describe how a society can have justice when morality, or right and wrong, is relative? Describe how its possible to have a rule of law, which is the implementation that allows for civil society, if justice is not based on objective morality?

In your own words, define injustice.

I think I want to first distinguish 'ultimate justice from God' from a more accessible legal definition of justice - which is the thing that permits for civil society. Since you've asked about the latter, I'm going to not address ultimate justice from God.

Every society on this planet can be described as a group of people with differing view of morality living with shared common laws which are intended to serve as the objective standard against which legal justice is measured? There is no society that I am aware of that allows for all of its individuals to govern themselves based on their own subjective sense of right and wrong - nor has anyone in this thread suggested that societies ought to be set up that way.

Societies like ours implement rule of law by appealing to the collective views of its citizens to create those laws. 'Legal' justice can be defined as the implementation of said law. Citizens need not appeal to the same source for their objective morality - what is important is that the objectives are generally agreed upon. For example, I think murder is wrong. You think murder is wrong. We both think murder is wrong, even though we appeal to different source to arrive at that conclusion. Our society is built of people who generally consider murder to be wrong and who have reached that conclusion through various paths. There may be some people in society that think murder is okay. You'll never have a society where everyone agrees on everything.


I don't know if I can define injustice without a little bit of context. In a legal context, injustice is a violation of the enacted law. In a more personal context, injustice can be defined as a violation of my personal sense of right and wrong. For example, someone that smokes weed in Texas has violated a law, but has not violated my sense of right and wrong. Enforcing the law and penalizing the person would be legal justice, but that doesn't appeal my personal sense of justice. Living in a society means compromise. Always has and always will.
Good response, I'll get back to you later today.
Martin Q. Blank
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Rocag said:

Is it immoral to drive 70 mph in a 60 mph zone? Most people would probably say no. There's no objective moral reason for that law to exist. God did not come down from on high to say "Nine over is okay, but ten over is out of the question." It's much more subjective than that. We put in speed limits to try and make driving safer for all parties involved. You're free to argue that any law on the books shouldn't exist, but that doesn't mean the government won't still hold you accountable for breaking them.
Maybe I don't understand what the difference between subjective and objective is. For someone to hold me accountable for a law I don't think should exist means that law has moved from that person's mind and imposed it on mine. Am I wrong?
Bob_Ag
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Rocag said:

Because law isn't morality.

Is it immoral to drive 70 mph in a 60 mph zone? Most people would probably say no. There's no objective moral reason for that law to exist. God did not come down from on high to say "Nine over is okay, but ten over is out of the question." It's much more subjective than that. We put in speed limits to try and make driving safer for all parties involved. You're free to argue that any law on the books shouldn't exist, but that doesn't mean the government won't still hold you accountable for breaking them.

Or are only some laws morality based? What's the difference then in how they are actually enforced?
You're getting lost in the weeds. Speed limit laws aren't created because driving 70mph is inherently immoral. They are designed because of safety for the community which is based on a larger sense of right and wrong.

No one is saying law is morality. Law is however predicated on ethics. Martin Q explains this exactly: how can you punish someone, or deliver justice, if justice by definition requires objective morality?

When we examine society, we find that we do in fact have general consensus of what is largely right and wrong and thus we derive a rule of law (or framework) around that. Once you remove objective morality, you remove justice, and society will soon break down. This is historical demonstrated time and time again.

The question then becomes, can objective morality come internally? The answer is of course not because we apply that to our everyday lives. When we want to be objective in life, we seek externalities or people will just say, "that's your own biased opinion". A system of ethics is not derived internally, only applied that way.
Rocag
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Well yes, all laws started out as ideas in someone's head at one point. Our system of government has rules by which laws are adopted and enforced. If you're being held accountable for breaking a law it implies that law has gone through some approval process and isn't just an idea in someone's head.

But let's further separate this idea that law must be based on objective morality. Consider a dictator which hold absolute authority over their country. This dictator decides he doesn't like the color red and anyone caught wearing red will executed. There's lots of reasons to dislike both the law and the system that produces and enforces it, but does that make it any less of a law for the people in that country? Now, can I say that such a law is objectively immoral? Nope. But I'm not really bothered by that fact either. It's not necessary for me to appeal to objective morality to oppose a law I dislike. My reasons will absolutely be subjective but again I don't see that as a problem.
Martin Q. Blank
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The fact humans are fallible doesn't mean we should become anarchists. Science, by its own rules, can never arrive at truth. But it doesn't stop scientific exploration to get closer to it. Same with morality.
BluHorseShu
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Sapper Redux said:

Depends on the God you believe in. Jews don't believe in a Hell and it's supposed to be the same God.
But they do believe in his imparted morality in us.
Rocag
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You've not yet demonstrated that a national justice system is dependent on the existence of objective morality. It seems like the only answer you have is that you've defined justice as being dependent on objective morality so if that doesn't exist neither does justice. OK, but I don't accept that definition in the first place.

It does seem like this is all just semantics as referenced in an earlier post.
Sapper Redux
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BluHorseShu said:

Sapper Redux said:

Depends on the God you believe in. Jews don't believe in a Hell and it's supposed to be the same God.
But they do believe in his imparted morality in us.


But not the same relationship between man and the divine. In fact, Judaism encourages debate and interpretation. It doesn't presume to perfectly know what is and is not moral without logically approaching and debating a question. Believing in a moral God does not mean every religious person everywhere believes in a singular objective morality that can be determined and applied to a society.
schmendeler
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AG
Bob Lee said:

one MEEN Ag said:

I've got family members that fit into this category. If there was a checkbox for, 'I believe in Jesus but Sunday is for kids sports' they'd fill it in. I have been invited to a bunch of sunday morning birthday parties lately. The hosts get a bit weirded out when we say that we'd like to show up after church if thats not a problem for the party.

Decline is real.


My mom's husband a couple years ago casually asked if my older girls could miss mass so they could take a weekend trip with them. Didn't even offer to take them to mass wherever it was out of town he was wanting to go. I said "absolutely not", and he gave me an incredulous look.

When we were still in the public schools, my wife would sometimes take the girls out of school on holy days of obligation to take them to mass. We did this even though there are times available to us after school, to send the message to the kids that as seriously as they know I take school, their obligations to our creator are infinitely more important. But the front desk lady on one occasion was very confused because, she said, she's Catholic. When my wife told her it was a holy day of obligation she said: "oh, you're REALLY Catholic." Lol.


I feel bad for these girls.
Aggrad08
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Martin Q. Blank said:

Rocag said:

Is it immoral to drive 70 mph in a 60 mph zone? Most people would probably say no. There's no objective moral reason for that law to exist. God did not come down from on high to say "Nine over is okay, but ten over is out of the question." It's much more subjective than that. We put in speed limits to try and make driving safer for all parties involved. You're free to argue that any law on the books shouldn't exist, but that doesn't mean the government won't still hold you accountable for breaking them.
Maybe I don't understand what the difference between subjective and objective is. For someone to hold me accountable for a law I don't think should exist means that law has moved from that person's mind and imposed it on mine. Am I wrong?
If you think being an "adult" at 18 is somehow an objective fact I don't know what to tell you. Our laws are subjective as hell even if an objective morality existed (it doesn't).
Martin Q. Blank
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Quote:

Our laws are subjective as hell even if an objective morality existed (it doesn't).
Why do you think that's true?
Bob Lee
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AG
schmendeler said:

Bob Lee said:

one MEEN Ag said:

I've got family members that fit into this category. If there was a checkbox for, 'I believe in Jesus but Sunday is for kids sports' they'd fill it in. I have been invited to a bunch of sunday morning birthday parties lately. The hosts get a bit weirded out when we say that we'd like to show up after church if thats not a problem for the party.

Decline is real.


My mom's husband a couple years ago casually asked if my older girls could miss mass so they could take a weekend trip with them. Didn't even offer to take them to mass wherever it was out of town he was wanting to go. I said "absolutely not", and he gave me an incredulous look.

When we were still in the public schools, my wife would sometimes take the girls out of school on holy days of obligation to take them to mass. We did this even though there are times available to us after school, to send the message to the kids that as seriously as they know I take school, their obligations to our creator are infinitely more important. But the front desk lady on one occasion was very confused because, she said, she's Catholic. When my wife told her it was a holy day of obligation she said: "oh, you're REALLY Catholic." Lol.


I feel bad for these girls.

Why?
one MEEN Ag
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Sapper Redux said:

Depends on the God you believe in. Jews don't believe in a Hell and it's supposed to be the same God.
Its a little more nuanced than that. First temple Judiasm had writings about sheol, the grave, where everyone goes. Ecclesiastes laments about how both the righteous and wicked go to sheol. But even within sheol you see the abyss where God can put the wicked right then and there. The book of Jonah, when the fish swallows Jonah he spends 3 days in the abyss (beneath the pillars of the world). Jonah dies and is cast to the abyss for his disobedience, and resurrected on the shores near Assyria. [Sidenote, this is why Jesus said the only miracle the Pharisees will get is the miracle of Jonah]. The book of Enoch had four 'bowls' or caves. The martyred, the righteous, the wicked, the ignorant. So in the texts that the ancient israelites preserved we see more than just 'no hell'.

Sheol is viewed as a temporary position in the afterlife, and it is not viewed as a pleasant place either. Everyone in sheol is waiting on..wait for it...the messiah to come, break the gates of hades and pull the righteous towards God and away from the wicked. Without the messiah, the world is unjust and the lives of the wicked to prosper and the martyrs die for nothing.

A modern jewish interpretation is going to deviate in obvious ways, but the whole point of the religion established by the God of Abraham is to bring about the messiah to save mankind. Shoel is a reflection of the constraints of the pre-messiah age and the hope of the messiah.
Sapper Redux
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Martin Q. Blank said:


Quote:

Our laws are subjective as hell even if an objective morality existed (it doesn't).
Why do you think that's true?
The crimes and punishments are defined by those in charge. A CEO who underfunds a hospital to gain a bigger bonus, resulting in patient deaths, may get a fine while someone who kills a person after accidentally falling asleep while driving may go to prison. Who objectively caused greater harm and what would your objective morality say about that?
schmendeler
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AG
They missed out on a trip with a family member over church
Bob Lee
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schmendeler said:

They missed out on a trip with a family member over church

If it helps you, I'm not so sure they would have chosen the trip if given the choice. Not that I would give them the option. Sometimes parents deny their children things.
Sapper Redux
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Quote:

the whole point of the religion established by the God of Abraham is to bring about the messiah to save mankind


That's not clear at all in the Torah and the messianic figure in the Nevi'im is not the ultimate point of Jewish worship. It's a different figure than what Christians have turned it into.

Sheol is not Hell. You seem to admit that without fully admitting it. Its nature changes even in the Biblical text, but it's never described in any way similar to the Christian Hell. The notion of an eternal lake of fire ruled by Satan is not a Jewish concept.
kurt vonnegut
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Bob_Ag said:


No one is saying law is morality. Law is however predicated on ethics. Martin Q explains this exactly: how can you punish someone, or deliver justice, if justice by definition requires objective morality?

I want to point out that if you look at different dictionary definitions of 'justice', you will find a whole bunch of different definition variations. The vast majority of definitions of justice appeal to more secular legal definitions and it actually took a few minutes to even find the type of definition you are using.

Objectives need not come from God. We do this ourselves every day in our lives and our jobs. When I go to the store I set objectives based on what I need to buy. And when I work on a project at work, the project has set objectives for what needs to be accomplished. None of these objectives are absolutes or God given.

And is our legal system any different? We create a law saying that murder is illegal and set a penalty for violators. The law is created with an objective in mind and in some cases explicitly stated. Implementation of the law introduces subjectivity because you involve a jury or a judge or some other party that has to read the law, try to understand the objective and then apply the circumstances of the case toward meeting the objective. Nevertheless, laws are established with some 'objective'.

If the definition of justice invokes secular law, then the objective involved is that which is defined by the law and its human creators. If the definition of justice invokes God given objective morality, then there does not exist a legal system that can reflect Celestial, eternal God given judgement and standards.

In other words, the version of justice which requires objective morality is the type of justice that you think God provides. And if the absence of an objective moral standard means that this ultimate, universal, celestial justice is impossible. . . . then its impossible. Who says the world has to be just? It would be nice if it was, but thats not a reason to think it necessary.
Aggrad08
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Martin Q. Blank said:


Quote:

Our laws are subjective as hell even if an objective morality existed (it doesn't).
Why do you think that's true?


I gave you a simple example. Objectively demonstrate a person is an adult at 18 years old and a child at 17.

 
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