And still no real response to this post either.
Peter Kropotkin wrote: ↑Thu Jul 27, 2023 5:57 pm
there is an old saying that was something that Dostoevsky wrote...
"If there is no god, then everything is permitted"
(which in fact, he doesn't seem to have said)
I believe one of his characters said it, which is different from the author asserting it. The character was not a philosopher or a moralist or some paragon either.
anyway, let us take a deeper look into this saying....
if there is no god... ok, so far, so good,
then everything is permitted...
now I have a problem.... for that isn't true....
freedom and this is what Dostoevsky was talking about,
is free... by any means....we are limited by a great many things...
we are limited by science and the various laws of physics..
we cannot, cannot disobey a law of physics... we cannot fly,
we cannot violate the laws of thermodynamics..
we cannot violate the laws of gravity...
we cannot violate the laws of evolution.....
'Permitted' has to do with social/interpersonal relations. It's not about being able to throw the Moon into the Sun or something.
Further you're treating it like a scientific proposition. At best it's an aphorism, which doesn't mean every word is taken literally. But since it's coming from the mouth of a character......
we are also unable to practice absolute freedom... we cannot
yell fire in a theater...
I think you mean we shouldn't. We certainly can.
we cannot kill with impunity.. we cannot
attack people with a hammer.. these things are not permitted...
regardless if there is a god or not...
Right, but the quote is talking about in relation to an objective morality. In relation to be damned, say. Or really, would we act morally if we could get away with not being moral, if there is no God. No afterlife. No judgment. No Hell and Heaven.
You're now going into secular laws adn the like. yes, people will still have tendencies to avoid earthly punishment, but if they can get away with stuff...
Dostoyevsky via his character was raising an issue.
we cannot try to overthrow the government... we just can't do
a great many things... even if we wanted to, we aren't permitted...
god has no bearing on the laws...
Religion has had a lot of bearing on the laws. Though of course there are chicken and egg issues.
the idea that ''thou shall not kill''
is just an exclusive religious idea is wrong... this law makes total sense
in any kind of situation... it doesn't matter if there is a god or not...
(the idea of using self-defense to protect one in which murder might
occur, still isn't an idea that requires a god)
If God exists, then there is no getting away with anything, at least in the long run and in, say, the Christian conceptions of God. This is what he's exploring.
physically, I still can't jump ten feet nor can I practice any kind
of morality/ethics that I so wish, because there is no god...
I am still very limited in my thoughts and actions,
You're not limited in your thoughts anymore. The OT focused on behavior, but Jesus extended the commandments to include internal states and attitudes. If there's no God you can certainly lust after your neighbor's wife, especially if you have a good poker face.
regardless if
there is a god or not... the fact is that it doesn't matter if there
is a god or not..
But it does make a difference. If there is the God of the Bible, it makes a great deal of difference. You have no privacy ever from the judge. In secular society you can get away with a lot, especially at the level of attitude - compassion, kindness, love and their opposites - and the level of thought. You will get caught.
And everyone is hiding something from some secular entity, if only a boss, spouse, friend, neighbor. In fact at the attitude/thought level we are all hiding A LOT. We are very free in a purely secular world in many ways. And certainly to try to get away with things even on the legal/physical end of things.
There's no getting away with stuff, no hiding stuff if there is the God of the Bible.
I am still not permitted to be free...
I still have limits and limitations on me, no matter if there is
a god or not...
Well, sure, but D did not write: if there is no God you have unlimited power and freedom.
You've interpreted that sentence very idiosyncratically.
It's certainly not the issue Dmitri/Ivan was raising.