Feel free to replace the Quran with whatever else applicable:
1. if you're incapable of passing moral judgment on the Quran, then you're not an autonomous moral agent
2. if you can pass moral judgment on the Quran, then the Quran cannot be the definition of morals
3. therefore, you're not an autonomous moral agent, or the Quran cannot be the definition of morals
if you're incapable of passing moral judgment on the Quran, then you're not an autonomous moral agent
1. if you're incapable of passing moral judgment on the Quran, then you're not an autonomous moral agent
2. if you can pass moral judgment on the Quran, then the Quran cannot be the definition of morals
3. therefore, you're not an autonomous moral agent, or the Quran cannot be the definition of morals — jorndoe
We might say that, in principle, autonomous moral agency is a prerequisite for (would-be) autonomous actors. — jorndoe
if someone were to say
"you must severely spank your kids every day, or they'll turn into immoral losers, and, besides, they probably did something wrong anyway"
then I'm thinking most would say that's not the right thing to do, i.e. passing judgment, a bad starting point. — jorndoe
It comes down to this - Judging the morality of other people or beliefs is not an autonomous moral action. Morals have to do with how you live your life, not how other people live theirs. — T Clark
My issue with this is that people with religious morality often seek to change laws and behaviour of others - presumably to please God. We don't just have to consider the Taliban or the Wahhabi Saudis in this enterprise, there are Western Christians working to turn the clock back on science education, gay rights, women's rights, capital punishment, euthanasia - what have you. — Tom Storm
right, yes, coincidental congruence, ...
A bit technical, though. :)
But 2 could fail on that. — jorndoe
There are no accidents. — Master Oogway
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