Are you including the philosophical arguments for God in this?
The cosmological argument.
The moral argument for God.
Aquinas's Five ways
The ontological argument
The argument from beauty
The argument from consciousness
The teleological argument — Andrew4Handel
This goes against the idea of a simple disbelief in gods if you have to write thousands of words in response to arguments for God. — Andrew4Handel
People don't seem to comprehend the lack of truth value in issue in morality. — Andrew4Handel
This fact demonstrates that to do good or bad and learn or not from the consequences most people do not need "divine permission" in order to survive and to thrive. So what are peculiarly "religious values" good for? :chin:So my charge is that non religious people are acting indistinguishably from religious people in a lot of their beliefs ... — Andrew4Handel
Morality is doing what is right, no matter what you are told. Religion is doing what you are told, no matter what is right. — H.L. Mencken, journalist & critic
With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil - that takes religion. — Steven Weinberg, Nobel physicist
:up: :sparkle:Morality is doing what is right, no matter what you are told. Religion is doing what you are told, no matter what is right — H.L. Mencken, journalist & critic
This fact demonstrates that to do good or bad and learn or not from the consequences most people do not need "divine permission" in order to survive and to thrive. So what are peculiarly "religious values" good for? — 180 Proof
Morality is doing what is right, no matter what you are told. Religion is doing what you are told, no matter what is right. — H.L. Mencken, journalist & critic
There is a large body of ethical theory that insist that moral statements have a truth value, but do not rely on a deity. — Banno
Why do you assume that? I've claimed the opposite with respect to morality more than once (links below) which you have either ignored or given vague meandering responses.Why don't you need your statements to have truth value? — Andrew4Handel
:chin:↪Andrew4Handel So [you assert] nature itself isn't grounds enough for natural beings to conceive of and practice morality (i.e. eusocial cooperation strategies). Why? — 180 Proof
People don't seem to comprehend the lack of truth value in issue in morality.
Morality may as well be a religion if it is just making up a system of rules and ideas to keep people happy.
But it has no truth value. No one has discovered a truth value to moral claims or moral instructions.
So moral systems are a sham at heart but people don't believe that so keep on making moral claims relentlessly. — Andrew4Handel
As an ethical naturalist and fallibilist, the truth value of moral claims about 'what harms persons, other animals and ecosystems' is discernible, ergo preventable or reducible. 'Supernaturalist criteria' for "justifying the moral norms" of natural persons was a brief, maladaptive interlude of the last several millennia out of an almost two hundred millennia span of eusocial h. sapiens existence. 'Divine command theory', as far as I can tell, is moral nihilism (e.g. Plato's Euthyphro, Nietzsche's The Antichrist), and the last century or so of substantive secularization has been and continues to be a struggle against vestigial priestcraft and normative superstitions. — 180 Proof
lack of truth value — Andrew4Handel
I have become agnostic based on my evaluations of theory, evidence, probability, limitations of knowledge etc. — Andrew4Handel
I want to know that my actions are good or bad objectively and not speculatively, subjectively or arbitrarily. — Andrew4Handel
No one has discovered a truth value to moral claims or moral instructions. — Andrew4Handel
Not knowing whether or not there is a g/G does not entail believing in g/G or disbelieving in g/G. Being agnostic is irrelevant.I have become agnostic based on my evaluations of theory, evidence, probability, limitations of knowledge etc.
— Andrew4Handel — EricH
Observing the foreseeable (e.g. net harmful / unjust) consequences of actions is effectively pragmatic and replicatable aka "objective". I've no idea what @Andrew is talking about either.I want to know that my actions are good or bad objectively and not speculatively, subjectively or arbitrarily.
— Andrew4Handel
Just like no one has discovered a truth value to medical diagnostics or treatments. :roll: What is harmful to our species is knowable and therefore preventable and reducible (i.e. in medical terms, 'therapeutically treatable'). Ergo, no "supernatural value systems" are needed (or are objective in any practical sense). Andrew seems incorrigibly confused.No one has discovered a truth value to moral claims or moral instructions.
— Andrew4Handel
Just like no one has discovered a truth value to medical diagnostics or treatments. — 180 Proof
As an ethical naturalist and fallibilist, the truth value of moral claims about 'what harms persons, other animals and ecosystems' is discernible, ergo preventable or reducible — 180 Proof
People don't seem to comprehend the lack of truth value in issue in morality. — Andrew4Handel
So no ethical theory convinced you. Note that whether or not you were convinced is different to whether or not the theories were true or false. You might be, indeed presumably were, unconvinced because the theories were false. If so then they do indeed have a truth value.When I studied moral; philosophy no theory we were presented with was able to give convincing evidence for moral truths. — Andrew4Handel
Uh huh. :roll:I don't see how you get from an assessment of harm to a morality. — Andrew4Handel
I've been trying, unsuccessfully so far, to understand what you're saying. You're agnostic and you want to know whether your actions are good or bad, but then you say that it can't be done. — EricH
Well, one of us is playing with the wrong of the mule:I am saying atheism seems to lead to moral nihilism and other forms of nihilism. — Andrew4Handel
Nihilism is conventional, or common sense, 'god-of-the-gaps theism' and, therefore, a significant reason why (philosophical) atheists reject theism. — 180 Proof
Uh huh. :roll: — 180 Proof
I also think the idea you can own something and have property is a metaphysical/supernatural claim because I don't think ownership is a natural property and it can only be enforced by brute force such as the police or army. A lot of social norms and claims are being maintained by brute force not reason. — Andrew4Handel
I've referred many times to 'preventing / reducing NET harm' in my formulations of an ethics. Your strawmanning only leads to non sequiturs, thus your confusions persist.Are you committed to the notion that all harm is bad? ... We should prevent all harm? — Andrew4Handel
Not sure what this has to do with the topic at hand, but there's not often a need to resort to force in order to social norms. — Banno
The important thing to do in your analogy is to go out and look for your missing friend, and muster what support you can for the search. — Banno
I am saying atheists are relying on social structures created through force not reason which is similar to what religious people do. — Andrew4Handel
Nihilism can be a real problem. — Andrew4Handel
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.