Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Mar 25, 2024 5:57 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Mar 25, 2024 1:49 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Mar 24, 2024 11:43 am
...we also have principles by which we can arrive at some evaluation of a moral situation.
Oh, I'm very interested in your exposition of these "principles" you say we have. What do you think they are?
I know what mine are, but those of others may well be different. Honesty is a principle I try to stick to, but it might sometimes be necessary to compromise on that if it happens to conflict with other principles. Without the assumption of honesty, communication is worthless. To try to avoid any action that seems likely to cause a negative change to someone's life is another. I wouldn't want to do something that resulted in someone losing their job, for example, unless there was a compelling reason why they should lose it. I always prefer to put more in than I take out, because I would prefer to feel taken advantage of rather than having it the other way round, so that is another of my principles. I don't suppose I always stick rigidly to my principles, but I try to, and doing so is my first impulse. The fact that there is no "objective" authority to which I can look for endorsement of my moral principles does not stop them from meaning something to me.
Well, those aren't "principles" you're describing, H. You're just talking about how you, personally, choose to make certain decisions; but you neither expect nor hope that others will be governed by these alleged "principles," so they provide no rule, instruction or insight for anybody -- apparently, even including yourself, since you both declare the "principle" of honesty, and then walk it back immediately. I don't see how that gives anybody any insight to what rule or "principle" you're actually committed to follow.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:There is nothing in the definition of morality that demands it must be paid attention to. You don't have to pay attention to God and the Bible; you choose to, and I choose to pay attention to my own moral sense and conscience.
Actually, there IS something that says you do have to pay attention: the fact that all good is centered in God, and that God Himself will judge the world. One can decide not to pay attention: what one can't decide is not to face the consequences of that decision.
But that doesn't apply to me, of course.
I'm afraid it does.
There are situations when it can be difficult to know what to do, because it is not always clear what all the moral implications of a situation and your response to it might be, but that is a possibility that must be no less likely for you than for me.
In a sense, that's right: but in a sense, it's not.
If a person has a principle, "Thou shalt not murder," then he's got something. But he doesn't have everything. He still needs a much deeper understanding of the nature of that principle to know whether or not "murder" is going to be applied to, say, pre-born children, or combattants in war, or capital punishment cases, so he's still got work to do. But he does have something.
Not so the secularist. He's got nothing. He doesn't even have reason to think that "Thou shalt not murder" is obligatory at all, to any cases. So he doesn't even have the larger principle from which the particulars are to be deduced. He's totally at sea. And all the worst, because although his conscience may bother him, he has no way to tell if it's doing so legitimately, or illegitimately, or because he's a coward. A very sticky wicket indeed.
Your question seems to be based on the assumption that your sense of duty must be superior to mine, but I don't see how you could actually know that.
No, my "sense of duty" is not superhuman in any way. But I do have some things you don't, it would seem. One is revelation, of course...you don't even claim to have any of that. Another would be objective truth...you don't claim that any moral precepts are objectively true at all, do you? And there are others, but that will do for the moment.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:In both our cases, the final decision about what we do is ours.
That much is true, of course, because we have free will. It doesn't mean that the decision we make is going to be right or consequence free.
Right relative to what?
Objective moral truth.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:There is no such thing as ultimate right and wrong; there is only right and wrong in relation to preferred human outcomes.
Instrumental "effectiveness," you mean?
That won't do. If a person's "preferred human outcome" is the death of his neighbour, the fact that a kitchen knife is his most effective instrument to do it will not make it right.
I never said anything about effective instruments. If you wish to see your neighbour dead, the moral correctness of that desire must be judged by you. How it will be judged by others is a separate matter, and not really within your control.
You say it, but I don't think you believe it. If your neighbour comes over and stabs your daughter, I do not believe you'll stand by the claim that his desire must be judged by him. And I think you'll (rightly) feel that there is a way he ought to be judged, even if your other neighbours hold to your relativistic position. I think you won't just "personally feel" he's wrong. You'll be certain he is.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:"Twinges" -if you must diminish and degrade them to that- are all we have.
I'm not diminishing them: but I'm afraid you are, without realizing it.
Your decision to dismissively call strong feelings and emotional compulsions "twinges" is intended to trivialise them, and create a false impression of their significance.
No. It's designed to point to the actual insubstantiality that you are assigning to them, even though you don't realize you are. And it seems to be working, I'd say. You don't like it, because you know that conscience NEEDS to be more than "twinges." But according to subjectivism, what "more" can they be?
No Christian believes that the deliverances of conscience are mere "twinges." But non-Theists would have to, in all honesty, admit to themselves that "twinges" are all that they are.
I am a non-theist who doesn't have to believe that, and who indeed does not believe that, so I, in all honesty, have to admit no such thing to
myself.
Well, maybe you should tell yourself what you're really implying. If conscience is strictly personal, then "twinge" is all it amounts to.
I'm quite able to rethink, and do it all the time. But I've spent a lot of time exploring Atheist responses...not just here, on this site, as you can see, but by reading the foundational works of the major theorists in the Atheist "field" or pantheon of alleged greats, like Nietzsche, Darwin, Marx, Freud,
I don't know why you bothered to read those theorists, but you could have just come straight to me.

Yes, of course. But I did want to do my homework. And I really did want to know if some of the smarter and more celebrated Atheists were being celebrated for anything they actually deserved to be celebrated for.
So I picked the heavyweights. I didn't want to leave myself open to the charge of not having stepped up to the Big Boys of Atheism.
And if any of these have better answers, I try to take them seriously, and figure out whether they've got a point. Consequently, I'm very, very interested in anything new some Atheist has to say about the subject of evil
I only recognise the word, "evil", as an adjective, describing something unusually malicious, and that's about all I have to say about it.
Okay. Why is "malice" also "evil," then?
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:If you found your capacity for thought was leaving you morally bankrupt,

Yeah, yeah.
No, it was Atheism's answers that were morally bankrupt. But you knew what I meant. Still, I'd actually consider it a great thing if you could give me some "principles" they so far have failed to think of. And I think they'd have reason to thank you, as well.
I'm sorry, but I don't know anything about the theory or practice of "Atheism".
No principles? I'm actually disappointed. No kidding. I was hoping to hear something new and surprising. If you come up with anything, please let me know.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:I don't think there is anything wrong with human beings, or with the "order" of the world.
Sure you do. You think it's "wrong" that Christians sometimes show up and challenge people's self-comforting existing beliefs, don't you?
No, it is their attempts to get other people to share their own self comforting beliefs that I think wrong.
Then the point is well-taken. You do think some things are "wrong." That's one of them.
So why is it "wrong"?