Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Aug 29, 2018 6:12 am
Principle of Charity.
I meant laws that are grounded on sound and justified arguments.
You should say so. The Principle of Charity requires us to take people at their word. It's certainly not "charitable" to put words they didn't say in their mouths, is it?
But in any case, even were I to insert those words, it would not save the case. There are no such things as "grounded" laws, according to your view, because there's nothing to "ground" them. Unless you now have something?
Why 'slavery' is wrong is grounded on a sub-moral ground of the need to respect the basic human dignity of every human being not to be exploited as a means [object] for the interest of another person.
But to believe this, we have to have a prior principle that says, like Kant said, human beings must be "ends" not merely "means." But how does Kant know that? How does he know that, say Darwin, Nietzsche, Huxley or Rand don't have the situation more right, and there are two classes of people, the weak and the strong -- the weak being rightfully viewed as the dross of society, and the strong being the gold? How does Kant know that all human beings are equally, not differently valuable?
He gives us nothing to show that he's got that right. (I think he
does have it right, but he has that only by accident or presumption.) He does not ground it in anything. So what rational basis do we have for believing it's true?
Every human being [including oneself] has a fundamental generic human state of dignity.
Why? Why are Darwin, Nietzsche, Huxley and Rand all wrong? How do we ground this claim that all human beings are owed "dignity," whatever that is?
Thus one is insulting one own basic human dignity when one practices slavery.
You can't "insult" a thing that hasn't been established by being grounded. And in point of fact, if Darwin et al. are correct, then I
maximize my dignity -- to borrow Nietzsche's words, I act like one of the "übermensch" -- when I
disregard the moral whining of the weak and act on my "will to power," which is the real source of my "dignity," and that of the human race in general, according to him.
Why are these guys wrong?
Note these people did not declare their views are 100% in accordance to the NT nor OT.
It was not I who grouped all Theists together, regardless of their particular beliefs. It was the UN, and previously, in this conversation, it was actually you.
It is likely they were driven by their inherent human nature and evolving moral compass and not solidly by their religious doctrines.
If that were true, then we should expect that 1) every form of Theism should be equally represented in the statistics, and 2) Atheists and agnostics should contribute an equal amount to charity as all the rest. But as you can see, we find no such thing.