Atheism

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Age
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Re: Atheism

Post by Age »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:12 pm
Gary Childress wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 11:34 am You don't know who I am, do you?
In some ways, no: of course not. All I've seen is your picture, which you posted, and I've had conversations with you for quite some time now.
All you see is a "godless heathen" or whatever.
:D Sorry, Gary...that's a rather naive and stereotypical assumption on your part, I have to say. If that were the case, why would I always be polite to you, or sympathize with your situation at all?
LOL Being CONDESCENDING is NOT be 'polite' "immanuel can".

If you REALLY BELIEVE that 'you' are ALWAYS 'polite', then here we have ANOTHER GREAT EXAMPLE of just how much of A LIE these ones WERE LIVING.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:12 pm And why would I bother to suggest any road of hope to somebody I was simply dismissing, if you were right?

May I suggest that you might want to get to know some real Christians?
WHY?

WHAT FOR? And,

What even are 'real Christians', to 'you', EXACTLY, "immanuel can"?

The REFUSAL to ANSWER this VERY SIMPLE CLARIFYING QUESTION, ONCE AGAIN, REVEALS the ACTUAL LACK of KNOWING 'they' REALLY HAD, back then.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:12 pm Whatever you think you know about them, it's pretty clearly wrong.
BUT, LOL what 'you' KNOW about 'them' "immanuel can" IS CLEARLY RIGHT, correct?
Age
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Re: Atheism

Post by Age »

Harbal wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:29 pm
Age wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:01 pm As A BELIEVER that God does NOT exist, then 'you' will OBVIOUSLY NOT RECOGNIZE if ANY ACTUAL communication between 'you' AND 'God' was taking place.
I don't have any beliefs about God's existence or none existence.
WHAT?

What does the word 'atheist' even mean or refer to, to 'you', "harbal"?
Harbal wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:29 pm If everyone here were to stop mentioning God, the thought of God would never enter my head.
WHEN 'you' have the 'thought of God' what is 'it' that 'you' are ACTUALLY 'thinking about', EXACTLY?

Also, what you SAY and CLAIM here does NOT mean that 'you' AND 'God' have NOT been communicating, AT ALL.
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Harbal
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Re: Atheism

Post by Harbal »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:09 pm
Here's the problem: the values of somebody "conditioned by" the culture of Somalia are not the values of somebody conditioned by being raised by Wall Street bankers. The values of somebody raised in Sweden are not those of somebody raised in the favelas of Brazil or the shantytowns of the Philippines. The values of an Englishman are not those of a Chinese dictator. Sure, they all have "values:" but how does your view give information a Russian or Cuban or can use to negotiate a common law, a common penal system, or any common institution at all with the Ghanaian and the Honduran, let alone how the Nihilist or Pragmatist can speak and act in common with the Humanist or the Muslim?

In fact, some theorists, like the Feminists and Developmentalists, have proposed that even women can have their own kinds of "morality," such as Ethics of Care, which are essentially different from male-generated views. So it looks like "cultural conditioning" isn't even going to get half the population to be informed of what "moral" means, or ground a single institution or common project anywhere.
But isn't that exactly how the world is? :? Morality between different nations, different cultures, different religions, and even different individuals withing any of the above, varies greatly, which very much suggests there is no single, objective source of morality.
Harbal wrote: I don't have an approach.
IC wrote:Fair enough. But that means that your way of deciding morals has no utility to anybody but you.
True, but I neither claim that it has nor intend that it should.
Harbal wrote: Okay, if you are going to assume that about me, I will also assume it about you.
IC wrote:Sorry -- I'm not trying to insult you, and I'm not just assuming it, Harbal...I'm just trying to deduce your view from the statements you are making about it. No personal insult is intended. I'm just trying to do some moral philosophy with your view. That's all. If I misspoke and implied an insult, I retract it.
No, I wasn't insulted. I was just making the point that what you were putting to me could equally be put to you. I would have to go back and look what you were actually putting to me, but I hope I won't be called upon to do that.
Now, let me fully admit that you may be a perfectly wonderful fellow -- you certainly entertain me, sometimes -- but we can both see, I'm sure, that being a perfectly wonderful fellow can happen by nothing more than what you've identified yourself as the root of your chosen morality: "cultural conditioning." It can happen because of nothing more philosophical or profound than a memory that one's current society doesn't do such things, or that mama once told me not to steal, cheat or lie. In other words, it can happen to somebody who totally lacks any rational grounds for insisting that his moralizing should be informative to others, or that it should be capable of informing any democratic or common action at all.
Morality seems to be more to do with emotion and sentiment than rationality, to me. I suppose Kant's, " one should act only in accordance with that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law”, or you fella, Jesus's, treating others as one wants to be treated, have some rationality in them, and I think both are sound principles.

I can see a case for promoting a belief in objective morality, if controlling a population's attitudes is your goal, and your own morality does not forbid such deceit.
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Harbal
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Re: Atheism

Post by Harbal »

Age wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:45 pm
Harbal wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:29 pm
I don't have any beliefs about God's existence or none existence.
WHAT?

What does the word 'atheist' even mean or refer to, to 'you', "harbal"?
"Atheist", to me, means one who does not participate in any belief systems centered around the idea of deities and such like. I don't say there isn't a God, just as I don't say there are no goblins and elves, and I treat them all with equal disregard. People do tend to try and force you into a particular position when you say you are an atheist, but I always keep it in my mind that I don't have to go where they are trying to put me. I hope you don't turn out to be one of those people, Age.
WHEN 'you' have the 'thought of God' what is 'it' that 'you' are ACTUALLY 'thinking about', EXACTLY?
I'm not sure, but I don't think it's anything definite.
Also, what you SAY and CLAIM here does NOT mean that 'you' AND 'God' have NOT been communicating, AT ALL.
Neither does it mean that we have. And nor does anything you might say.
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Sculptor
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Re: Atheism

Post by Sculptor »

Religious people only understand religious people, so they tar "atheists" with the same brush as themselves; and pretend they are part of a religion.
They subconsciously know the inadequacy of faith and belief and so claim that atheists "believe" there is no god, and worst still that they have faith that there is no god, because having faith is a belief that there is not god does not make sense. Then they ignore the fact that having faith in a belief that there IS a god also makes no sense too.
There are a couple of things wrong with this. THe first is to ask what the hell do you mean by "god" in the first place? What is it that an atheist is suppose to have faith in that he does not believe in it. THe second problem is that all theists, actually do have a belief that there is no other gods, and have faith that these gods do not also exist.

I suppose I feel sorry for them. They claim that the "atheist religion" is useless and based on nothing; because we all know that belonging to a religion which is groundless in terms of evidence and reason is stupid.
But there is no symmetry. here. Yes having a groundless religion is like having a lead balloon, but in the case of atheism it does not lead to belief it is about not believing.
Atheism implies an absence.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Atheism

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harbal wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 5:11 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 4:09 pm
Here's the problem: the values of somebody "conditioned by" the culture of Somalia are not the values of somebody conditioned by being raised by Wall Street bankers. The values of somebody raised in Sweden are not those of somebody raised in the favelas of Brazil or the shantytowns of the Philippines. The values of an Englishman are not those of a Chinese dictator. Sure, they all have "values:" but how does your view give information a Russian or Cuban or can use to negotiate a common law, a common penal system, or any common institution at all with the Ghanaian and the Honduran, let alone how the Nihilist or Pragmatist can speak and act in common with the Humanist or the Muslim?

In fact, some theorists, like the Feminists and Developmentalists, have proposed that even women can have their own kinds of "morality," such as Ethics of Care, which are essentially different from male-generated views. So it looks like "cultural conditioning" isn't even going to get half the population to be informed of what "moral" means, or ground a single institution or common project anywhere.
But isn't that exactly how the world is? :? Morality between different nations, different cultures, different religions, and even different individuals withing any of the above, varies greatly, which very much suggests there is no single, objective source of morality.
It's certainly how the world has become, in practice. But it doesn't mean that there isn't an objective moral code back of all that...for we have no reason to believe, and every reason to disbelieve, that all moral codes are equally good.

And I think you'll probably agree: the moral code of North Korea is not as good as that of South Korea, in at least some respects, no? The moral precept, "Don't steal" is better than the pragmatic principle, "If you can get away with it, do it." The decision to allow women to vote is better than the decision to deny them that -- or, if you prefer, the decision to prevent them voting is better than the one to allow them to vote; because it doesn't matter which way around you put it, so long as you realize that some principles are above others, and not all moral codes are equal.

Because all moral codes are not equal, some are better than others. That's obvious. But in what way are some "better"? They can only be truly "better" if, in some way, they are more conformed to what objective, true morality is. So the decision to allow women equal rights as human beings is, in view of the objective fact that they deserve equality, a "better" decision than the decision to deny that they have rights. It's closer, if not identical, to the objective moral truth of how things actually are.

There are follow-up questions to that, such as "How do we know?" But for the moment, the important principle is only this: it is clearly not the case that all moral codes are equal. Some are, indeed, better than others; and it cannot be otherwise, since they mutually contradict on key issues. It's not snobbery to say so: it's just realism.

Only after we know that can we go on to the follow-up questions. Because the first thing we've got to get rid of is the empirically and logically untenable idea that all codes are equal, and there's nothing to choose between them.
Harbal wrote: I don't have an approach.
IC wrote:Fair enough. But that means that your way of deciding morals has no utility to anybody but you.
True, but I neither claim that it has nor intend that it should.
Right. But then, your approach to morality is not recommendable to anybody. And it can't ground a society, or inform a judicial system, or structure a polity, or even advise a common life. And normally, those are goods for which we all look to a code of ethics or morality. If it can't do those things, then it really can't do anything valuable at all...at least, for anybody outside of yourself.
Morality seems to be more to do with emotion and sentiment than rationality, to me. I suppose Kant's, " one should act only in accordance with that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law”, or you fella, Jesus's, treating others as one wants to be treated, have some rationality in them, and I think both are sound principles.
Okay, but now you're no longer appealing to "culture" or "developing" morality, but rather to one or another objective moral precept. You've left your original position, and moved to that of Kant or Jesus, instead.
I can see a case for promoting a belief in objective morality, if controlling a population's attitudes is your goal, and your own morality does not forbid such deceit.
That's a danger, of course, and one I would not only freely recognize, but would share your caution against. A humanly-invented code of morality is just bound to become that: a ruse for controlling other people, and illegitimately so. All the more reason, then, that we need not to trust such things, but rather to revert to the objective moral truths that underly the whole universe, not to some pretender to the same.

But there's no refuge in relativism. Denying the existence of such a moral code will not save us from tyranny or exploitation; it will only remove from us any semblance of defense against the same. For example, our rights cannot actually be violated by an aggressor, if the objective fact is that we have no rights in the first place. But that doesn't mean nobody will ever become aggressive, and nobody will ever foist upon us the harms we associate with "violation of our rights"; we're still going to be aggressed against, in such a case, but we won't even be able to say, coherently, "You've violated my rights." :shock:

In other words, if there's no objective moral code, we've lost even our ability to protest evil.
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Harbal
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Re: Atheism

Post by Harbal »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 6:46 pm

There are follow-up questions to that, such as "How do we know?" But for the moment, the important principle is only this: it is clearly not the case that all moral codes are equal. Some are, indeed, better than others; and it cannot be otherwise, since they mutually contradict on key issues. It's not snobbery to say so: it's just realism.

Only after we know that can we go on to the follow-up questions. Because the first thing we've got to get rid of is the empirically and logically untenable idea that all codes are equal, and there's nothing to choose between them.
Yes, some moral codes are better than others, but only in my opinion. Were I in a moral dilemma, I might seek someone else's opinion, but if I had to have objective fact, I would have no idea where to look for it.
Right. But then, your approach to morality is not recommendable to anybody. And it can't ground a society, or inform a judicial system, or structure a polity, or even advise a common life. And normally, those are goods for which we all look to a code of ethics or morality. If it can't do those things, then it really can't do anything valuable at all...at least, for anybody outside of yourself.
No, I don't aspire to inform the judicial system with my subjective morality, but, every once in a while, someone who I don't steal from, or lie to, or indeed eat, might be considered a beneficiary of it.
Okay, but now you're no longer appealing to "culture" or "developing" morality, but rather to one or another objective moral precept. You've left your original position, and moved to that of Kant or Jesus, instead.
No, I haven't moved to Kant or Jesus, we just happen to coincide, and what we coincide on has a system to it, which contains a sort of rationality, which was the issue in question. At its core, I suppose it comes down to empathy. Human beings are able to imagine themselves in the place of others, and the best of us, which I would like to think is the most of us, prefer to avoid doing anything to them that we would not want doing to ourselves. That preference is inside us, albeit that we could argue about how it got there.
Harbal wrote: I can see a case for promoting a belief in objective morality, if controlling a population's attitudes is your goal, and your own morality does not forbid such deceit.
IC wrote:That's a danger, of course, and one I would not only freely recognize, but would share your caution against. A humanly-invented code of morality is just bound to become that: a ruse for controlling other people, and illegitimately so. All the more reason, then, that we need not to trust such things, but rather to revert to the objective moral truths that underly the whole universe, not to some pretender to the same.
Okay, I kind of know your answer to the question I am about to ask, but I don't know if you will actually give me a straight answer, or what form it will take if you do. Where are we look for trustworthy, objective moral truth?
But there's no refuge in relativism. Denying the existence of such a moral code will not save us from tyranny or exploitation; it will only remove from us any semblance of defense against the same. For example, our rights cannot actually be violated by an aggressor, if the objective fact is that we have no rights in the first place. But that doesn't mean nobody will ever become aggressive, and nobody will ever foist upon us the harms we associate with "violation of our rights"; we're still going to be aggressed against, in such a case, but we won't even be able to say, coherently, "You've violated my rights." :shock:

In other words, if there's no objective moral code, we've lost even our ability to protest evil.
All you are making an argument for here is that it would be more expedient to convince as many as possible of the objecivity of morality, regardless of the truth of the matter. I can't say the world would not be a better place for it, I can only say that I don't like the idea. And, of course, when we talk about expediency, we have to ask, expedient for whom? Not the kind of people I want to comply with, I suspect.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Atheism

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Dontaskme wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 3:34 pmYes, source is known, and seeing is another form of knowing.

Seen implies an object seen.

Objects seen, cannot see, they are only being looked upon and known by seeing which is another word for knowing.
This is great. I am just now taking a course “The Interpretation of Gobbledygook” and this gives me a primary source to work with.

Thank you!
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Harbal
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Re: Atheism

Post by Harbal »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 8:08 pm
Dontaskme wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 3:34 pmYes, source is known, and seeing is another form of knowing.

Seen implies an object seen.

Objects seen, cannot see, they are only being looked upon and known by seeing which is another word for knowing.
This is great. I am just now taking a course “The Interpretation of Gobbledygook” and this gives me a primary source to work with.

Thank you!
Regarding your own gobbledygook; may I suggest that it would be kinder on those foolish enough to read it, to make it more concise? I only say this on the off chance that you might wake up one morning with a feeling of curiosity, albeit idle curiosity, about what being kind feels like.
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phyllo
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Re: Atheism

Post by phyllo »

One ought to be polite on a forum. But does one have to be kind?

What is kindness on a philosophy forum?
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Harbal
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Re: Atheism

Post by Harbal »

phyllo wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 9:15 pm One ought to be polite on a forum. But does one have to be kind?
I only suggested that he might be kinder, which would still give him plenty of scope for staying outside the boudary of actual kindness. So, no, he doesn't have to be kind.

Actually, I wouldn't want him to change in any way, he might not be as much fun to play with if he did.
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henry quirk
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Re: Atheism

Post by henry quirk »

Harbal wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 2:52 pm
I can go along with it, and being an atheist is not an obstacle to my going along with it.

Really? That's surprising cuz I'm talkin' about man's soul and natural rights.

Here, read it again with that in mind...

As I say: it's universal, this sense of self-possession. Any where, any when, every person knows he is his own and knows it would be wrong to be used or murdered or slaved or etc. As I say: even the slaver, as he fixes prices to men, knows he is his own. No one has ever truthfully said I ought be property. Now, considering the wide range of biological, psychological, cultural, sociological, societal, philosophical, religious, etc. differences between men and groups of men, it's reasonable to assume over the long haul of history some men or groups of men would have found it natural to be used as commodity or pack animal or food. But no such men or groups of men exist. There's never been a slaver who said or sez as it it right for me to own others, it wouid be right for another to own me. A man may violate another but he never takes his own violation as acceptable or right. This universal could be simply a brute fact, a peculiarity of human biology/neurology, but as it never varies, never goes away, this seems far-fetched to me. You could conceivably breed man to be eyeless or armless; it does not seem to me you could breed away man's innate intuition of self-possession. So, as self-possession is not a biological trait, but it exists, it must be sumthin' other than a function of biology.

I think most people mean something else when they talk about God.

Which is surprising, especially in a philosophy forum.

Why can't I be both moral and atheist?

If you recognize man as ensouled with a natural right to his life, liberty, and property, then I think you can be a moral atheist. The challenge, of course, is where did the soul and the natural rights affixed to it come from? If not the Maker, then...?
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Harbal
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Re: Atheism

Post by Harbal »

henry quirk wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 9:39 pm
If you recognize man as ensouled with a natural right to his life, liberty, and property, then I think you can be a moral atheist. The challenge, of course, is where did the soul and the natural rights affixed to it come from? If not the Maker, then...?
No, henry, I don't believe there are such things as souls and natural rights, just as you don't seem to believe there are moral atheists. Still, it's a big world, surely there is enough room for both of us. I hope so, cos I ain't the one who's gonna leave. :wink:
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Re: Atheism

Post by henry quirk »

Dontaskme wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 2:52 pm
Age has natural rights to exist too.

Yes, he has the same right to his life, liberty, and property as any other person has to his. All I owe him is the recognition and respect that he is his. I don't owe him, attention or affection or pity or a helping hand. And sure as shit I don't owe him my time.
Just scroll past Age's posts if they annoy and pollute your mind
His posts are an affront to sanity. They leap from the screen and scorch the eyeballs. He's back my penalty box.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Atheism

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harbal wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 8:07 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Apr 15, 2023 6:46 pm There are follow-up questions to that, such as "How do we know?" But for the moment, the important principle is only this: it is clearly not the case that all moral codes are equal. Some are, indeed, better than others; and it cannot be otherwise, since they mutually contradict on key issues. It's not snobbery to say so: it's just realism.

Only after we know that can we go on to the follow-up questions. Because the first thing we've got to get rid of is the empirically and logically untenable idea that all codes are equal, and there's nothing to choose between them.
Yes, some moral codes are better than others, but only in my opinion.
Really? So it's just "in your opinion" that rape, or pedophilia, or slavery are not good? You're somehow convinced you're not actually, objectively right about that?

I find that...improbable. You don't seem to be as devoid of an objective moral compass as that would suggest. I suspect you know very well those things are objectively wrong, and that your opinion about them is actually right. But I understand why you don't know HOW you know that, and can't say. What you say you believe about morality, namely that it's not objective, will simply not permit you to articulate what you do, in fact, know...that your opinion is actually right.
Right. But then, your approach to morality is not recommendable to anybody. And it can't ground a society, or inform a judicial system, or structure a polity, or even advise a common life. And normally, those are goods for which we all look to a code of ethics or morality. If it can't do those things, then it really can't do anything valuable at all...at least, for anybody outside of yourself.
No, I don't aspire to inform the judicial system with my subjective morality, but, every once in a while, someone who I don't steal from, or lie to, or indeed eat, might be considered a beneficiary of it.
Of course. Very much so. But what you can't offer anybody, on that basis, are the basic goods to which we all look from any moral philosophy. In other words, you can have your private morality make you feel good about yourself, and to prevent you from doing what you consider an injury or harm to others; but you can't prove to anybody that you are actually being a good person for behaving that way, or do anything with society or politics or justice that way.
Okay, but now you're no longer appealing to "culture" or "developing" morality, but rather to one or another objective moral precept. You've left your original position, and moved to that of Kant or Jesus, instead.
No, I haven't moved to Kant or Jesus, we just happen to coincide,
Well, since Kant doesn't "coincide" with Jesus Christ, and you may or may not "coincide" with one or the other, that's implausible. But either way, they both believed in objective moral realities, and you don't; so they could at least offer some answer to the question, "Why should we do X or Y?" that's more than you'll be able to offer, since you insist there can be no "why" to morality.
At its core, I suppose it comes down to empathy.
It doesn't, really. One can feel oneself to be "empathetic" by healing a sick patient or "putting her out of her misery" equally. One can be "empathetic" to a saint or a psycho, as the many "empathetic" prison letters to such from misguided young women attest. Empathy's just a feeling, and feelings don't provide information, much less moral legitimacy. And what if, like a sociopath, one lacks empathy altogether? But there are high-functioning sociopaths who have never committed a crime; their lack of empathy hasn't made them less moral, therefore.
Harbal wrote: I can see a case for promoting a belief in objective morality, if controlling a population's attitudes is your goal, and your own morality does not forbid such deceit.
Where are we look for trustworthy, objective moral truth?
I'll answer very directly.

I think we have various sources, but not all of equal clarity. I do think, for example, that human beings, when they are functioning normally, have a conscience; but consciences are not infallible. I do think some moral facts we learn from culture; but culture has to get its own moral facts from somewhere. We do get some moral information from nature: there are things which, if one does them, one will not survive for long, or be healthy, or extend one's legacy beyond one's own death. But naturally, I think we get our only really clear moral information from revelation, from God Himself. Absent Him, nobody else is really positioned to know what the truth about objective morality is.

But there's no refuge in relativism. Denying the existence of such a moral code will not save us from tyranny or exploitation; it will only remove from us any semblance of defense against the same. For example, our rights cannot actually be violated by an aggressor, if the objective fact is that we have no rights in the first place. But that doesn't mean nobody will ever become aggressive, and nobody will ever foist upon us the harms we associate with "violation of our rights"; we're still going to be aggressed against, in such a case, but we won't even be able to say, coherently, "You've violated my rights." :shock:

In other words, if there's no objective moral code, we've lost even our ability to protest evil.
All you are making an argument for here is that it would be more expedient to convince as many as possible of the objecivity of morality, regardless of the truth of the matter.
No, I wouldn't make that argument at all, and it's not what I was saying. Did I not also say that we need to be on guard for false moral codes? Absolutely.

But there is this truth, too, as you seem to intuit: that any society that has a common code, even an immoral one, is likely to be at least partially functional and capable of coordinating its (maybe even evil) activities and sorting its values; whereas a relativistic one is capable of nothing at all...not even of being a society, in any clear sense of the term.

So that doesn't tell us we should embrace any false moral codes, but it reminds us that there's a huge payoff for getting morality right, and a huge risk of getting it wrong; but that relativism doesn't offer anything at all.

Hence, relativism cannot be recommended to anybody.
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