Moral Relativity?

Logiclul

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Grichnoch said:
Logiclul said:
MonkeyGH said:
Logiclul said:
Great wall of text
"subjective morals still allow people to agree while also causing disagreements."

You and I already determined that objective things allow that as well...(colors).

Your entire argument against Grich could be applied to almost anything. Colors. Shapes. Things you previously listed as objective.

What is your criteria for something objective?
No, what we determined is that objective morality can not exist, as there are moral disagreements wherein both sides of the argument are morally sound.

You'll have to explain how my argument can be applied to shapes, and how shapes are objectively moral (???).

Also this captcha is ridiculous. There's no way I can read that.
Wait, we haven't determined that objective morality can't exist, you did, and that does not make it true.

What Monkey is saying is that just because we can disagree under a system of subjectiveness, does not mean that we can't also disagree under a system of objectivity. So saying that we can still disagree under subjectivity is not your ticket to heaven.

Monkey brought colors and shapes into it because they are things we know to be objective. But even though they are objective, we can see them subjectively. If I look at a cube with each side a different color, I can say I see a cube that is red, white, and black, but you might see white, black, and yellow because you are at a different angle. That does not change what the cube is.

The same with morality, what you believe to be true about morality does not change what it really is. How you react to moral law does not dictate what moral law is.
So you're saying that there is a moral law (one which is impossible to discern as far as we can be concerned) which exists. And that that moral law is (naturally) broken by many many millions of people who have their own false-moral code.

If morals are some unknown canon, then it means nothing. Morals don't really restrict us to anything, they are simply guidelines which make us feel like we are doing good. Each person feels different things from different actions, which is why no moral codes are the same, and thus why there is moral relativity. If there is a moral code which is prime and that no one knows, then it may as well not exist. So we are back to many people with many different codes.
 

deepseadiver

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Hmm. Interesting talk guys. Let me point out a few things (based on my very humble, yet educated (and before you call me an 'internet expert', just know that I have had more official debates then you have ever been to in your life. I am working on a degree in math and logic, with a heavy emphasis in computer science. Until you show me more about yourselves than the kind of stuff I see on most of your profiles like: "I'm a level 30 in WOW" or "I am a dread assasin" and all that junk... give me one good reason to believe you apart from your opinions... lets see some credentials.) opinion)

@Mortai: Your taste in arguments (vs Grichnoch) were rather poor. Attacking a person directly in a debate of ideas is never a good idea. Any self-respecting 'debater' knows this. In future try to restrict your 'jabs' to the realm of theory, and avoid directing your opinions towards a specific person (as a person... talking to someone is perfectly fine, just don't attack them as a person). And Grichnoch was mostly right. While it is not a rule that that kind of (bording on insulting possibly?) speech is a sign of a weak argument, people who start down that road do tend to unravel their own points. Just a quick warning.

@Kaulan: "Oh look, and internet expert... how quaint." What does that make you? I haven't seen anything to show you know more than Grichnoch or that he knows less than he is saying.

@ThreeWords: While I agree that non-arguments are flaws in a debater, let me point out a couple of things to you, First, you just did the exact same thing. You accused Grichnoch of a non-argument, at the same time as you used one. Watch that in future. Second, if you notice, Grichnoch already said we was out of the discussion, so therefore what he posted would not have been an argument, it would have just been a final note on debate.

@Logiclul: What MonkeyGH and Grichnoch were saying is that, while a person's experience will differ when it comes to morals, the morals themselves will not differ. And you said that if a moral code was undefined to us, it would be useless. Well, that's where things like the Bible, the Koran (or Qu'ran), the Book of Mormon etc come in. All of those define a moral law, that is absolute as much as it is objective (to use the words you all have been throwing around). Now I know that many of you are probably athiestic or some other variety of that, and you might say that you don't have a religion, but in reality, you do. A religion is defined as a system of beliefs, and athiests believe that there is no God, and that evolution is true, and that nature is all there is. Sounds like a system of beliefs to me. That would therefore make athiests (and naturalists) religious.

Now none of what I have said has solved any of the problems about 'subjective' 'objective' morality here. That is because I don't believe that we can in this place and time. The great thinkers of the world have been struggling with this concept for centuries, I don't see why everyone in this forum thinks they need to solve it once and for all.

That said, let me make my case, then you all can slam on my opinions all you like. But be warned, I do agree with Grichnoch on this. In his 'farewell post' he said that you all seem to be suspending logic in order to make your points. I half agree/disagree. You have all been pretty quick to make comments that make absolutely no sense from either a logical, mathematical, or rational standpoint. (like Logiclul's set T etc... what was that all about?) But at the same time you have all made some good points, and I respect you for that.

Most of what I have to say are quotes, because I can't adaquately express what I want to say in my own words.
Joshua Greene (respected neural surgeon and brain expert, and supporter of relative morality) once said: ?If everyone believed [relative morality], the whole world would fall apart. If right and wrong are nothing more than the instinctive firing of neurons, why bother being good?? I agree. What is the point of anything good?
"Greene is right. Good and evil cannot possibly exist within a world that defines everything by chance. In his evolutionary belief system, only (fallible) human preference can determine ideals of right and wrong, and such preferences may shift from society to society." -- Janine M. Ramsey.

"Evil and good do objectively exist because they emanate from the fact that there is an unchanging, omniscient (all-knowing), and holy God. These are not subjective opinions invented and written down by man. Rather, ?good? expresses the innate characteristics of God Himself that He has built into every human being, and every human being is responsible to live up to those standards. And the absence of good defines evil.

But, evolutionary ?science? will likely never recognize this simple truth. While continuing in its quest to overturn the existence of God in the mind of society, it is inadvertently revealing the truth regarding the ghastly implications of evolutionary philosophy. With the Discover magazine article, we are witnessing the ?leading edge? of evolutionary research drawing towards the inevitable and logical conclusion that in a world without a God there is no objective basis for moral truth. There is only human preference. A frightening, anarchical proposition.

The question is, will society continue to blindly follow this flawed theory of origins and life?"--J. M. Ramsey again

My whole argument is based on the existence of an absolute, sovereign, creative God, who creates the rules, and expects us to live by them. While you may not agree with that, I do have a flawless system of objective morals provided by God, and nothing you can say will ever undermine that argument. Just saying: "Well, I choose not to believe in God" and "Well, you can't say that cause I don't believe in God" just doesn't cut it. WHY doesn't God exist? Give me something solid please. I have yet to see anyone else (including grichnoch and monkeygh) give anything close to the definitive system of morals and beliefs that I have.

Thanks,

Cheers Chaps, I may not get back to this 'till later, but comment away!
Pip now.
 

deepseadiver

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Hmm. Interesting talk guys. Let me point out a few things (based on my very humble, yet educated (and before you call me an 'internet expert', just know that I have had more official debates then you have ever been to in your life. I am working on a degree in math and logic, with a heavy emphasis in computer science. Until you show me more about yourselves than the kind of stuff I see on most of your profiles like: "I'm a level 30 in WOW" or "I am a dread assasin" and all that junk... give me one good reason to believe you apart from your opinions... lets see some credentials.) opinion)

@Mortai: Your taste in arguments (vs Grichnoch) were rather poor. Attacking a person directly in a debate of ideas is never a good idea. Any self-respecting 'debater' knows this. In future try to restrict your 'jabs' to the realm of theory, and avoid directing your opinions towards a specific person (as a person... talking to someone is perfectly fine, just don't attack them as a person). And Grichnoch was mostly right. While it is not a rule that that kind of (bording on insulting possibly?) speech is a sign of a weak argument, people who start down that road do tend to unravel their own points. Just a quick warning.

@Kaulan: "Oh look, and internet expert... how quaint." What does that make you? I haven't seen anything to show you know more than Grichnoch or that he knows less than he is saying.

@ThreeWords: While I agree that non-arguments are flaws in a debater, let me point out a couple of things to you, First, you just did the exact same thing. You accused Grichnoch of a non-argument, at the same time as you used one. Watch that in future. Second, if you notice, Grichnoch already said we was out of the discussion, so therefore what he posted would not have been an argument, it would have just been a final note on debate.

@Logiclul: What MonkeyGH and Grichnoch were saying is that, while a person's experience will differ when it comes to morals, the morals themselves will not differ. And you said that if a moral code was undefined to us, it would be useless. Well, that's where things like the Bible, the Koran (or Qu'ran), the Book of Mormon etc come in. All of those define a moral law, that is absolute as much as it is objective (to use the words you all have been throwing around). Now I know that many of you are probably athiestic or some other variety of that, and you might say that you don't have a religion, but in reality, you do. A religion is defined as a system of beliefs, and athiests believe that there is no God, and that evolution is true, and that nature is all there is. Sounds like a system of beliefs to me. That would therefore make athiests (and naturalists) religious.

Now none of what I have said has solved any of the problems about 'subjective' 'objective' morality here. That is because I don't believe that we can in this place and time. The great thinkers of the world have been struggling with this concept for centuries, I don't see why everyone in this forum thinks they need to solve it once and for all.

That said, let me make my case, then you all can slam on my opinions all you like. But be warned, I do agree with Grichnoch on this. In his 'farewell post' he said that you all seem to be suspending logic in order to make your points. I half agree/disagree. You have all been pretty quick to make comments that make absolutely no sense from either a logical, mathematical, or rational standpoint. (like Logiclul's set T etc... what was that all about?) But at the same time you have all made some good points, and I respect you for that.

Most of what I have to say are quotes, because I can't adaquately express what I want to say in my own words.
Joshua Greene (respected neural surgeon and brain expert, and supporter of relative morality) once said: ?If everyone believed [relative morality], the whole world would fall apart. If right and wrong are nothing more than the instinctive firing of neurons, why bother being good?? I agree. What is the point of anything good?
"Greene is right. Good and evil cannot possibly exist within a world that defines everything by chance. In his evolutionary belief system, only (fallible) human preference can determine ideals of right and wrong, and such preferences may shift from society to society." -- Janine M. Ramsey.

"Evil and good do objectively exist because they emanate from the fact that there is an unchanging, omniscient (all-knowing), and holy God. These are not subjective opinions invented and written down by man. Rather, ?good? expresses the innate characteristics of God Himself that He has built into every human being, and every human being is responsible to live up to those standards. And the absence of good defines evil.

But, evolutionary ?science? will likely never recognize this simple truth. While continuing in its quest to overturn the existence of God in the mind of society, it is inadvertently revealing the truth regarding the ghastly implications of evolutionary philosophy. With the Discover magazine article, we are witnessing the ?leading edge? of evolutionary research drawing towards the inevitable and logical conclusion that in a world without a God there is no objective basis for moral truth. There is only human preference. A frightening, anarchical proposition.

The question is, will society continue to blindly follow this flawed theory of origins and life?"--J. M. Ramsey again

My whole argument is based on the existence of an absolute, sovereign, creative God, who creates the rules, and expects us to live by them. While you may not agree with that, I do have a flawless system of objective morals provided by God, and nothing you can say will ever undermine that argument. Just saying: "Well, I choose not to believe in God" and "Well, you can't say that cause I don't believe in God" just doesn't cut it. WHY doesn't God exist? Give me something solid please. I have yet to see anyone else (including grichnoch and monkeygh) give anything close to the definitive system of morals and beliefs that I have.

Thanks,

Cheers Chaps, I may not get back to this 'till later, but comment away!
Pip now.
 

chadachada123

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I think that there is relative morality, in a sense.

If you grew up in a society where young boys enter a master-apprentice relationship (with sex) with an older man, and everyone is taught that that is the norm, there is nothing inherently wrong with this, since all parties are consenting (presuming they are), and are simply living up to their civic duties. (For those that don't know, this is called pederasty, and was a main practice of ancient Greece).

That said, I suppose it's universal morality in that I see no harm in pederasty so long as all parties are consenting, or at least convinced that this particular path is the norm.

Were pederasty to be instituted in US culture, however, boys growing up would be sent many mixed messages, and many would be traumatized from being told that they were "raped"/"molested." In that sense, it's relative. It wouldn't work here because of our culture (it would harm people), but it worked in other cultures just fine without trauma.
 

deepseadiver

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Mortai Gravesend said:
deepseadiver said:
@Mortai: Your taste in arguments (vs Grichnoch) were rather poor. Attacking a person directly in a debate of ideas is never a good idea. Any self-respecting 'debater' knows this. In future try to restrict your 'jabs' to the realm of theory, and avoid directing your opinions towards a specific person (as a person... talking to someone is perfectly fine, just don't attack them as a person). And Grichnoch was mostly right. While it is not a rule that that kind of (bording on insulting possibly?) speech is a sign of a weak argument, people who start down that road do tend to unravel their own points. Just a quick warning.
How interesting. You say they're poor, but all you do is complain about the tone. What a substantive criticism of the points I made. And in support of a wonderful red herring no less. Do you have real criticism of my points, or are you going to slavishly support him?

Btw here's a better rule: The person that complains about tone without addressing the points probably has no valid reply.

Spouting weak 'rules' is worthless, it addresses nothing.
If you hadn't noticed, I haven't actually responded to any of you 'point by point' because I find that to be rather useless, as people generally like to embrace their own thoughts without giving others their ear. I don't want to get involved in the endless circle of mayhem created by everybody spouting of supposed 'facts' willy nilly. (NOTE: I will give any of your ideas thought if it is well formulated).

The reason I presented my cased as I did, is because the only way to make headway here is for all of you blokes to quit responding to each other, and start adding some meat to the discussion.

Don't view my reluctance to join in your style of conversation as a flaw, error, or logical problem, see it as my attempt at bringing this discussion to a higher level.

And I'm not defending Grichnoch singularly, I would say the same thing to you regardless of who you said those things to.

Also, I was not complaining, but giving you tips on better debating. You can say whatever you want, I don't give a blast, but in order to give your points any credence, you need to rise above directing attacks a specific persons.

"Do you have real criticism of my points, or are you going to slavishly support him?"
I don't want to criticize your points dear fellow. It would be pointless(pun intended).

If you watch those silly political debates on the tube that show the US GOP candidates going back and forth, you would see what I mean. All they do is address a particular jab or comment that a competitor made at them, which results in them looking foolish and getting nowhere. My professional policy when it comes to debate: 'Don't let your opponent dictate what you will say next. Be independant of their quips and arguments. Say meaningful things, not reactive things.'
Those are the ways to make a successful point. So until I see you fellows doing that, I feel it is truly pointless to reply individually to each one of you.

Until next time chaps!
 

Logiclul

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deepseadiver said:
[cut out to avoid walling]
First off, not sure why you went ahead and talked about atheism and religion like that, as while it is correct to say that most of the users here atheistic (there was a poll a while back; and I did not select atheism from the list), it has no bearing on the argument (except to, perhaps, classify the population, much like you did with saying none of has have credentials (and while I don't have anything which would pertain to this argument, I hardly boast a level 30 whatever; I care more about philosophy (which I admit novicy at) than games, so please refrain from broad statements like that)). I say yes, the Bible may have objective moral truths, however I contest that it is not a complete set of moral beliefs. They are certainly great morals to build on, but I think that people may have special exceptions to some of the rules, and will then make moral decisions based off of their new-edited morals (even devout christians do this).

The T-Set thing was just my way of showing that it would make sense for humans to inherently have morals which aren't part of some high-order-law which is consistent through all of time. I showed that there could be a realistic and natural progression of morals which suggests moral relativity.

I've read that Green quote before (or at least something similar) and to the posed question I say this:

The point of doing good is the satisfaction one receives when they know that they have done good.

As for your god-given morals, they do not prove objective morality even if they do exist. To convince you I will assume that they do. If not everyone adheres to them, then there is no moral obligation to those who don't. The laws of good as one might put them don't apply to them, rather an independent set which is empirically determined does.

Does that make sense?

I do enjoy, however, the company of an educated person who seems to have joined on the whimsy of intervening in our conversation. (I am being sincere)
Mortai Gravesend said:
deepseadiver said:
@Mortai: Your taste in arguments (vs Grichnoch) were rather poor. Attacking a person directly in a debate of ideas is never a good idea. Any self-respecting 'debater' knows this. In future try to restrict your 'jabs' to the realm of theory, and avoid directing your opinions towards a specific person (as a person... talking to someone is perfectly fine, just don't attack them as a person). And Grichnoch was mostly right. While it is not a rule that that kind of (bording on insulting possibly?) speech is a sign of a weak argument, people who start down that road do tend to unravel their own points. Just a quick warning.
How interesting. You say they're poor, but all you do is complain about the tone. What a substantive criticism of the points I made. And in support of a wonderful red herring no less. Do you have real criticism of my points, or are you going to slavishly support him?

Btw here's a better rule: The person that complains about tone without addressing the points probably has no valid reply.

Spouting weak 'rules' is worthless, it addresses nothing.
He accused you of ad hominem, which is very valid criticism. He is saying that your points do not address the actual theoretical issues, rather it stands to attack first the speaker and then their argument by association. I haven't read your posts yet specifically and can't right now, but what he said is not stupid by any stretch I think.
 

deepseadiver

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Mortai Gravesend said:
deepseadiver said:
My whole argument is based on the existence of an absolute, sovereign, creative God, who creates the rules, and expects us to live by them.
Your argument then rests on your ability to prove the existence of this absolute, soverign, creative God who created the rules and expects us to live by them.

While you may not agree with that, I do have a flawless system of objective morals provided by God, and nothing you can say will ever undermine that argument.
Well your argument is pretty lacking so I don't see a need to undermine it right now.

Just saying: "Well, I choose not to believe in God" and "Well, you can't say that cause I don't believe in God" just doesn't cut it. WHY doesn't God exist? Give me something solid please. I have yet to see anyone else (including grichnoch and monkeygh) give anything close to the definitive system of morals and beliefs that I have.
Actually first thing first, you give a reason to believe in said God. You proposed it existed, now show it does. Otherwise I can claim that God 2.0 is the real God and in His infinite wisdom he decided to tell me you're wrong. Oh and if you want to just say you don't believe in God 2.0 then you need to say why He doesn't exist.
Hmmm. Confused... please explain?
 

Eggbert

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The easiest counter I see to this pretentious, irritating argument is to start whaling on the guy. When he tries to get you to stop, just claim moral relativity. You know, that he can't impose his morals of 'hitting me is bad' on you, because all morals are relative.
 

chadachada123

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*Sigh* I can't believe I'm taking the bait. Here goes.

deepseadiver said:
Hmm. Interesting talk guys. Let me point out a few things (based on my very humble, yet educated (and before you call me an 'internet expert', just know that I have had more official debates then you have ever been to in your life. I am working on a degree in math and logic, with a heavy emphasis in computer science. Until you show me more about yourselves than the kind of stuff I see on most of your profiles like: "I'm a level 30 in WOW" or "I am a dread assasin" and all that junk... give me one good reason to believe you apart from your opinions... lets see some credentials.) opinion)
This is useless filler and senseless bragging. Computer science and math do not equate to credentials in debate, and you should know this, if you're as seasoned of a debater as you claim.

@Mortai: Your taste in arguments (vs Grichnoch) were rather poor. Attacking a person directly in a debate of ideas is never a good idea. Any self-respecting 'debater' knows this. In future try to restrict your 'jabs' to the realm of theory, and avoid directing your opinions towards a specific person (as a person... talking to someone is perfectly fine, just don't attack them as a person). And Grichnoch was mostly right. While it is not a rule that that kind of (bording on insulting possibly?) speech is a sign of a weak argument, people who start down that road do tend to unravel their own points. Just a quick warning.
No problems here.

@Kaulan: "Oh look, and internet expert... how quaint." What does that make you? I haven't seen anything to show you know more than Grichnoch or that he knows less than he is saying.
Replying to this makes you look childish, but doesn't affect your argument. Neither does it support it, but whatever.


@Logiclul: What MonkeyGH and Grichnoch were saying is that, while a person's experience will differ when it comes to morals, the morals themselves will not differ. And you said that if a moral code was undefined to us, it would be useless. Well, that's where things like the Bible, the Koran (or Qu'ran), the Book of Mormon etc come in. All of those define a moral law, that is absolute as much as it is objective (to use the words you all have been throwing around). Now I know that many of you are probably athiestic or some other variety of that, and you might say that you don't have a religion, but in reality, you do. A religion is defined as a system of beliefs, and athiests believe that there is no God, and that evolution is true, and that nature is all there is. Sounds like a system of beliefs to me. That would therefore make athiests (and naturalists) religious.
Ah, here we go. Let's pick this apart piece-by-piece. For one, even if we accept that there is a "universal moral law," there are millions of religions, each with their own moral codes, making the assertion "universal morality exists" completely useless as a claim. Secondly, the Bible (and the Koran), just to name a random holy book, contradicts itself on claims of morality at several points, with a god that clearly is not unchanging in any sense of the word.

Regarding your definition of atheism, you are sorely mistaken. Atheism includes both the lack of a belief in higher powers AND the belief that there are no higher powers. Even if we used only strong atheists or hard atheists, you're warping the definition of a "system" of beliefs. The possession of several beliefs does not constitute a system of beliefs, and it especially does not constitute religious belief, which is defined anyway to be a system of beliefs related to a deity or deities.

Beyond this, religion is rooted in, as you said, belief, while science is rooted in testability, and is itself unconcerned with supernatural beings that cannot be tested. Atheists (any intelligent people, really) only believe in evolution (and gravity, atoms, etc) because that is what testable, falsifiable evidence leads the most credit too.

Beyond THIS, atheists do not "believe that nature is all there is," inherently. Skeptics (and I hate to generalize like you seem to be doing) only reject the idea of strongly believing in something which has no evidence (like gods, unicorns, etc).

Even if what you're suggesting is correct, this is only semantics, and changes nothing about the topic at hand. You're manipulating the English language to define things the way that YOU would like to define things, and while this is fitting with a politician, this is not the tactics used by a person with dignity, honor, etc. "Universal morals," indeed.

Now none of what I have said has solved any of the problems about 'subjective' 'objective' morality here. That is because I don't believe that we can in this place and time. The great thinkers of the world have been struggling with this concept for centuries, I don't see why everyone in this forum thinks they need to solve it once and for all.
Irrelevant.

That said, let me make my case, then you all can slam on my opinions all you like. But be warned, I do agree with Grichnoch on this. In his 'farewell post' he said that you all seem to be suspending logic in order to make your points. I half agree/disagree. You have all been pretty quick to make comments that make absolutely no sense from either a logical, mathematical, or rational standpoint. (like Logiclul's set T etc... what was that all about?) But at the same time you have all made some good points, and I respect you for that.
Luckily, I haven't been involved until just now, so I have nothing to say on the arguments of others.

Most of what I have to say are quotes, because I can't adaquately express what I want to say in my own words.
Joshua Greene (respected neural surgeon and brain expert, and supporter of relative morality) once said: ?If everyone believed [relative morality], the whole world would fall apart. If right and wrong are nothing more than the instinctive firing of neurons, why bother being good?? I agree. What is the point of anything good?
Wrong. Altruism and cooperation are hard-wired into our DNA. Right/Wrong IS the instinctive firing of neurons, and because working together benefits all members, that is what many animals opt to do. We humans are hardly different.


"Greene is right. Good and evil cannot possibly exist within a world that defines everything by chance. In his evolutionary belief system, only (fallible) human preference can determine ideals of right and wrong, and such preferences may shift from society to society." -- Janine M. Ramsey.
Yes, that is exactly what some of us have been trying to say. Preferences certainly can shift from society to society, but a different definition of what constitutes "rape" doesn't necessarily mean one society will be more unhappy than another.

"Evil and good do objectively exist because they emanate from the fact that there is an unchanging, omniscient (all-knowing), and holy God. These are not subjective opinions invented and written down by man. Rather, ?good? expresses the innate characteristics of God Himself that He has built into every human being, and every human being is responsible to live up to those standards. And the absence of good defines evil.
Non sequitur...You have no evidence that this "unchanging" being exists, and even if one did exist, this does not in any way imply that objective morality exists. An omniscient being could just as easily be completely amoral, or could itself believe in relative morality. There is also the problem of how an "unchanging" being could create something in the first place, and why an "all-knowing" being would create something, knowing its outcome from the outset.

We've still no measure with which to pin-point what constitutes "good," let alone evidence of an omniscient creator.

But, evolutionary ?science? will likely never recognize this simple truth.
Because it's not truth.

While continuing in its quest to overturn the existence of God in the mind of society,
This is not the goal of science. Science is concerned with testing nature to discover patterns and to discover how this universe works. It says absolutely nothing about the existence of deities, which are by definition outside of nature and untestable. Not only that, they are unfalsifiable, and are as useless in a conversation as the suggestion that we are living in the Matrix.

it is inadvertently revealing the truth regarding the ghastly implications of evolutionary philosophy. With the Discover magazine article, we are witnessing the ?leading edge? of evolutionary research drawing towards the inevitable and logical conclusion that in a world without a God there is no objective basis for moral truth. There is only human preference. A frightening, anarchical proposition.
Just because the facts are uncomfortable doesn't mean you can just wish them away. Even with relative morality, this does not lead to "anarchy," because, as I've said, altruism is hard-wired into out brains. Not only that, simple logic tells us that acting only selfishly harms both outsiders and oneself. Simply-speaking, even with relative morality, people will generally act nicely to others because life is, in essence, a prisoner's game, where working together harms everyone the least.

The question is, will society continue to blindly follow this flawed theory of origins and life?"--J. M. Ramsey again
Useless filler. Without naming any flaws with evolution and evolutionary theory, it's looking like this author is just a religious nut trying to undermine actual scientific understanding of the world.

My whole argument is based on the existence of an absolute, sovereign, creative God, who creates the rules, and expects us to live by them. While you may not agree with that, I do have a flawless system of objective morals provided by God, and nothing you can say will ever undermine that argument. Just saying: "Well, I choose not to believe in God" and "Well, you can't say that cause I don't believe in God" just doesn't cut it. WHY doesn't God exist? Give me something solid please. I have yet to see anyone else (including grichnoch and monkeygh) give anything close to the definitive system of morals and beliefs that I have.
If your system is so flawless, how can it be that we're still debating what is "moral" and what isn't after thousands of years?

This second-to-last sentence, though, is how I know that you're not simply a victim of Poe's law, but a troll looking to incite others with idiocy and childish debate tactics.

If you were even beyond grade school, you would know that the burden of proof is not on the non-believers. YOU are the one making the assertion that an untouchable being with no physical (or logical) evidence exists, and YOU are the one that must provide proof without looking like a fool. The same is to be said of unicorns, etc. It is all well and possible that unicorns, ghosts, and gods exist, but without evidence, it is asinine (to say the least) to try and say that it is OUR job to convince you that something which already has no evidence does not, in fact, exist. You're free to believe in fairies or whatever else you'd like, but when you are telling other people that these things exist, it is entirely your job to provide proof, and if none is provided, the logical choice of these other people is to deny your claims as unsupported.

You are not a seasoned debater. You know nothing of logical fallacies. If you do know of them, you are choosing to ignore them to make your claim seem more feasible, or at least to place doubt in the realm of science.

By me even answering you, it gives the impression that your "ideas" are on equal footing as mine. It is akin to a geologist speaking to a flat-earther at a live debate, as if the flat-earther is anything but a closed-minded person with no understanding of simple logic, let alone the arguments for morality or the existence of gods.

10/10 because you got such a long goddamn reply from me.
 

Torrasque

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In a Philosophy class I took 2 terms ago, I learned that Moral Relativity is pretty stupid.
If you follow Moral Relativity, then you can do whatever you want because you want to. Other people can also do whatever they want because they want to, and since you are a Moral Relativist, you can't tell them "don't do this" or "stop doing that". So when someone punches you in the gut, you just have to grin and salute them for doing what they want. When someone burns your house down, you can say "that sucks that my house burned down", but you most certainly cannot say "WHY THE FUCK DID YOU BURN MY HOUSE DOWN!?!?!?!".

So when your friend says he believes in Moral Relativity, punch him as hard as you can in the face and tell him that you punched him because you wanted to, and since he can't put his morals on you, he can't do shit about it. That'll change his stupid mind pretty quickly.

Edit: I tried reading some earlier posts, but most of the ones that are not saying what I am basically saying, are barely checked flame wars =|
 

deepseadiver

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Jan 18, 2012
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Logiclul said:
deepseadiver said:
[cut out to avoid walling]
First off, not sure why you went ahead and talked about atheism and religion like that, as while it is correct to say that most of the users here atheistic (there was a poll a while back; and I did not select atheism from the list), it has no bearing on the argument (except to, perhaps, classify the population, much like you did with saying none of has have credentials (and while I don't have anything which would pertain to this argument, I hardly boast a level 30 whatever; I care more about philosophy (which I admit novicy at) than games, so please refrain from broad statements like that)). I say yes, the Bible may have objective moral truths, however I contest that it is not a complete set of moral beliefs. They are certainly great morals to build on, but I think that people may have special exceptions to some of the rules, and will then make moral decisions based off of their new-edited morals (even devout christians do this).

The T-Set thing was just my way of showing that it would make sense for humans to inherently have morals which aren't part of some high-order-law which is consistent through all of time. I showed that there could be a realistic and natural progression of morals which suggests moral relativity.

I've read that Green quote before (or at least something similar) and to the posed question I say this:

The point of doing good is the satisfaction one receives when they know that they have done good.

As for your god-given morals, they do not prove objective morality even if they do exist. To convince you I will assume that they do. If not everyone adheres to them, then there is no moral obligation to those who don't. The laws of good as one might put them don't apply to them, rather an independent set which is empirically determined does.

Does that make sense?

I do enjoy, however, the company of an educated person who seems to have joined on the whimsy of intervening in our conversation. (I am being sincere)
Mortai Gravesend said:
deepseadiver said:
@Mortai: Your taste in arguments (vs Grichnoch) were rather poor. Attacking a person directly in a debate of ideas is never a good idea. Any self-respecting 'debater' knows this. In future try to restrict your 'jabs' to the realm of theory, and avoid directing your opinions towards a specific person (as a person... talking to someone is perfectly fine, just don't attack them as a person). And Grichnoch was mostly right. While it is not a rule that that kind of (bording on insulting possibly?) speech is a sign of a weak argument, people who start down that road do tend to unravel their own points. Just a quick warning.
How interesting. You say they're poor, but all you do is complain about the tone. What a substantive criticism of the points I made. And in support of a wonderful red herring no less. Do you have real criticism of my points, or are you going to slavishly support him?

Btw here's a better rule: The person that complains about tone without addressing the points probably has no valid reply.

Spouting weak 'rules' is worthless, it addresses nothing.
He accused you of ad hominem, which is very valid criticism. He is saying that your points do not address the actual theoretical issues, rather it stands to attack first the speaker and then their argument by association. I haven't read your posts yet specifically and can't right now, but what he said is not stupid by any stretch I think.
Ah, you make a few good points.

First, I meant no rude stereotypism with my previous comment. I just like to lay all my cards down first, so people know where I am coming from. I have responded to "Oh, I'm an athiest, I don't do religion" a thousand too many times. So I thought I would take care of it off the bat. I did not intend to offend any of you fine chaps whatsoever.

Secondly, one cannot believe part of the Bible, and not believe another part. The book was not written like that. I thank you for your acknowledgemnt of it, but I ask: what is the point of taking any morals whatsoever if you are just going to pick and choose?

Next up: Doesn't your answer stem from a belief of a conscience? The satisfaction of doing good could come from no other than a developed conscience. The Bible is the only source I have yet found that gives a reasonable explanation of said in-grown consience: that being, we are made in God's image.

You said that God-given morals don't prove objectivity. Then you talked about some adhering and some not. The issue I take with with this stems from who the morals apply to. Where I live, it is illegal to operate a motorcar while intoxicated, I assume the same applies where you live. Now, just because I go and decide not to live by that rule, does not mean that it 1) does not exist or 2) does not apply to me. It does exist, and it does apply to me, and I, in my ignorance, will get punished for it in the end. That is the whole premise of the Bible.

Mortai said that he wanted me to prove the existance of a God. Well, I ask for someone to prove His inexistance. If He does not exist, it should be relatively easy to prove so, and I will accept any argument in that direction, and will retaliate in like force.

Back to you sir Logiclul, people keep accusing me of attacking Mortai in my earlier post. But I was not. I was simply reccomending to him that he keep his posts limited to attacks on ideas, not people. And to say that I failed to address his points is not quite right. You see, I was never trying to, so I never failed. If I was trying to address his points, I would have done so.

Thank you for your sincerety. It is a refreshing breeze in today's culture. Thank you for responding in a pleasent manner.

Until next time, Cheers!
 

Logiclul

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deepseadiver said:
Ah, you make a few good points.

First, I meant no rude stereotypism with my previous comment. I just like to lay all my cards down first, so people know where I am coming from. I have responded to "Oh, I'm an athiest, I don't do religion" a thousand too many times. So I thought I would take care of it off the bat. I did not intend to offend any of you fine chaps whatsoever.

Secondly, one cannot believe part of the Bible, and not believe another part. The book was not written like that. I thank you for your acknowledgemnt of it, but I ask: what is the point of taking any morals whatsoever if you are just going to pick and choose?

Next up: Doesn't your answer stem from a belief of a conscience? The satisfaction of doing good could come from no other than a developed conscience. The Bible is the only source I have yet found that gives a reasonable explanation of said in-grown consience: that being, we are made in God's image.

You said that God-given morals don't prove objectivity. Then you talked about some adhering and some not. The issue I take with with this stems from who the morals apply to. Where I live, it is illegal to operate a motorcar while intoxicated, I assume the same applies where you live. Now, just because I go and decide not to live by that rule, does not mean that it 1) does not exist or 2) does not apply to me. It does exist, and it does apply to me, and I, in my ignorance, will get punished for it in the end. That is the whole premise of the Bible.

Mortai said that he wanted me to prove the existance of a God. Well, I ask for someone to prove His inexistance. If He does not exist, it should be relatively easy to prove so, and I will accept any argument in that direction, and will retaliate in like force.

Back to you sir Logiclul, people keep accusing me of attacking Mortai in my earlier post. But I was not. I was simply reccomending to him that he keep his posts limited to attacks on ideas, not people. And to say that I failed to address his points is not quite right. You see, I was never trying to, so I never failed. If I was trying to address his points, I would have done so.

Thank you for your sincerety. It is a refreshing breeze in today's culture. Thank you for responding in a pleasent manner.

Until next time, Cheers!
Could you quickly jot down a comprehensive list of the Bibles' moral code? I would like to see it (and probably will ask for citations for ones I don't think exist) so we can take a look at this objective morality of yours.

No need to try to prove the Bibles' existence to me, I'm ready to assume it is true in order to have this debate, as I think that even if God exists we may have a subjective morality.

You cannot apply Law to an argument of Morals. If you have another argument where you don't compare breaking the law to breaking a moral code, then I'll hear it.

I know how you were responding to Mortai, and while I haven't read his posts, it didn't look to me like anything you said was inherently incorrect, and certainly were not attacking Mortais' person.

There are cases where it is impossible to prove something doesn't exist which we know does not. For instance, an invisible, undetectable, floating castle that always is 12 miles above MY head, may go through objects, and is the cause of all weather and knowledge does not exist, however it is impossible to prove it. As such a thing would naturally leave nothing which could implicate its existence.

REGARDLESS, if he isn't going to assume your canon, then just ignore it, because all I care about is seeing what morality we are dealing with if a Christian God exists.
 

deepseadiver

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Jan 18, 2012
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@chadachada

You seem to be too emotionally attached chap. Just remember, this is a discussion. I think we could go in circles for hours and hours on this, because you have your own preconceived ideas just as I have mine. I doubt we will ever see eye to eye on this.

I find that comparing me to a 'gradeschooler' is rather insulting. But then, Richard Dawkins erroneously thinks that all Christians are mentally unfit and as smart as and ass.

I never meant for my accomplishments to mean anything beyond: "Look, this is what I do." I don't claim to be the earth's best debater. And if you truly think that math and computer science have nothing to do with this realm of morals, maybe you should try it... you might find yourself surprised.

I won't respond to your other points, as it would just result in an endless circle of unresolvable debate once again.(this is not an escape) With that my good fellow, I appreciate your input.

Thanks!
 

MonkeyGH

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chadachada123 said:
If you were even beyond grade school, you would know that the burden of proof is not on the non-believers. YOU are the one making the assertion that an untouchable being with no physical (or logical) evidence exists, and YOU are the one that must provide proof without looking like a fool. The same is to be said of unicorns, etc. It is all well and possible that unicorns, ghosts, and gods exist, but without evidence, it is asinine (to say the least) to try and say that it is OUR job to convince you that something which already has no evidence does not, in fact, exist. You're free to believe in fairies or whatever else you'd like, but when you are telling other people that these things exist, it is entirely your job to provide proof, and if none is provided, the logical choice of these other people is to deny your claims as unsupported.

You are not a seasoned debater. You know nothing of logical fallacies. If you do know of them, you are choosing to ignore them to make your claim seem more feasible, or at least to place doubt in the realm of science.

By me even answering you, it gives the impression that your "ideas" are on equal footing as mine. It is akin to a geologist speaking to a flat-earther at a live debate, as if the flat-earther is anything but a closed-minded person with no understanding of simple logic, let alone the arguments for morality or the existence of gods.
*Whistles* That's quite the statement. I'm a Bible-believing Christian as well, which is why I opposed the idea of subjective morality in the first place. By the way, I appreciate the implication that I'm not yet in grade school. ;)

I've always seen the evidence of God's existence as self-evident. Look out a window and you'll see trees, grass growing, various facets of nature. His creation declares his existence, because something created implies a creator. I do not believe that the big bang theory is an adequate explanation for what we behold today in nature simply because you cannot have absolute nothingness produce something. Physical impossibility in it's most basic form.

The only logical conclusion a person can make is that you need something that never had a beginning.