Religion is just people's opinion regarding what god/s want. So it is the best and worst of us, just like secular morality. Both secular ethics and religious ethics rely upon the subjective (or intersubjective) preferences of human beings. — Tom Storm
Religion is much more than people's opinion of what god wants. — Merkwurdichliebe
:100:Valuing human life relies upon a presupposition that harming people is wrong. If a person needs reasons for this, perhaps they need psychological help rather than philosophy? We are a social species that seems to be hard wired for empathy and cooperation. — Tom Storm
We’ll have to dig our way out of that. One way I’ve come to value a person is to recognize her originality. Nothing like her has ever existed, nor ever will, because she’s original, one-of-a-kind, and in that sense effectively priceless. — NOS4A2
The issue I think is that while we are indeed “hard wired” for empathy and compassion, this doesn’t tell us why someone who isn’t hard wired for empathy and compassion (or someone who is racist, sexist, etc) is “wrong.” The fact that natural selection tends to generally choose people who are empathetic and cooperative thing doesn’t mean people who deviate from this view need to be corrected.Valuing human life relies upon a presupposition that harming people is wrong. If a person needs reasons for this, perhaps they need psychological help rather than philosophy? We are a social species that seems to be hard wired for empathy and cooperation.
The fact that natural selection tends to generally choose people who are empathetic and cooperative thing doesn’t mean people who deviate from this view need to be corrected. — Paulm12
Imagine someone comes along and claims they have no respect for the value of human life — Paulm12
(or the value of the lives of certain groups humans) — Paulm12
The issue I think is that while we are indeed “hard wired” for empathy and compassion, this doesn’t tell us why someone who isn’t hard wired for empathy and compassion (or someone who is racist, sexist, etc) is “wrong.” — Paulm12
Well, other people might not want to be treated the exact same way you want to be treated. That’s why the golden rule fails, in my opinion. Better to find out how they want to be treated first of all instead of assuming that everyone wants the same treatment as yourself. — NOS4A2
Well, other people might not want to be treated the exact same way you want to be treated. That’s why the golden rule fails, in my opinion. Better to find out how they want to be treated first of all instead of assuming that everyone wants the same treatment as yourself. — NOS4A2
My understanding, and how it was taught to me, was always that you treat others as you would like to be treated - in other words, to be consulted - to be asked what you like and to have your individual preferences respected. — Tom Storm
Still, assumptions are made, behavior is premised on them. Worse still, it’s self-cantered. You consider yourself before considering anyone else. — NOS4A2
Not much of a rule, then — NOS4A2
That's just your poor interpretation. The golden rule considers all stakeholders on an equal and balanced basis.Worse still, it’s self-cantered. You consider yourself before considering anyone else. — NOS4A2
Hillel’s formulation of the Golden Rule — schopenhauer1
One should never do something to others that one would regard as an injury to one's own self.
- Mahābhārata 13.114.8 (Critical edition)
Thus the Golden Rule is extremely informal. There must be more rigorous ethics underpinning it, and that is the point of ethical reasoning. — schopenhauer1
That's just your poor interpretation. The golden rule considers all stakeholders on an equal and balanced basis.
Some posters demonstrate your observation quite definitively.The thing about the golden rule is not everyone grasps it. — Tom Storm
Indeed! Luke 6:31 has "And as you wish that others would do to you, do so to them."There are many variations. — Tom Storm
My advice is simple, pick your team/place your vote/plant your flag etc as wisely as you can.That’s the problem to begin with. Tastes, manners, proclivities, beliefs, desires, etc. are pluralistic. — NOS4A2
Yeah, this is how I see it too. Hopefully there are some basic principles most people can agree on, and then build a society off of these principles that is able to reinforce them.The point is that societies have to choose which of these attributes we will privilege and what we do about the ones we think are unhelpful. This process is not scientific and relies upon intersubjective agreement and ongoing dialogue
Couldn’t agree more with this. I’ve found the Golden Rule (and it’s variants like the categorical imperitive) to be excellent guides or “starting points” for behavior.Indeed! Luke 6:31 has "And as you wish that others would do to you, do so to them."
A masochistic rapists dream, no doubt, but none of the more easily twisted versions worry me.
The golden rule is an excellent humanist/socialist mission statement imo
Christians, Humanists, Buddhists, etc have a lot of common ground in this area. — Paulm12
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