You are simply making this up. I wrote (in clear, simple English) some of the grounds on which a reasonable secular morality is based -- cultural norms, accepted principles, etc. It has the same "reality" as laws -- which, in Western society, are also secular.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Oct 10, 2025 8:12 pm
No, it's what is called a "synonym." I can see you're irritated, but I think that's because you sense we're on the verge of a truthful realization here. But let me explain.
We can play with nomenclature; we can call it "subjective opinion," or "taste," or "preference," or "gut feeling," or "momentary disposition," but what "prejudice" captures much better is the element of taking received moral precepts that are (according to subjectivism) merely subjective, and treating them as if they had some sort of objective force. It's passing a "judgment" before one has any grounds to justify that judgment. And if that doesn't amount to "prejudice," then I'd say probably nothing can.
Morality is not like taste in movies -- mine, yours, or the critics'. If it is not grounded in some reality, then it has no authority, no power, no obligatory force...it can, and should be, simply disregarded.
Nietzsche got that.
A "prejudice" is a preconceived opinion not based on evidence or reason.
I explained that in my post (which you ignored) and explained it again above. You probably read your anti-secular-morality screed somewhere. Maybe the original writer can defend it better than you can. You appear unable to defend it at all.Yes. So what "evidence" or "reason" can you produce for even one moral precept? Just one. Any one. You can pick it. But show why anybody at all is obligated to agree with it.
Why? Why can't morality be a matter of taste? It certainly has been through the ages. Moral principles and practices have changed with changing cultures and changing tastes.No. I'm suggesting he's dealing with mere matters of taste, not matters of morality at all. Taste can neither be right nor wrong...but morality always requires both.Are you suggesting that a literary critic who prefers Jane Austen to Georgette Heyer is merely "prejudiced"?
Torquemada thought Christianity not only justified but demanded the torture and burning of heretics.
Torquemada's faith clearly justified his actions. If heretics can guide themselves and others to the pits of hell. and if hell is eternal torture, surely preventing even one person from suffering eternal torture justifies subjecting several to temporary torture. Makes sense to me.No, I don't think he did. I think he just wanted to do it, and found it convenient to invent a pseudo-religious rationale to do it. But you won't find he had any basis in Scripture. He was just making stuff up.
Of course, you might be referring to Torquemada in the hopes of invoking a case we'll all agree that he did something wrong. But if his opinion on the subject was subjective, and yours is subjective, then is torturing "heretics" actually right or wrong? What's your "reason" and "evidence" that you're right, and he wasn't?
What's the "reason" and "evidence" you use to inform yourself that "kindness" and "charity" are good, and Torquemada was bad?
You see, even subjectivists can't help trying to smuggle back into the discussion value judgments for which they can explain no warrant. Alexiev does not like torture. Torquemada did. What is the arbitrating authority that ought to compel us to agree with Alexiev and not with Torquemada?You're guessing. Neither you nor I knows his motive. If his faith was really focused on objective realities, he surely should have compared his own actions to Scripture and discovered he was not "loving his enemies" or "praying for them" by torturing them.The certainty with which Torquemada approached his faith -- feeling his beliefs were "objective -- justified his actions.
Did he know about the Biblical view? Probably. We might guess he did. Maybe he didn't. But he certainly didn't care, if he knew; and he wasn't looking to it for any instruction about what he was doing. His actions prove that.
But given that Atheists have killed far, far more people than all the religious in the world combine, throughout the entirety of human history, what's your assurance that they are in a more "moral" position?
The reason kindness and charity are good is that they conduce human happiness (which, in my subjective opinion is also good). Arguing that there is no "evidence" that happiness is good is silly. It's good in my subjective opinion. I need no confirmation from you, Jesus, or the Bible. Why would I?
Because, in my subjective opinion, love conduces human happiness -- mine and others' -- and faith and hope often do not. Although the postulates in both secular and religious morality are subjective, the conclusions are derived via reason.I agree. Doubt is very good, so long as it does not merely decay into brainless cynicism, but rather provokes proper questioning.Doubt -- I'd suggest --is the beginning of wisdom.But again, why do you believe they should agree? And if they don't, what makes one of them bad?"And now I give you these three, hope, faith, and love. But the greatest of these is love." Both secular and Christian moral philosophers can (subjectively) agree.