Well, as a statistics guy, I must remark that that is rather unscientific. — Merkwurdichliebe
This is an ancient perspective that usually sees evil as a matter of acting against nature. The effect is a loss of vitality.
A drawback of this view (for some) is that it means that if the sinner does "get away with it" as you put it, then it couldnt have been evil in the first place.
In fact, with this 'cause-and-effect-morality', one comes to understand what was good or bad in retrospect, by seeing who came to bad ends.
A sibling outlook is a feature of a Christian story about a Jew who was robbed and beaten. His fellow Jews saw him and walked on by. They assumed he must have done something wrong to end up that way. The Good Samaritan comes along and makes no such judgment. The Samaritan has a less materialistic moral perspective.
Morality is more complicated and conflicted than it looks at first glance. For us, its a fusion of several different cultural views. — frank
For the nonbeliever, moral principle can only be sourced from within as personal opinion, — Merkwurdichliebe
Lying is another example. Most of us get away with a lie or two, but this destroys trust, and once trust is destroyed, a lot more goes wrong. Or worse a person's lies can result in the deaths of millions of people. Our wrongs affect others and can even impact life in a big way. — Athena
How many people died because the tobbacco industry lied? What is the affect of the oil industry lying about the consequences of extracting and burning oil? A limited consciousness that leaves a person to believe s/he can away with lying is a terrible thing. — Athena
Lying is another example. Most of us get away with a lie or two, but this destroys trust, and once trust is destroyed, a lot more goes wrong. Or worse a person's lies can result in the deaths of millions of people. Our wrongs affect others and can even impact life in a big way. — Athena
How many people died because the tobbacco industry lied? What is the affect of the oil industry lying about the consequences of extracting and burning oil? A limited consciousness that leaves a person to believe s/he can away with lying is a terrible thing. — Athena
I don't think you answered the question. What is being judged, the person or the act? — Athena
Well, words have whatever meaning we assign them. But, to address your question, as a start I would offer that religion is about our relationship with reality, whereas other methodologies such as science concern themselves with facts about reality. — Hippyhead
First, discussion of religion can be greatly improved on philosophy forums if we can get past the extremely common assumption that religion is almost exclusively about belief, ideological assertions. — Hippyhead
Next, it seems to me that, generally speaking, there is considerable more acceptance of doubt in religious communities than is typically demonstrated by atheists and philosophers.
As one example, the Catholic saint Mother Teresa spoke honestly about the deep doubts that she experienced. I don't see that happening too often with atheist philosophers.
BTW, in case it matters, I'm not religious.
The key is that religious belief is a conviction, impossible to change by any other notion or reasoning.
— Merkwurdichliebe
Ok, sorry, not really meaning offense or trying to start a food fight, nothing personal intended, but this is just rubbish. — Hippyhead
Okay, let us address dogma and authority.
dog·ma
/ˈdôɡmə/
Learn to pronounce
noun
noun: dogma; plural noun: dogmas
a principle or set of principles laid down by an authority as incontrovertibly true. — Athena
What does one study to be a religious authority?
What does one study to understand reality?
What you miss in this analysis is that the religious person still has to choose. They are not in a different position to the non-religious in that regard. So if the choice of a non-believer is in some way arbitrary, so is the choice of the believer.
You cannot avoid responsibility for your moral choices by blaming god — Banno
Why isn't this equally true of the believer? They also have a choice, to believe or no. But in their case they pretend that they hand the responsibility over to someone else.
The argument you present here reeks of special pleading — Banno
Very importantly, the person who does wrong does not get away with it — Athena
Oh no! Little banno is upset. Somebody get him his bottle before he starts whining. — Merkwurdichliebe
Liberal education is education for good moral judgment and it results in a much higher morality and has done far more for humanity than religion. Our life span has doubled and in the US few die of starvation, and if they stopped listening to their preachers and Trump, they would stop spreading a deadly virus! Life long liberal education is far superior to being dependent and as a child who must be rewarded or punished to do the right thing. — Athena
We have advanced civilization
I am afraid "believers" hold many false ideas.
So a personal insult is an improvement on special pleading in your moral system. — Banno
Do you reject this plot? Or would the murder be ok in this case? — frank
Merkwurdichliebe
I think morality is a massive engine of emotion. Take away the absolutes and things get sketchy. — frank
And that is the key distinction. The believer believes in something absolute, absolutely. Whereas the nonbeliever believer doesn't. — Merkwurdichliebe
Where specifically is the special pleading? — Merkwurdichliebe
I have a thing for silent, forgotten victims. I dont guess it's really a matter of morality, though. Actually I dont know what it is — frank
belief in god accrues no virtue. — Banno
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