Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 7:02 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 5:03 pm
Hitler probably thought he was morally right, but most people think he was morally wrong. Isn't that what it amounts to?
If that's right, then we'd still not know whether we ought to oppose Hitler or not. If we feel like it, maybe; but if we don't...
That's certainly true, but belief in God doesn't eliminate that problem. Theists have felt things and found justification for the position they want in their scriptures. Theists have justified killing other theists or calling them evil based on their beliefs. Theists have stopped being theists. Theists have converted and believed very different things about society. Theists have become religious leaders that created schisms in religions that led to wars. Theists have sinned in their religions, despite or because of their religions - depending on perspectives. There's no lack of theists who commit crimes that are proscribed or commit what we now think of as crimes but were not proscribed by their religions. Theists....well, you get the idea.
You keep criticizing non-theists for potentially changing their minds. Or being driven by feelings. Well, they are human. Humans change their minds. Theists are humans. They change their minds. Sometimes en masses. Sometimes as individuals.
Talking about Hitler. Antisemitism was rampant in the Germany at that time. The vast majority of Christians were German. They didn't really have to change their minds to support Hitler. Their theism was no protection against this. If only they had managed to feel and change their minds.
If only the natural recognition of the human in others had not been clouded by propaganda.
In the US there were a number of right wing Christians who were pro-Hitler.
The people who first really opposed Hitler in Germany...commies.