Immanuel Can wrote:uwot wrote:
Do you really mean that? If an atheist behaves exactly like a theist, what is the difference in terms of purity?
Immanuel Can wrote:Nothing, except that the atheist has no grounds for any concept of "purity" at all.
Why not? If there is no difference between the purity of the deeds, what is it about them that the atheist cannot conceive?
Immanuel Can wrote:Purity is a value term.
I don't think you mean purity in any sense that I would use it; I suspect that your definition would be closer to something that I would call godly or holy, but you are right, I would not consider that I have any grounds for using such a term.
Immanuel Can wrote:Atheism has no value terms it can ground. It can only affirm them gratuitously and without reason.
Nonsense. I'm not a fan of Schopenhauer, but I think he had a point when he said: “Compassion is the basis of morality.” I think I can make a judgement on whether my behaviour is causing discomfort, distress or even pain in others. If so, I can make the value judgement that my behaviour is bad, just because it is my opinion that bad, with regard to behaviour, is precisely that behaviour which causes unnecessary or undeserved discomfort.
Not wishing to hurt people unnecessarily is reason enough not to.
Immanuel Can wrote:This god of yours; do he prefer a believer that sins to a non-believer that doesn't?
False dichotomy. Everybody sins.
So I've heard. What you mean, however, is that everybody sins in the eye of this god of yours. If you replace his inescapable notion of sin, with something like 'breaks the law', or 'wilfully causes unnecessary harm', it is no longer a false dichotomy, nor is it necessarily true. Let me rephrase the question in a way that doesn't include your god's inescapable 'sin': does your god prefer a pope who by failing to act decisively allows child abuse by priests, to an atheist who condemns it?
Immanuel Can wrote:But believers have a standard that condemns their sin and gives them incentive to repent of it.
Atheists don't have the option of repentance; they have to live with results of their deeds. There is no absolution. No amount of Hail Marys will make it better. For those who need one, that is an incentive not to cause suffering in the first place.
Immanuel Can wrote:Atheists have no such standard to which they could make reference.
Does it not bother you that the standard you refer to puts the feelings of an immortal, omnipotent, omniscient god who ought to be able to look after himself, before those of other human beings? Atheists can base their standards on what they can see happening as a result of their actions, rather than on the words of a book, the newest portions of which are nearly 2000 years old.
Immanuel Can wrote:Some have personal values, but personal standards don't count as moral precepts,
I see; you have no personal values. You think it right not to kill, because the bible says so. I think it right not to kill, because whatever the victim may have done, there will always be miscarriages of justice.
Immanuel Can wrote:because like Henry, any skeptic can simply say, "I disagree," and the game is over.
The Blessed Henry doesn't simply say, "I disagree"; unlike you, he has his own standards, which have the advantage that they are negotiable. How much of your moral code is negotiable? Skeptics do disagree with your moral precepts, I'm doing it now, but it isn't therefore game over. The game is over, because you insist that there is a god, that I cannot see, and that I have to accept the conditions the invisible god imposes.
Immanuel Can wrote:It's not the personal choices theists make, it's when they demand that others make the same choice.
Atheists, though, cannot even claim that personal autonomy is an obligatory value.
You're going to have to explain the above to me.
Immanuel Can wrote:The right to make one's own choices is not guaranteed by naturalism, and so it's just one of those "personal" value choices some atheists may make, and others may not.
The right to choose is a choice? You're not being very clear.
Immanuel Can wrote:In fact, atheism cannot, in principle, show that even totalitarian systems are "wrong"
Atheism, to remind you, is the assertion that no god exists, it is not a 'thing' that can or cannot demonstrate the moral standing of totalitarian systems. But on that subject: what does, say, the catholic church, with a supreme leader, whose edicts are supposed to be infallible have to say about totalitarian systems?
Immanuel Can wrote:-- much less that condemnations of things like "hypocrisy" are justified.
St Augustine's prayer: 'Make me celibate, lord, but not yet.' springs to mind. How does belief in a god make your condemnation of hypocrisy more valid than mine?
Immanuel Can wrote:(I'm not sure what you mean by "an example" here: it's true of *all* atheists, in principle. An "example" is only a single case.)
Well, let's look back at that exchange:
Immanuel Can wrote:In any case, in their worldview even hypocrisy, if anyone has it, is not a "bad" thing anymore, but simply a choice of lifestyle.
Can you give an example?
Can you give an example of hypocritical lifestyle, a single case even, that I, as an atheist would not condemn, "in principle"?.
Immanuel Can wrote:'It's good because the bible says so.' is facile.
Even if this were true (and it's not necessarily true), it won't help atheism with its lack of grounds for values.
It may not be what you are claiming, but 'It's good because the bible says so.' is obviously facile. Not having tablets of stone is not a lack of ground for values. One way round this is to say, I don't care whether it is 'right' or 'wrong' in any absolute terms, I will simply act according to my conviction that causing unnecessary harm or distress is something I wish to avoid.
Immanuel Can wrote:
You're arguing that because you don't like the opposite view, therefore your view must be right. Non sequitur there.
It is a non sequitur, but I would challenge you to show where I have used the argument you attribute to me.
Immanuel Can wrote:It's The Blessed Henry to you. (I rest my case.)
Ad hominem. Not an argument, just a paltry insult. Unworthy of you. I've seen you argue before: you can do better.
It's a joke. I really can't do better.