Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Dec 29, 2024 8:33 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Dec 28, 2024 6:43 pm
Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Dec 28, 2024 6:31 pm
There's no difference between the rules of the Bible and any other rules that a society agrees to. The Bible is no more "objective" than any other human created rules because in the end it was human beings who wrote the Bible and it's human beings who observe the rules of the Bible or not.
Well, the second part is true: until the Judgment, it's certianly up to human beings whether or not they observe the objective moral truths. But the rest is the point we're debating, not a given conclusion. I believe the Bible is the Word of God. You believe it's not. But IF it is, then it's certainly vastly more objective than anything men invent, and it's not human beings who wrote it.
So you need to prove your case, not merely assume it. What's your evidence to say that the Bible does not articulate objective moral truths?
Humans can create rules for our societies.
Stalin created rules. Hitler created rules. Mao, Xi and the Kim Jongs had plenty of rules. But I don't suppose you're going to want to say that their rules were all
the right rules, are you? But if you don't, then you are presented with a logical problem: how do you know what
the right rules are, and what
the wrong rules are?
If there are people who disagree with the prohibition against murder, then they themselves open themselves up to being murdered.
Stalin may well have realized that. And for that reason, he was all the more diligent about murdering his enemies, and anybody of whom he had even a suspicion. But it did not stop him murdering. And likewise the others.
Likewise theft: if everybody realized that stealing stuff "opens them up" to being stolen from, you'd suppose they wouldn't steal. But they still do, and do very often. They simply consider that the chances they will actually be stolen from are considerably less than the gains they stand to get from stealing. And you can add in all the different vices, and you'll find it's the same in every case.
That's as "objective" as rules get--even the ones in the Bible.
But it's not at all objective. And my contention is that the Bible does articulate the objective moral truths. So again, you need to
prove that, not just ask me to assume it with you for free.
And it's wrong either way because it inflicts extreme and unnecessary suffering on another human being.
Tell Stalin. He won't believe you. Neither will anybody else who's contemplating anything immoral...unless you can give them evidence that "Thou shalt not kill," or "Thou shalt not steal," or whatever else you choose, is objective.
"Subjective" never means more than "what I (or my friends) feel at the present moment." And to say to somebody, "You shouldn't steal from me, because that's what I feel at the present moment" is never going to be good enough. That much is surely obvious.
What does "tell that to Stalin" mean?
Very simple: Stalin liked causing suffering. It was useful to him to do so. You say he should have known it's wrong to inflict suffering. He might very reasonably ask you, "Why"? And it's not obvious what answer you would be able to offer.
Not everybody's a Stalin. But at some time, many people find it useful or in their perceived interest to inflict suffering on others. If you want them to believe they should resist that impulse, you need to tell them why it's wrong; because the question doesn't answer itself.
I think few, including most Atheists, would dispute that the Soviet Union was a dungeon and that the society that the Bolsheviks created was horrible.
But what they can't explain is why it was
wrong.
It takes human beings to determine what is just and what isn't.
Stalin 'determined' that killing people was not only just fine, but very useful. So did his many followers, and the torturers in Romania, Albania, East Germany, Cuba, Chile...and a host of other such places. And it continues today. As a subjectivist, how are you going to be able to decide they're wrong for doing that? Because you personally don't like it? Do you really think that's an explanation they should accept -- don't hurt others, because Gary doesn't like it when you do that?
And what about justice? Is it no more than "whatever Gary thinks is just"? And if justice for somebody else means something very different, or even opposite to what Gary thinks, then which one of the two is
actual justice? How can you even know when justice has been served, or when it has not yet been?