OK. Lets see.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 5:11 pmWell, let's see about that.
Lets accept that your deduction is valid.
Justify its soundness.
OK. Lets see.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 5:11 pmWell, let's see about that.
I'll wait to hear from others on that. You're just trolling anyway.Skepdick wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 5:12 pmOK. Lets see.
Lets accept that your deduction is valid.
Justify its soundness.
No, I wouldn't concede this, because you've actually got two arguments here, not one, and they aren't the same:Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 5:08 pm Let's take a "religion" neither you nor I believes is true, just so we're not partisan. Let's call it the religion of "Moo."
The god Moo made everything. (Of course, all Mooists would have to believe this, by definition of being a "Mooist.")
Moo made women only 1/2 the value of a man. (This could be both given in Mooist revelation, and perhaps deducible from the natural world Moo is said to have made, in that women are made smaller and weaker than men.)
Therefore, to value men by a 2-1 ratio over women is moral. (This is deducible from the two previous claims.)
Now, neither you nor I believes in Moo. But we'd both have to concede that if Moo existed, had made the world, and said that he made women to be only half the worth of a man, the rest would logically follow.
No. If we believed what Mooists believe, they would still be wrong, because their belief that Moo made women less valuable than men cannot be correct.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 5:08 pmIt's just that easy to get a morality out of a religion or ideology that holds that the universe has some kind of teleological or purposive creation. And all of them do. We don't even have to agree that their morality is genuinely moral; we can see that, if we believed what Mooists believe, they'd be right.
That is not why I think they are wrong; I would think they were wrong even if I believed in Moo. The issue is not whether a deity exists, nor what intentions or other attributes the deity has; the issue is whether a deity can determine moral values. You appear to think that the Christian God can actually set the moral values of people and actions simply because, unlike Moo, he exists and has certain intentions, including moral intentions. But none of this amounts to the ability to determine moral values, any more than my existing and intending to run a mile in four minutes means that I am actually able to run a mile in four minutes.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 5:08 pm We just think they're wrong, because you and I don't believe in Moo.
That's the point.CIN2 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 8:12 pmNo, I wouldn't concede this, because you've actually got two arguments here, not one, and they aren't the same:Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 5:08 pm Let's take a "religion" neither you nor I believes is true, just so we're not partisan. Let's call it the religion of "Moo."
The god Moo made everything. (Of course, all Mooists would have to believe this, by definition of being a "Mooist.")
Moo made women only 1/2 the value of a man. (This could be both given in Mooist revelation, and perhaps deducible from the natural world Moo is said to have made, in that women are made smaller and weaker than men.)
Therefore, to value men by a 2-1 ratio over women is moral. (This is deducible from the two previous claims.)
Now, neither you nor I believes in Moo. But we'd both have to concede that if Moo existed, had made the world, and said that he made women to be only half the worth of a man, the rest would logically follow.
Argument 1
The god Moo made everything
Moo made women only 1/2 the value of a man
Therefore, to value men by a 2-1 ratio over women is moral
Argument 2
Moo made the world
Moo said that he made women to be only half the worth of a man
Therefore, to value men by a 2-1 ratio over women is moral
The first argument is valid...
I agree. We'd have to know that Moo is not a liar, and infallible. But if we did know that, then again, there'd be no problem with the Mooists getting validity out of that argument....just because Moo said that he made women only 1/2 the value of a man is no reason to believe that he actually did.
"Cannot"? What makes you say so?...their belief that Moo made women less valuable than men cannot be correct.
Well, if a Supreme Being exists, whether Moo or otherwise, he certainly "can" do that, else he wouldn't be "supreme" at all. You might argue he hasn't done that -- which you'd then have to give reasons to believe, or you might argue that Moo has lied -- unless Moo is incapable of lying or being wrong, of course....the issue is whether a deity can determine moral values.
See above.If you wish to convince me that the Christian God can determine moral values, you are going to have to explain how he does it.
You'll wait for others to do the justification for you?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 8:05 pmI'll wait to hear from others on that. You're just trolling anyway.
Ignoring me and justifying the soundness of your deduction aren't mutually exclusive.
Yeah, right.Skepdick wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 9:14 pmIgnoring me and justifying the soundness of your deduction aren't mutually exclusive.
Get on with it.
So far you are demonstrating failure at both ignoring me; and justifying the soundness of your deduction.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 11, 2025 1:14 amYeah, right.![]()
Here's the etymology of mystic for you:agora wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 7:36 pm @Ben JS; you wrote:
The needs of people are not mystical.
That we have preferences is not mystical.
Codes of conduct enabling effective cooperation is not mystical.
My answer:
[...]
Mysticism is the human ability to relate to and manage energy. (inner/subtle energy)
[...]
When I say the needs of people are not mystical,etymonline.com wrote:late 14c., mistike, "spiritually allegorical, pertaining to mysteries of faith," from Old French mistique "mysterious, full of mystery" (14c.), or directly from Latin mysticus "mystical, mystic, of secret rites" (source also of Italian mistico, Spanish mistico), from Greek mystikos "secret, mystic, connected with the mysteries," from mystes "one who has been initiated" (see mystery (n.1)).
Meaning "pertaining to occult practices or ancient religions" is recorded by 1610s. That of "hidden from or obscure to human knowledge or comprehension" is by 1630s.
According to an accurate definition of mystical, it doesn't.agora wrote:constructing another belief system — under the name of ethics — which might itself have mystical foundations?
Your answer is that people who considered themselves mystics contributed to society.agora wrote:My answer:
Religious morality has religious roots, secular morality does not.agora wrote:"reject morality just because of its religious roots"
Ben JS wrote: Religion is not the origin of morality.
People are the origin of morality.
We evolved preferences that led to our survival.
We evaluate and judge the world based on these preferences.
We form practices that adhere to our preferences.
There's evolutionary advantage in treating those around you fairly -
an agreed upon set of actions that wont merit retaliation.
Cooperation increased our survivability, thus 'morality' was selected for.
It emerged not because of religion.
Religion appealed to religious constructs,
for reasons to be moral.
Not necessary.
There are plenty of reasons to be moral in the absence of religion.
The basis of morality can be rooted in needs of people,
and the rewards and consequent health produced from adopting it.
Ben JS wrote: Secular morality can be founded and rooted within the needs of people.
As soon as a person agrees that what they want is their health,
then we can establish what is conducive to health and their self-interest.
Without a goal/objective, all is neutral.
We are born biased, due to natural selection.
Our structure produces bias.
Morality does not need to some divine justification, simply 'I prefer this.'
It can function in light of the recognition that it's basis are preferences that resulted in survival - and nothing more.
We don't need a sky daddy to figure out how to build mutually beneficial relationships with others.
Morality is all about a code of interaction with others.
As if there were no others, you wouldn't need to justify anything.
You'd do what you want, and you'd need no defense.
Ben JS wrote: One of the things we typically have is compassion / empathy.
It developed for a very self serving reason, but it is present nonetheless.
From this, we can be motivated to build a morality and act in a moral way.
Even in the absence of compassion / empathy,
we can recognize the utility of acting in accord with societal ethics.
Not because it is thought to be a fundamental truth of existence,
but because we decide it is in our interest to do so.
When we have common goals,
we can develop agreed upon norms.
Differentiate between that which supports or hinders our goals.
Evaluate and apply values to things, relative to their affect on our goal realization.
This is not nothing.
It is a tool that provides utility.
A very fulfilling one -
fulfillment being a typically rewarding/preferred experience.
===Ben JS wrote: Morality is a construct.
A useful construct.
It is not fake.
Language is a construct.
A useful construct.
It is not fake.
Neither morality nor language are an inherent aspect of reality.
Each are constructed and their meanings created,
as a means to express the will of the one utilizing them.
Morality's roots are undecidable. Therefore any assertion on the matter is wrong.
I'm now merely amusing myself. I have no intention of doing any more serious business with anybody so unserious.Skepdick wrote: ↑Fri Apr 11, 2025 5:55 amSo far you are demonstrating failure at both ignoring me...
My "unseriousness" is why you can't justify the soundness of your deduction?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 11, 2025 2:12 pmI'm now merely amusing myself. I have no intention of doing any more serious business with anybody so unserious.
If you'd paid attention, you'd already know I provided the justification to somebody else. But you're asleep at the switch.Skepdick wrote: ↑Fri Apr 11, 2025 3:20 pmMy "unseriousness" is why you can't justify the soundness of your deduction?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 11, 2025 2:12 pmI'm now merely amusing myself. I have no intention of doing any more serious business with anybody so unserious.