Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Mar 24, 2020 5:17 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Mar 23, 2020 1:38 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon Mar 23, 2020 5:35 am
I have already provided the links to my justifications.
They don't work. You've been repeatedly shown that, you just don't believe it.
I am not going to repeat that again.
There would be no value in you doing so. You would need some new, much better argument than that.
You have not provided any effective counter argument to my claims at all.
Then you haven't been reading. Never mind...I'll do it again, below.
What you have in mind is...
It doesn't actually matter whatever I have in mind. What matters for the ought-is question is whether secularism can do any better than anything else.
And it cannot. It cannot even logically sponsor any merely
arbitrary morality, let alone an
objective or, as you say,
"ideal" one. Secularism is utterly
amoral in its consequences.
I don't have to accept Darwin's theory of evolution lock-stock-and-barrel.
Your alternative it to reject Evolutionism entirely. Darwin quite explicitly depended his whole system on survival-of-the-fittest being true. He had no other mechanism of evolution at all, in fact.
Rhetoric again.
No, it isn't. Rather, it's a substantive difference. Standards are abstractions. Abstractions do not have causal powers.
You've made what's called a "category error," by placing "standards" in the category we would call, "causally-powerful entities." They're not one of those.
Strawman again.
I can see you don't know what a "straw man fallacy is." Not surprising, since you evidently found
ad hominems too difficult to understand as well. I wonder what other fallacies you'll continually make without knowing...it will be interesting to see.
I have already justified the moral ought from empirical evidence, i.e. as "programmed," no human would want to be killed except the mental case.
But you've not realized that it's utterly irrelevant what a person would "want," in that case. We could equally argue, that since no person wants to age, to lose hair, or die at all, no person should age, lose hair, or die -- and that's obviously silly. Whether or not death is going to come is unrelated to "wanting" it to happen.
Strawman again.
Same mistake.
Try a new name next time...accuse me of being
ad hoc ergo propter hoc, or of the pity fallacy next time, just to spice things up. It will be no more justified, but a little more interesting.
I have already argued,
- 1. no human would want to be killed except the mental case.
2. This proposition can be tested first personally, common sense and questioning all humans which is not done yet but can be justified with philosophical reasoning, i.e. psychiatry confirmation, suicide is a mental problem.
3. Applying the Golden Rule,
4. No human ought to kill another human - the secular absolute moral ought
Yeah, it's still an incredibly bad argument, since you can't justify any of its premises at all. I don't think you have any experience with logic...if you had, you would know what you've presented isn't logical, isn't defensible and isn't a syllogism.
Take Philosophy 101 somewhere. In your first lesson, you'll learn why the above is wrong.
You have not disputed why my proposal above will not work.
Yeah, I have. But it seems it's more than anyone can do, to make you able to understand the problem. You just recycle it, which shows you have completely failed to grasp the critique. If you had any grasp of it, you'd at least try to patch up the faults, rather than simply repeating them as if that should impress us.
show which premise is false?
"False" is the wrong word. For example, the Golden Rule is not "false." In fact,
can be insisted upon,
if you had a Theistic supposition. IF there is a God, and IF He issues such a command, then such a command is certainly morally binding. But you have argued God is an illusion, so you can't rationally go that route yourself. You would need to show a secular reason why we are duty-bound to follow the GR.
But you cannot. You cannot, in fact, even see how to try to do that.
So you can't insist on the Golden Rule; you can't show it's right.
In short, the right word is not "false" but "rationally indefensible" is the right condemnation for your argument. On secular assumptions, no premise and no conclusion in it is warranted by secularism.
Now, I understand that you so far have shown you're utterly unable to comprehend that. If you thought more carefully, I think maybe you would. Either way, whether you do or not, it remains true: nothing there can be rationally insisted upon from the premise, "Secularism is true, therefore...etc."