But, having never existed seems to me the best version of reality. — AmadeusD
One could imagine a person not responding emotionally and yet able to recognize that a particular action is immoral. Why? Because most people recognize that certain actions are objectively immoral. The example that illustrates this point is the following: Imagine a person — Sam26
Because most people recognize that certain actions are objectively immoral. The example that illustrates this point is the following: Imagine a person cutting off the arm of another without good reason. The harm done to the person is objective, viz., the blood loss, the arm on the ground, the screams, and the reactions of family and friends. — Sam26
I disintinguish betweem emotions and moods. Anxiety and depression sometimes have emotions - some specific thing that I am anxious or depressed about. — Ludwig V
As Wittgenstine said "The world of the happy man is quite different from the world of a sad man". — Ludwig V
So, for me, emotional reactions are the emotions. (You seem to be positing that the emotion is something orther than the reactions). — Ludwig V
Ok, but then my point still stands. One can't derive any consequent from "boo stealing!". At the very least a moral statement worthy of the name needs to apply to more than just oneself. — Banno
Emotions are not simply "expressions" like "ouch!" or "boo". They include a cognitive element, which is identified when we say "I am angry because..." or "I am afraid of..." "boo stealing" includes the belief that the addressee has taken possession of something that does not belong to them. — Ludwig V
I don't like emotions or descriptions as an understanding of moral rules. Yet they include - are related to both. So a compatibilist answer is required. Perhaps something ike this. Moral rules encode our expectations and requirements of people's behaviour. There are facts of the matter whether certain rules do encode our expectations and requirements. But we do not respond to people following or violating those rules in the same way as we respond to "plain" - morally neutral - facts of the matter. — Ludwig V
Whether it is true is a very different question to whether it is truth-apt. — Banno
Can you show me how stealing is wrong is truth apt?
— Tom Storm
Odd.
It is true that stealing is wrong.
"Stealing is wrong" is false. — Banno
I think generally morality is rooted in the harm done, i.e., X is immoral because of the harm it causes. — Sam26
I don't see how a moral statement can be considered truth-apt.
— Tom Storm
And yet they are. It goes with the territory of "statement" — Banno
There could be many foundational moral statements of this sort. That's a conviction you hold to that's bedrock, you accept it as true, a given. Like a rule of chess. — Sam26
It's an interesting question, but in my daily life it's really just a word I don't use often (I did in this thread, for obvious reasons). And that means when talking on the topic I have little at stake, but it's also never homeground. So do I have faith in... something? Maybe. Then what follows from that? — Dawnstorm
Sure, but then neither is faith in all its meanings always equivalent to unquestioning obedience to some authority or else in some authoritative given - this as per the Abraham example as written.
As ↪unenlightened remarked early on, in common speech one and one's spouse are said to be faithful - full of faith - toward one another. Or as another example, having faith in humanity, or else one's fellow man. In neither of these contexts is faith taken to be about blind obedience to authority. Nor is it about mere belief.
I'll venture the notion that faith is about a certain form of trust - a trust in X that can neither be empirically nor logically evidenced. Belief (also closely associated to the notion of trust) can and most always should be justifiable in order to be maintained - as is the case in JTB. But faith eludes this possibility in practice. — javra
H'm I'm not sure what to make of the last sentence there. But I think you are missing my point. The fireman (person?) heading into a burning building has lots of equipment and training, not to mention protocols behind him. They cannot sort all that out for themselves. They need to have faith - to trust, if you prefer - that all of that is as it should be and that their project is worthwhile. You and I might want to say that they need to trust in science and reason. My point is that, so far as I can see, that trust is hard to distinguish from the trust of a believer in whatever they believe, whether it be God, or luck, or the stars. I realize that's heretical, but the question does not just go away. — Ludwig V
There is no way to asses a faith, so far as I can see, but by its fruits. Religious faiths come out with a pretty mixed record. Are we sure that science and reason (Enlightenment) comes out much better? — Ludwig V
The science we have now is far beyond anything they considered. — Banno
For me using the word "faith" outside of a Christian or Islamic religious contexts is problematic.
— Tom Storm
Why so? That makes no sense to me. — Ludwig V
On the other hand, the people we are talking about consider their choice to be well founded and likely to succeed. That's what faith does. — Ludwig V
But will you allow them to make their choices? Or, better, at what point are you prepared to intervene and prevent people acting in accordance with their faith, even if you consider their choices to be poorly founded and certain to fail? — Ludwig V
Second, it seems to me that the soldier or fireman who chooses to risk death to save someone must have some faith on a similar level. A faith that the risk is worth it, perhaps. At some level, if there is something that we live for and that we will face death for, it may not be the same as religious faith, but it occupies the same place in our lives. Even to have no faith in anything (if that's possible) is to have a faith of a kind. Is this what the existentialists meant by commitment. — Ludwig V
First, I still have to respect the choice they made. The people close to me who made that choice caused me pain and anger at the time, but still, they have the right to choose. — Ludwig V
And this is the culpability of faith, when it encourages folk to cruelty. — Banno
The consequence of my belief is meaning and purpose, I'm not just a cosmic coincidence awaiting a return to dust.
The issue for me isn't whether you choose faith or science, so long as you know it's a choice. — Hanover
In this case the consequence of their belief was the death of a child and 14 folk being convicted of manslaughter. — Banno
You don't seem to have a burning desire to know truth. Or maybe you do. — Gregory
Faith is subjecting a belief to its consequences. — Hanover
Masculinity has become a problem for itself, it is unclear what it is precisely, how it should be constructed. It is clear that it is a problem, but unclear what the solution is because it is caught in a contradiction. It has to reform and not reform at the same time. — Tobias
Don’t masculine and feminine go together as the two poles of an outdated binary social conception? Aren’t they in the process of being replaced by a new binary, in which both what had been understood as masculine and what was seen as feminine are redefined? Or perhaps the binary itself is on the way to being replaced by a spectrum or non-linear plurality or fluidity? — Joshs
Speaking of Church, I wonder if the so-called charismatic evangelical churches, with bands and lightshows and the like - are simply the result of applying these cultural forms to so-called 'religion'. That, combined with the so called 'prosperity gospel', which worships consumerist materialism as a manifestation of the holy spirit. — Wayfarer
If we cannot be certain of anything ourselves, does that mean that certainty does not exist? — Kranky
What I mean is: If I cannot be certain that I exist, can it still be said that it is certain?
There is a belief that I exist, but it might not be me thinking it. The thought of my existence could exist without me.
I think my question is:
So, if there is no certainty of my existence, can it be said that the belief of my existence is certain? — Kranky
Harris is saying that it's ok that we don't have a "conceptual definition" for morality because we just sort of know what it is. — frank
Aren't you describing consequentialism? If Harris defines morality as consequentialism, why would he give the opinion that morality doesn't have to have a clear definition in order to be rationally discussed? — frank
Why does the government have to favor Catholicism? — Arcane Sandwich
Argentina is a modern Nation-State. And, as all modern Nation-States, it is not Biblical. Hence, it is not subjected to Biblical Law. — Arcane Sandwich
In Matthew 28:19-20 Jesus is recorded as saying - Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. — Tom Storm
What does Argentina have to do with Catholicism specifically, or with Christianity in general? Nothing, because Argentina is not in the Bible to begin with — Arcane Sandwich
Argentina's policy, from the entire country to every city and town, should not be based on one bronze age myth be used by a country to enforce values on its citizens. It should be based on secular, Enlightenment thought instead. In other words, it should be based on science, not religion. — Arcane Sandwich
I think Harris wants to have his cake and eat it too. 'It's a meaningless universe, but you shouldn't do x.'. — frank
he example provided in the OP is relevant here: it is a fact that Argentina is not in the Bible. Is it a Biblical country, in a metaphorical sense? That would mean nothing to me, even if it were true. — Arcane Sandwich
Up until recently, abortion was illegal in Argentina. Unlike the USA, we never had legal abortion clinics here. Women used to die during clandestine abortions. And one of the main reasons why it took so long to legalize abortion, was because of the opposition of the Catholic Church. They oppose abortion on religious, ethical and political grounds, and they make their case by way of philosophical and biblical arguments. — Arcane Sandwich
One of the consequences of the Thesis upheld in the OP is that facts should matter more than mere opinions in matters of international politics. — Arcane Sandwich
It matters in international politics — Arcane Sandwich