Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 9:18 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 7:40 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 7:07 pm
And human beings are rational creatures; it is contrary to our nature not to ask why and how. That is what has taken us from the cave to the Moon. That is what we do.
Great. Then explain how rationality can inform us about morality.
We need principles on which the morality is founded, so that we can test any particular instance against them.
Okay. What's one of these "principles"?
If you've got a better "reason," then I'm all ears.
To make us more fit for our relationships with other people, and the relationship we have with ourselves?
Except it doesn't. The difference in our values make us often do things like killing our babies, or killing our elderly, or killing the mentally ill, or killing other nations, or poisoning and slicing our bodies to pieces in order to become what we are told we "really" are, and so on.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:How do we know there is a God at all?
Because we all do. He's revealed his existence to us. (Romans 1)
No, he hasn't revealed his existence to me, nor most of the others on this forum, it seems.
It depends whom you believe.
I don't at all think it's true that the people here do not know there's a God. I think the people here often say they wish they could eliminate God. Those are not at all the same propositions.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:I don't know what you mean.
Well, is incest your current issue? It's not mine,
Actually, it is yours.
Oh, sorry...I should have been clearer.
I was asking if you personally felt you needed an answer to the incest issue, since I do not. I had raised it only in an effort to find common ground with you, but if you don't feel a prohibition toward that particular action, then it wasn't useful for anything further, and I was suggesting we move on.
I suggested abortion, homosexuality and capital punishment;
All possible picks, but not as universal as incest, and inconveniently, not issues on which we might automatically expect to begin from agreeing. But thanks anyway.
I very rarely see anything purely in black and white.
Is that a good thing?
I don't mean to say there's no time for greyness in issues, but if we are achieving any moral clarity, isn't the point to know the actual rightness and wrongness of things, rather than always to be caught in a grey muddle in the grey middle?
Is there anything you regard categorically as evil or wrong? Or anything as categorically good?
I regard putting the demands of a supposed higher being before the interests of other members of my own species as wrong, if that will do.
What would make that objectively wrong?
I think you need to pull a rabbit out of the hat quite quickly, before we are both condemned to a life of nihilism.
Well, I'm not a nihilist, of course. But what I can do is show you the path that so naturally leads from subjectivism to nihlism. That much is actually rather easy. And I'm not at all confident that if you are a rational person, and if you see the reasoning, you might not end up there. Because if I were a moral subjectivist, I think it would be obvious to me that we have to do away with empty gestures and vaccuous language about my personal wants being somehow "moral" without me being even able to say what that was, and that moral nihilism would be the obvious next landing point...unless I were prepared to reconsider my basic assumptions about God.