If you're a Christian, God exists.
Now, if you're a Humanist, God doesn't exist, you believe.
If you're a Christian, God exists.
Now, if you're a Humanist, God doesn't exist, you believe.
Not necessarily ..........
I read Phyllo differently here.MikeNovack wrote: ↑Wed Mar 25, 2026 3:01 pmNot necessarily ..........
It is the belief of many Christians, that a humanist could not be a deist. But what they are doing is ASSUMING that all deists must be believing in a "hands-on" deity like they do.
I find nothing inconsistent with a different notion. That there is a "first cause" deity, creator of the universe, who paint only with a broad brush, and leaves matters like how we humans conduct ourselves to us.
Whether causation is being implied or a necessary correlation, doesn't really matter, it's a strong assertion. I think he meant something else, but as written it much stronger. Could be a kind of 'Freudian' SlipIf you're a Christian, God exists.
I think it's unconscious and but not necessarily unintended.Now, if you're a Humanist, God doesn't exist, you believe.
I was explaining the concept of "grounding," sometimes also called "legitimating" or "being rational." I wasn't making that case.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Wed Mar 25, 2026 5:07 amNothing here that explains why a Christian must accept your moral claim that slavery is wrong.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 24, 2026 9:37 pmExplain why we are obligated to be Humanists, or to follow Humanist moral claims.If you're a Christian, God exists. God is the necessary authority for ethics, and ethics are that which is harmonious with his revealed will and nature. And the package is internally rational. A rational Christian can find the necessary reasons for Christian ethics. Christian ontology and Christian morality fit each other, logically.Now to you....
Explain why we are obligated to be Christians, or to follow Christian moral claims.
I can meet it for a Christian. Humanists cannot even meet it for themselves.So, you cannot meet the criterion you expect of Humanists.
Oh, that's a different question. Yes, I can. They're obligated because they're the truth. One is always obligated to the truth. And one always answers to the One who said, "I am the Way, the Truth and the Life." The Humanist may think he can do as he pleases, or as his Humanism teaches him; but he's wrong. He's still going to answer for what he chooses.You cannot demonstrate why anyone is obligated to be a Christian, or to follow Christian moral claims.
Absolutely, I can. And I have authorization and authority for so doing...even an obligation to do so.You can't demonstrate this to other theists.
Yes, you made it clear you can't, and yet it is one of the criteria you use to show that Humanists ethics are doomedImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Mar 25, 2026 7:35 pm I was explaining the concept of "grounding," sometimes also called "legitimating" or "being rational." I wasn't making that case.
I've pointed out myself in other contexts that Christian abolitionists were key in moving the nation away from slavery. But the problem is that while one can try to argue the Bible is anti-slavery via deduction and focusing on some parts, obviously Christians have held other positions and they have their own arguments and had those arguments for a long time. And their arguments could be solid also. They did not feel obligated to agree with anti-slavery arguments.But the Christian opposition to slavery is fundamentally grounded in the fact that all men are made "in the image of God," as Genesis says, and thus are properly only ever the possession of God Himself. And it was this conviction that informed both William Wilberforce and the American Abolitionist movement that they were duty-bound to fight against slavery...to the death, if necessary.
So, you cannot meet the criterion you expect of Humanists.
Well, you can't even to that but again, you the following with the words Humanist and Humanism in itI can meet it for a Christian. Humanists cannot even meet it for themselves.
You cannot demonstrate why anyone is obligated to be a Christian, or to follow Christian moral claims.
You just said you can't do it for a humanist. So you can't demonstrate it to anyone. Further as quoted earlier, you saidOh, that's a different question. Yes, I can
Now, do you want to tell me why a Humanist should follow Christian ethics? I can't,
That's not a demonstration they are obligated. You can't even demonstrate that the Bible is the word of God. You can't demonstrate that your interpretation is correct. It is grounded in your subjective intuition. And you already admitted that you can't do this.They're obligated because they're the truth. One is always obligated to the truth. And one always answers to the One who said, "I am the Way, the Truth and the Life."
You can't demonstrate this to other theists.
So, you demonstrated to other theists, non-Christians, that there is an obligation to be Christians and follow Christian morals?Absolutely, I can. And I have authorization and authority for so doing...even an obligation to do so.
But in relation to Slavery, you wouldn't do it until I presented my moral skepticism about such demonstrations (which you assumed, incorrectly, had to be moral nihilism).Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Mar 25, 2026 7:35 pm Absolutely, I can. And I have authorization and authority for so doing...even an obligation to do so.
Logically, they have to be moral Nihilism. Consistency would require you to be a nihilist, and your professed dismissal of all objective morality actually demonstrates that that is what you are. But you don't seem particularly aware of the implications of your own view. And that's not unusual: lots of people try to "jump off a cliff and stop half way down," so to speak, because they don't like how hard the ground looks.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Wed Mar 25, 2026 8:50 pmBut in relation to Slavery, you wouldn't do it until I presented my moral skepticism about such demonstrations (which you assumed, incorrectly, had to be moral nihilism).Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Mar 25, 2026 7:35 pm Absolutely, I can. And I have authorization and authority for so doing...even an obligation to do so.
Sure there is. God exists. This world and everythin in it was created for a purpose, one that God has declared; and to defy that purpose is unethical.one can even believe there are objective morals, but think that there is no way to demonstrate an obligation to others to follow them.
It is not a reasonable attack on secularism to demand that secularism do the task what no one can do.For it has never been any reasonable defense for secularism if any number of other views can or can't do the task that secularism itself cannot do.
Nope, they could be moral skeptics. And you could be an intuitionist realist as far as morals.
I didn't dismiss all objective morality.Consistency would require you to be a nihilist, and your professed dismissal of all objective morality actually demonstrates that that is what you are.
But you don't seem particularly aware of the implications of your own view. And that's not unusual: lots of people try to "jump off a cliff and stop half way down," so to speak, because they don't like how hard the ground looks.
That's what I said. doomed in that sense. I did not say there aren't objective morals. The issue is proving, demonstrating to others that moral X is objective. You seem to think all truths can be proven.All ethics are doomed in the sense that they cannot prove their basic value/moral judgments are objective, be they humanist, theist, other.
But my argument is not et tu quoque. You don't even read what you write. I don't think any moral system can prove its morals are objective. Further you repeatedly compared theists with non-theists on the issue. You did that on your own, repeatedly. So, my pointing out that you were incorrect about the difference is not tu quoqe. Not only did you not refuse to be distracted, you brought up the difference between humanists and Christians yourself.In both your requests and Henry's, I simply stayed on topic and refused to be distracted by et tu quoque fallacies that were thrown at me. For it has never been any reasonable defense for secularism if any number of other views can or can't do the task that secularism itself cannot do. But I was forthcoming when you confessed your view of morality, nihilistic as it actually is, as you will note.
one can even believe there are objective morals, but think that there is no way to demonstrate an obligation to others to follow them.
That's just some claims. Claims are not a demonstration.Sure there is. God exists. This world and everythin in it was created for a purpose, one that God has declared; and to defy that purpose is unethical.
Ah, so you can't demonstrate it, but it is. That's fine. I understand that your believe what you believe. I just have not seen anything like a demonstration.We have that obligation, whether or not we admit it. Reality does not change to suit our willingness to believe.
No, because mere skepticism would imply they don't know, and they should know...if they can think logically about their own beliefs. There's not one single moral precept they can come up with from Humanist presuppostions. Anybody who doesn't know that hasn't tried.
Okay, what morals are objective, in your view?I didn't dismiss all objective morality.
If there are such things as objective morals, as you claim, then what is your basis for assuming nobody can prove any?I don't think any moral system can prove its morals are objective.
Or it's the truth. If God exists, and if God has spoken, then that's as much demonstration as a rational person is ever going to need. The question, then, is only "Does God exist?" And for that, we have good evidence.one can even believe there are objective morals, but think that there is no way to demonstrate an obligation to others to follow them.That's just some claims.Sure there is. God exists. This world and everythin in it was created for a purpose, one that God has declared; and to defy that purpose is unethical.
See above. We can.Ah, so you can't demonstrate it, but it is.We have that obligation, whether or not we admit it. Reality does not change to suit our willingness to believe.
I'm going to make another thread about it, just for you, IWP...
Isn't it easy to see though?Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 11:20 amI quoted you three times where you clearly stated that modern lefty values come from Jesus. Unless that sentence was poorly written it meant that Jesus was causal in the positions of the people you consider pernicious. I asked you three times about that. Nothing. You can't even manage to say either, well yes there is a problem with Jesus' ideas there or No, what I meant was.......
Well said.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 3:14 pmThe historic legacy of Christianity in the formation of the very Western morality that informs their own basic suppositions, suppositions most (I find) have never really investigated, is one interesting topic. But something is not automatically right merely because it is longstanding or impactful. Confucianism has been longstanding and impactful, beyond doubt: but it doesn't make Confucianism the key to morality.
So I've been pointing to the conceptual analysis angle, the moral epistemology. Secularism requires particular foundational, ontological beliefs, such as "all that has come into being has come into being by chance, or by randomness, or by quantum accident," or something similar to those explanations -- something, in any case, devoid of intention, intelligence, purpose, plan or teleological goal. And in such a realm, there is no making sense of morality -- the secular supposition has to be that it comes into play accidentally, weirdly, as a by-product of impersonal, undirected forces. Whether or not anybody has any duty to behave morally, they're utterly unable to explain in secular terms.
This is a fatal flaw of the secular worldview. For human beings simply find morality too intuitively necessary and compelling to dismiss it as an accidental or evolutionary "quirk" or freak happening. It continues to drive us and shape us. Conscience is forever within us, and among us. But why it is, and why we should continue to care about it, no secularist can explain.
But Theism can. It can explain not only the manifest order and teleology of the world, but also why certain moral ideas are so compelling, so indispensible to us and to our societies. Secularists may not like that explanation, but they have no contrary one to offer at all. So the moral-explanatory ineptitude of secularism, is, to me, one of the most important apologetics arguments. It's something we all intuitively sense is important, but which secularism will never help us justify.
And this argument is a conceptual, philosophical, rational and not merely historical one.
This is why secularism also has no way to argue that slavery is "wrong." Nothing, according to secularism, can ever be objectively "wrong." In fact, the word "wrong" can mean no more than "at this moment, I don't like X," or "at this historical phase, the powers in my social group choose to disapprove X." It can't mean slavery is "wrong." In fact, secularism would have to see it as "right," or rather, as "morally neutral," in all days and societies in which people just happen to approve of slavery.
I was speaking about me, not humanists, though I think you are wrong about humanists also. I am not a moral nihilist. Moral nihilists claim that there are no objective morals. I do not claim that. In fact I think there are. I don't think however one can demonstrate them.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 26, 2026 5:56 am No, because mere skepticism would imply they don't know, and they should know...if they can think logically about their own beliefs. There's not one single moral precept they can come up with from Humanist presuppostions. Anybody who doesn't know that hasn't tried.
I didn't dismiss all objective morality.
Oh, well, pedophilia is wrong, there's one.Okay, what morals are objective, in your view?
Because they are necessarily based on a non-rational direct intuition.If there are such things as objective morals, as you claim, then what is your basis for assuming nobody can prove any?
one can even believe there are objective morals, but think that there is no way to demonstrate an obligation to others to follow them.
That's just some claims.[/quote] Claims. Non-rational assertions. And note: I to not think non-rational is pejorative. Irrational is. Non-rational is neutral.Sure there is. God exists. This world and everythin in it was created for a purpose, one that God has declared; and to defy that purpose is unethical.
Again, you can't demonstrate this. Now you are saying that God can. Note the difference.Or it's the truth. If God exists, and if God has spoken, then that's as much demonstration as a rational person is ever going to need. The question, then, is only "Does God exist?" And for that, we have good evidence.
Ah, so you can't demonstrate it, but it is.[/quote]We have that obligation, whether or not we admit it. Reality does not change to suit our willingness to believe.
No, you said God can.See above. We can.
I know, you said it. But when I pointed it out, you denied. So, I had to quote it. I'll wait for the other thread.Wizard22 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 26, 2026 8:34 amI'm going to make another thread about it, just for you, IWP...
Isn't it easy to see though?Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 11:20 amI quoted you three times where you clearly stated that modern lefty values come from Jesus. Unless that sentence was poorly written it meant that Jesus was causal in the positions of the people you consider pernicious. I asked you three times about that. Nothing. You can't even manage to say either, well yes there is a problem with Jesus' ideas there or No, what I meant was.......
Jesus Christ' teachings, philosophy, and entire religion is about UNIVERSAL SALVATION OF THE SOUL FOR EVERYBODY.
EVERYBODY.
That's as far "Left" as Leftism goes, IWP. Take as the ulterior case, Judaism and Jews, which only believe in Salvation for themselves and non others...
Well, yes. What they do is to attribute the power and authority of a kind of "god" figure to other things...Nature, History, Society, Evolution, Science, Subjectivity...etc. (I capitalize them here, because they are not what they seem: not, "science" the discipline, but "Science" the imaginary pseudo-god, or not "nature" the ordinary process, but "Nature" the god-by-another-name). This new "god" becomes their buck-stops-here point for everything, and they ask no further questions once they arrive at it. For example, they say secular morality is reasonable because Society says so. But Society is just a bunch of individuals collectivized and deified in their minds, and not some special thing capable of backing morality. Or they say you have to believe them because if you don't you'll be "on the wrong side of History," as if they know there's a specific meaning and preference behind the past, and they alone know what it is. But the purpose of all these deified abstractions is merely to prevent further thought, and eliminate further questioning, such as "what does 'Science' really tell us about the truth of right and wrong?" And the answer, of course, turns out to be "Nothing at all."Wizard22 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 26, 2026 8:40 amWell said.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 3:14 pmThe historic legacy of Christianity in the formation of the very Western morality that informs their own basic suppositions, suppositions most (I find) have never really investigated, is one interesting topic. But something is not automatically right merely because it is longstanding or impactful. Confucianism has been longstanding and impactful, beyond doubt: but it doesn't make Confucianism the key to morality.
So I've been pointing to the conceptual analysis angle, the moral epistemology. Secularism requires particular foundational, ontological beliefs, such as "all that has come into being has come into being by chance, or by randomness, or by quantum accident," or something similar to those explanations -- something, in any case, devoid of intention, intelligence, purpose, plan or teleological goal. And in such a realm, there is no making sense of morality -- the secular supposition has to be that it comes into play accidentally, weirdly, as a by-product of impersonal, undirected forces. Whether or not anybody has any duty to behave morally, they're utterly unable to explain in secular terms.
This is a fatal flaw of the secular worldview. For human beings simply find morality too intuitively necessary and compelling to dismiss it as an accidental or evolutionary "quirk" or freak happening. It continues to drive us and shape us. Conscience is forever within us, and among us. But why it is, and why we should continue to care about it, no secularist can explain.
But Theism can. It can explain not only the manifest order and teleology of the world, but also why certain moral ideas are so compelling, so indispensible to us and to our societies. Secularists may not like that explanation, but they have no contrary one to offer at all. So the moral-explanatory ineptitude of secularism, is, to me, one of the most important apologetics arguments. It's something we all intuitively sense is important, but which secularism will never help us justify.
And this argument is a conceptual, philosophical, rational and not merely historical one.
This is why secularism also has no way to argue that slavery is "wrong." Nothing, according to secularism, can ever be objectively "wrong." In fact, the word "wrong" can mean no more than "at this moment, I don't like X," or "at this historical phase, the powers in my social group choose to disapprove X." It can't mean slavery is "wrong." In fact, secularism would have to see it as "right," or rather, as "morally neutral," in all days and societies in which people just happen to approve of slavery.
In my time debating them, I've found that they slip up from time-to-time, and do presume some type of 'Creator' being or God-figure, despite their best efforts to pretend Atheism or Agnosticism. They cannot get away from their Theistic compulsion so easily.
That's actually not how it got started, if you look back. Henry started it, merely as a test-case for how secular morality could be justified. He picked it because it's something all of us recognize as having a moral dimension, and intuitively know is wrong. And he basically put to objectors here the problem of how they know what they feel they know about it.The masses need a Scapegoat figure, or a "whipping boy" (hence this Slavery thread) to take their frustrations out upon.
That's a major blind-spot of Western thought today. Liberationist language is never able to tell us what we are being liberated to do or to become. At least, not in any plausible way.It's why Postmodern Liberalism runs itself into the ground on the matter of "Secular Morality" and attempts to abolish "Slavery". All must be Liberated--but why, and from what, and from whom?
Actually, in Christian thought the relation that is eternal is not master-slave, which is, after all a human invention and oppressive. The relation is that of God and His people. It's a relationship of harmony and friendship, not subjugation. And while God never for a second fails to be superior to those He loves, He does truly love them, and they love Him because of His love for them and His goodness to them, and they co-work the future together. And there is a promise of mutual enjoyment, as well: to know God is joy, and to be known by God is security and life. So it's a relationship not of oppression, but of friendship, in the Biblical telling of it.This is the very force that pushes them toward a meaningless universe, nihilistic, devoid of Creator or Creation: Non-Theism or Anti-Theism. Implied in the very category of Theism is Master and Slave dichotomy.
Yes, that's what unfocused liberationism causes: one becomes focused on hating everything, not being grateful for anything. One is forever seeking to be "turned free" of the present state of affairs, always to an undefined "freedom" that is really meaningless because it aims at no particular reality. When one is finally "free" in that sense, one will have no companions, no goals, no achievements, no future and no hope...because all those things constrain (i.e. make unliberated) to some degree the person who has them. As Sartre said, "Hell is other people," meaning that anytime another person even exists, they constrain our freedom to some degree. Can you imagine a philosophy that aims at getting other people out of your reality? That's pretty awful, really. And if you listen to their most advanced theorists, they all say that the struggle to wreck things, to reject things, to debunk things, and even to criticize oneself must be unending, relentless and merciless. There's no end to the process of criticizing and destroying, and no good goal at the end of the process. It's got to be just perpetual, they're told.I believe their attempts to get away from that, to Liberate it, is the root of their ideology. It necessarily leads to Anti-Divinity, against all that is Good, Holy, and Beautiful in life.