sthitapragya wrote:Subjective decisions require logic. To figure out a positive or negative response and choosing to act in a manner what evokes a positive response from society is logical. I don't see what is so difficult to understand about that.
It appears you're using the word "logical" in an informal way, meaning, "to have a line of thought pertaining to X." But lines of thought can be illogical. Logic is more formal than that: it means that the argument "adds up" to what its premises promise, so that any rational person is obliged to believe the thing which is logical.
Hence, it cannot be subjective. Subjective is always merely relative to a person. Logic is universal, because it is compulsory for all rational persons.
And yes, no one needs to agree with any particular moral precept you may choose. A classic case is the way the seventh day adventists( if I have that right) disagree with you with regards to the interpretation of Exodus 31:15 and working on the Sabbath. You subjectively decided that it does not apply to you and choose to ignore it. They disagree with your decision.
Indeed they do. And I have a logical line of argument that demonstrates they're wrong. The Adventists presuppose no difference in regard to Law, Biblically speaking, between Old and New Testaments. I think they're off base there, and can give them my reasons, just as I gave them to you. Mind you, I wouldn't say that therefore none of them are Christians: I'd just say that Christians, like every other kind of person, have some differences of opinion they need to discuss.
Rather like you and I are doing right now, with regard to Atheism.
And that is where you have a blind fold on. Subjective decisions require logic. Just as the subjective decision to follow or not to follow objective morals requires logic.
No. See above. "Logic" is not an exact synonym for "line of thought." The same misunderstanding appears below, in your next claim:
I am not hoping for anything. i am simply saying logic dictates that people base their decisions on how society is going to react. People can subjectively choose to ignore the logic, or conclude that it is more logical to do the opposite.
"Logic" does not dictate "that people should base their decisions on how society is going to react." That's an ideological position, not a logical one. The ideology behind it is Sociological Relativism, the idea that something profound happens when a "society" rather than an individual agrees on a point or elects a course of action. It's also a clear exemplar of what's called "Bandwagon Fallacy," the mistake that having more people believe something makes it more likely to be true.
Sometimes it is, and sometimes more people are just more wrong.
And the second interpretation is just offensive and an attempt to goad me into saying things to you. You should try to overcome this petty mean minded streak in you. It simply lowers your respect in the eyes of others. You are a fairly intelligent man and can absolutely understand what I mean.
Well, thank you for the flattery --- and I'll leave the insults.

Come on, now...that's pretty transparently just a tactic. Let's not insult one another's intelligence. You are not being "goaded" into anything, nobody's being "petty" or "mean" here, and we're not looking for "respect in the eyes of others"...at least, I'm not, and I hope you're not. It's about truth, or it's about nothing.
Be a maaaaaaaan!
Let's not bother with all that. I need no flattery, nor do I bridle at insults. These things just obscure the issues we're trying to discuss, and t's all merely
ad hominem anyway. That is, it's a second fallacy here. From what I know about you, I like you well enough too -- but I'm not going to jump to conclusions. If we ever meet, I'll make my decision then. Until then, you and I are merely disembodied voices to each other, so all judgments or person or character are merely provisional anyway.
There is no either or. I am simply saying that people, all people, and that includes you, do make decisions based on how society will react. It is unavoidable. If you think you do not, you are simply deluding yourself. So don't try and put words into my mouth which you really want to say. I know you are one of those who have concluded that atheists are the scum of the earth. But I think it is a little unsophisticated to let it show.
Please quote me where I said, "Atheists are the scum of the earth" -- other than here, parroting your words, of course.

I have said no such thing, so that's an untrue claim.
You can look back and see what I said: I said that many Atheists are nice people: but their Atheism gives them no warrant to be nice at all. Moreover, and more importantly, it fails to make bad people good. There is no reason why an Atheist MUST NOT become Hitler, just as there is no reason an Atheist may not decide to become a...well, a nice Atheist, anyway.
Hardly "the scum of the earth." Just the most confused people on earth, morally speaking. For by their own confession, they know nothing about morality at all, either way.
Immanuel Can wrote:If it's the former, you make Atheists into moralists. But that's no good for you -- not logical -- because you claim there is no morality.
Now here is where you need to put your intelligence back to use. I have maintained there is no right and wrong. I have never said that there is no morality. I might have implied it because I still have a problem differentiating between ethics and morality.So to clarify,If morals are what come from "inside" or what God decides, then there are no morals. There are only ethics. And everyone needs ethics to live.
Ground that. Prove to me that "ethics" means something, when you use the term here. Because if it has no basis in moral truth, then "ethics" is simply a delusion some people wish to adopt, and others simply do not.
That's a key thing about ethics: we never need an "ethic" about anything we already want to do. For example, nobody needs to come to me and tell me to take a shower in the morning. I like it. Moral rules are unnecessary there, as I will do it anyway. But let's suppose I want to embezzle from my employer: I need the money, I want the money, and I can get my hands on the money with nobody knowing. I'm not worried about being caught, because I imagine I'm clever and devious enough to dodge that. I'm not fearful of punishment, because the money will be worth more to me than the risk...Now, suddenly, I need ethics: why must I not steal the money from my employer?
So if, as you say, you really have an Atheist "ethic," show why it should stop me from doing anything I personally decide I want to do. Go ahead.
Immanuel Can wrote:That's the real outcome of logic when we apply it to subjectivism: and you can now see there's nothing logical about subjectivism at all.
In that case, there is no logic to anything you do at all. Every decision you make is subjective. Including the one to follow objective morals. Within the objective morals, you subjectively pick and choose morals to follow even while others who follow the same set of objective morals might make different subjective choices.
No, because I'm not a subjectivist. If I were, you'd be right, of course.
Objectivists, by definition, recognize that morality makes rightful demands upon them from the external. Subjectivists only respond to promptings from within themselves, subjective tastes. Objectivists can respond to the demands of an existing, universal and external code (assuming such exists, which we do); subjectivists cannot, or they cease to be subjectivists.
The external demands of objective morality are still there for subjectivists (assuming again that such exist), but subjectivists are ignoring them. It's still
wrong for a subjectivist to murder babies, for example, and ignoring that doesn't change their moral status (if objective morality exists). But from an objectivist perspective, subjectivists choose to pretend that's not so, even though they may sense it is. Or they may not. It would make no difference from an objectivist view.
Immanuel Can wrote:Societies have approved much evil: how do you know which are the good societies? Or do you affirm Nazi Germany and Pol Pot's Cambodia as just as "moral" as every other society?
Nazi Germany was probably good for the Germans at that time. It was bad for the rest of the world. Both decisions were subjective. Today the same Germany feels that what their ancestors did was bad. Pol Pot's Cambodia was good for Pol Pot and his gang of men. It was bad for the rest of Cambodia. From my personal perspective, I can see the harm both Nazi Germany and Pol Pot's regime caused to society and feel that what they did was negative and therefore bad and I personally would not do it to anybody. Now please do not start on the right wrong thing simply because I said good and bad. I have already explained to you. Rotten apple is bad. Rotten apple is not wrong.
Ah, you sense where your argument is weak, I see.

But you can't cover it like that. By the way you choose to frame your answer, you show that you know you are rationally in no position to condemn Pol Pot or Hitler; and that's why you hold back on doing so. You want to say, "Well, it was good for Germans," as if that answers the question of whether or not in murdering 6 million Jews and a whole lot more Slavs, Poles, Russians, disabled persons, dissenters and so on, Hitler was actually
wrong. It does not.
You've proved my point. Atheism has no way of condemning -- nor even justifying the prevention of -- any evil at all. It cannot even really identify an evil, even when almost anyone will recognize it AS evil. It just can't justify a single moral precept: not even the most simple.
Immanuel Can wrote:Even if societies agreed on morality (which we can empirically see they do not), where do you get the precept that we should do what our particular societies approve? As I said before, every criminal knows that there are consequences for bad behaviour: but what if he doesn't care, or doesn't mind risking it? Are you then going to tell him he's "bad"? On what basis?
Why do you insist on misinterpreting my words? I have maintained that it makes sense to make decisions based on societies response. I have never said one SHOULD do it. It is subjective because everyone's interpretation of the response can be different. People have a difficult time coming to an agreement on written words. How on earth can you expect people agree on interpretations of responses?
Wait, though. You've revealed the problem to which I was pointing you.

"People have a difficult time coming to agreement" is just the obvious bit; something much more profound is this: "How do you know anyone even SHOULD?" And you admit here that you don't know such a thing!
Another basic thing about morality: it's about "should." It's about what people
ought to do, especially when they don't want to do it. Any view that can tell us nothing about "should" or "ought" or "must" is not a view of morality at all; it's just a contingent sociological observation, with no moral or ethical content at all.
And that's what you're really giving me: you think you're talking about "Atheist ethics," but you're actually only talking about things like personal preference and habit. However much you may "like" your view, or however many people may or may not "agree" with it, there is no specifically, definitionally "ethical" content in your view. You're not talking about
ethics at all. (See if you can grasp what I mean without feeling as though I intend an insult there; I do not.)
I didn't prove that, by the way: arch-Atheist David Hume did. But I agree with his observation.
If a criminal behaves badly, why should I tell him anything? If his criminal activity is directed towards me or comes to my notice, I will inform the authorities or try to stop him from doing it provided I am capable of stopping him. Then he might or might not face the consequences of his actions.
Also, only an idiot would go up to a criminal and tell him his behaviour is bad. That is a surefire way of inviting trouble.
Not the point. The point is that according to Atheism itself, you can't even tell if he IS a criminal. He might not be. Maybe he's a "freedom fighter." Maybe he's a "Robin Hood." Nothing in Atheism gives you any guidance on which he is...so if you remain consistent with Atheism, you cannot find a reason to arrest him. So how would you even know you ought to, and have any right to "stop him"? How would you know if he deserves any "consequences," whether a jail sentence or a gold medal?
You'd be making it up, either way. You'd have no way to know you were justified in doing ANYTHING to him, nor any way of knowing you would be wrong to do anything to him...
Atheism has no moral information. Subjectivism does not mend that, because all it does is try to add in the prejudices and preferences of an individual or his society -- and it cannot for a minute show that it has any right to do so.
Now, a society built on Atheist subjectivism (though one such has never existed) might theoretically have
power to force its will on him: but it never has
right. It cannot show that it does. It doesn't even know what "right" is.