By "bound," do you mean "unable to do otherwise," or "morally obligated"?Londoner wrote:Isn't the problem with the ' You falsely assume only theists are bound by morality'?
If you mean the first, your statement is true but trivially so: nobody is "bound" in that sense, but that hardly constitutes any kind of problem, since morality assumes free agents: "ought implies can."
If you mean the second, then your statement is simply false. For anyone who subscribed to a morality-rationalizing ideology would be rationally obligated to follow it: whether he did follow it or not would be a different question -- but he would have at least a rational obligation to do so, whether he did or not.
He might even have a moral obligation as well, if his system should turn out to be true.
Oh, you wouldn't. Neither physically nor rationally nor morally would you have any duty to be a good person.If I think morality is a human construct, then why would I be 'bound' to it?
Absolutely right. Under Atheism, morality's just an option. Nothing requires it, either physically or morally. Nothing can compel it, nothing makes even a mass-murderer or a serial rapist in any reasonable sense "bad."Sure, I might construct a moral system and then try to live by it, but it would just be the equivalent of saying 'let's see if I can get to the end of the road without treading on any cracks'. An amusing game, but there would be no reason why I shouldn't replace it with a different game at any point.
So, you can treat morality as sociology; 'I see many people in China are playing the 'don't tread on the cracks game'.
If you do, it becomes completely trivial. So what if people in China don't like the step-on-cracks game...or theft, or murder, or lying, or graft, or infanticide, or rape, or racism? Or what if they do?
Congratulations!But if you are saying that Morality is a thing in itself, something we should be bound by, then the atheist has to give a reason for believing that.
Yes, yes it does. Absolutely. Now we're on the same page!And that reason has to be something more compelling than 'I just made it up'
