Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 21, 2022 1:08 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Thu Apr 21, 2022 7:58 am
Hume's 'no ought from is' [
NOFI] was targeted at Christianity's Moral System.
Sorry: that's incorrect.
If you read the quotation, you'll see that. He never makes any condition of religion, either way. Hume was an Atheist. He just thought the claim was obvious in all cases, because for him, no religion was even real.
Read the passage only??? that would be insulting one's own intellectual competence.
To reflect high intellectual competency and integrity one must consider Hume's principle in the context of his whole work and the state of knowledge specific to his time.
Hume was an atheist and the dominant religion within his environment then was Christianity.
Hume critiqued 'miracles' and the self [soul] very strongly and these are critical elements of Christianity.
As such when Hume condemned NOFI, his main target [besides others in general] was the divine moral oughts [from a God out of nowhere] of Christianity which would have been sounded and surrounded him in every corner of life then.
At present we have sufficient knowledge to prove Hume was too hasty and wrong
I'm sorry to contradict, but that's also false, actually.
What is your justifications?
Hume was a empiricist thus heavily empirical inclined.
Hume's inclinations in terms of morality was towards sentiments [emotions] rather than reason.
Currently we have loads of empirical evidence to support the moral basis is from evolution and within the brain [neurosciences].
[/quote]But if you think it's so, then give us the proof. You will be considered the greatest moral philosopher of the 20th and 21st centuries, if you can pull that off.
Go ahead.
[/quote]
I have not provided the full proof but have laid down the model and principles [& clues] of a moral model that is based on empirical evidences and philosophical reasonings.