- Registrado
- 4 de Ene, 2021
we did this thread already
morality is mostly subjective even with a god
morality is mostly subjective even with a god
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Just to clarify: I'm not saying you can't have morals without authority. (If I did then I misspoke apologies) Only that those morals will never be 'objective'. Honestly why does morality need to be 'objective' anyway? Its like searching for 'the real' meaning of life.Not a single reply acknowledging the existence of secular ethics as the answer to this question. The closest we got to it was @The best and greatest's post about morality being predicated upon argument from authority (a 101-level induction fallacy). Say what you will about deontological ethics or might-makes-right ethics - They're at least more internally consistent than the whims attributed to the god of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (itself modeled after the contemporary authority of a sultan or pasha to be appeased or provoked).
Is it a matter of Kiwi Farms posters being generally uneducated, or those who took a Philosophy 1 class knowing better than to take the bait; because you can't teach a man anything he thinks he already knows?
Just to clarify: I'm not saying you can't have morals without authority[...]Only that those morals will never be 'objective'.
When people ask for an 'objective morality' what are they really asking for?
God created secular moralityI understood; was agreeing with you, and additionally qualified your point as being a principle anyone else presumably interested in the topic could expect to encounter in a Logic 101 course dealing with distinguishing between deductive and inductive arguments, and engaging with them in accordance with Aristotelian or Boolean logic - which is otherwise conspicuously absent in these discussions.
Someone else to do their thinking for them, so they can have a pseudo-profound "answer" to pull out of their ass to invoke as a weapon at the first sign of being forced to consider something different. One can consider themselves objective or moral - But to consider themselves to be both means they can't be doing either very well.
God created secular morality
So then why is suffering so logically inconsistent if there is supposedly a rational God behind it? Why make some people have a life of nothing but suffering when they are moral, but others who are wicked to their fellow men can endure little hardship? Having a supposedly loving entity promote suffering amongst humanity is ontologically horrifying, instead of it than just having it being a consequence of one’s own choices, or it existing because…it just does.It can not be objective with god.
YesCould He lift it?