Harbal wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 12:34 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Sep 07, 2023 9:11 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Thu Sep 07, 2023 7:47 pm
I think I was speaking for myself when I said that, and it was because I was posting about morality and you diverted the conversation towards God, which was a direction I had no interest in going in.
Well, the problem with that strategy is simple: no God, no morality.
I make moral judgements and decisions frequently, and so do the vast majority of people;
Yes, I'm sure you do. But if you're an Atheist, you cannot make them
because they're right. You can only make them because they're convenient, or traditional, or habitual...but never because there's an objective reality backing the choice you make. It's always totally arbitrary, from an Atheist perspective.
Both Doestoevsky and Nietzsche saw that.
Why do you think I'm interested in what Doestoevsky and Nietzsche saw?
I should think you'd be very interested in what two men of broad reputation, significant achievement as philosophers, and sharp intelligence realized...especially since one was a Theist and one was a celebrated Atheist. I would think you'd want to ask yourself why they'd agree on this, when on so much else they disagreed. But not everybody is curious, I guess.
So you're going to convince yourself there's no such thing as objective morality, because that's literally all an Atheist can rationally do.
I don't have to convince myself of it; it is blindingly obvious to me that there is no such thing as objective morality.
Well, that's my point: it's assumptive, not demonstrated; but for somebody already committed to Atheism, it's irresistible...or "blindingly obvious," as you say...although ultimately probably more "blinding" than "obvious."
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:I can't really see what it matters whether I call myself an atheist or an agnostic.
One's honest, and one isn't. If one believes in objective moralty, there's a difference.
I don't believe in objective morality.
Well, then, it hardly matters whether you call yourself one thing or another. Honesty is only a virtue in a universe with objective morality in it. Otherwise, it's just a convenience or an inconvenience, as circumstances arrange.
You don't have any evidence, because there is no evidence.
Where's your evidence for the claim, "There is no evidence"?
You have none. It's a wish. It's a disposition. It's not a rational postulate. You actually have no idea what evidence there may or may not be, or who may have it...and the same is true for all of us, in every matter, so it's beyond the possibility of denial. What we DO all know is only whatever evidence we may personally have. And that's what makes our situation on this Earth inevitably a matter of probability, not certitude, and of faith and commitment, not of arid detachment.
But the commitment cannot be avoided, because we all have to live our lives somehow, according to some kind of compass points. As Bob Dylan said,
"You gonna have to serve somebody."
A funny thing about Atheists, though: they think that serving themselves, making themselves their own little "god," is some kind of badge of honour. Their "god" came into the world uttterly clueless and against his will, stumbled through a short and painful life of brief triumphs and disasters as the victim of material circumstances, and will die shortly and feed worms. That's not much of a compass point for anything, really.