So either killing other human beings is not against an innate moral sense or it's not immoral under particular circumstances. Can you at least outline the circumstances where it's not immoral to kill other human beings? — praxis
My remark was not about the length but about the clarity of the argument. I suspect that more thought about how exactly to formulate your points more clearly will actually lead to a shorter post.
It is also very difficult to have a debate about many claims at once because it becomes hard to follow which claim some comment applies to. Concentrating on the most important claims (you decide which that might be) also leads to shorter posts. After clarifying one claim, the debate can then move on to the next. (This is the reason why I picked only few claims--those which seemed clear enough to discuss while still central enough to what I assume your post is about.)
So, no, on the contrary I would have preferred a shorter post. In some parts the claims were very vague--especially beginning with "they...". It wasn't clear to me who you refer to and it wasn't clear to me what the point to be thought through is at that instance. — ivb
I'm not talking about a specific belief unique to one side of an argument. My point is about the use of logic and reasoning to support one's arguments and claims.
In most of your arguments, you don't engage with the question of actually justifying your position with logic. You just repeat some assertion of what athiesm or materialism does. You don't engage in terms of logic to actually justify your claims over oppositions. You don't give us a reason to think your position is correct over others. — TheWillowOfDarkness
On a side note: Let's not bring Kant into this and just stick to the claims at hand. (Comparing oneself with that calibre can only bring ridicule.) — ivb
Also yes, reasoning is a minimal requirement for posts here, if you don't like it, kindly find somewhere else you can be unreasonable among. — StreetlightX
"Reason" is that which operates from atheistic premises. That which goes against atheism is against "Reason".
And so if you go against "Reason" (which is code for atheism)- then you need to be censored. — Ram
Every 3rd thread on the front page is about deligion*
"The forum hates religion!"
Get over yourself. — StreetlightX
Not enough indifference. Still treats the problem of God's existence as a legitimate question, even if answered in the negative. Only true atheism is: 'God? What's that?' 'Never heard of it' 'Lets get on with it then'. Ruthless, uncaring abandonment of the debate as beneath the dignity of sense, let alone truth.
To treat God like we treat Quetzalcoatl: an artefact of distant bemusement. — StreetlightX
Do the atheists want a discussion or do they just want a space where they can bash theism and where theists can't respond? — Ram
I am new to the forum, in what way have you been censored? Were there reasons given? — DingoJones
I'm not on staff, so my comments do not represent there reasons in my comments, but your criticism had been terrible throughout, a series of posts with many unsupported or outright mistaken claims about athiesm and materialism.
You do not engage with ideas on the subjects in most cases. When people try to engage your criticism, you generally do not respond in the space of logic and reasons. You just repeat an assertion of how atheists and materialists must be terrible.
Suffice to say, the reasons your claims attract censure is likely because the break forum rules with regards to giving supported arguments. Most of the time you aren't reasoning about what is true, you are just engaged in a practice of attacking a terrible atheists and materialists. In an environment which is dedicated to reasoning and pursuit of truth, just spewing attacks against you enemies doesn't cut it. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The "Enlightenment" is so "enlightened" I might get banned if I think outside its perspective, as having an alternate view is deemed unacceptable by its guardians. — Ram
These materialists want everything to fit into their preconceived framework and reject things not on the basis of whether or not they're true but whether they fit into the preconceived framework. This is no way to search for truth.
Materialists literally cannot think outside of their preconceived framework. Islamic epistemology or the epistemology of The Varieties of Religious Experience.... these epistemologies are literally unthinkable for them. They think the epistemology handed down from the Enlightenmennt is the only conceivable epistemology and can't conceive of other epistemologies, much less evaluate them. — Ram
I apologize for not addressing all of your points, but it seems to me that they all would require some work in their exposition to warrant a proper debate. — ivb
My desire is to show that there is a way out for the atheist who is not a follower of desires and that there is a way out if a person wants to pursue it. — Ram
Firstly, the claim that "atheism gives them a license to do whatever they want" would require a separate argument as it is not self-evident to me: While atheism might not give behavioural prescriptions, it does not rule out other sources of behavioural rules. I fail to see how it would grant any license at all. What those other (subjective/intersubjective/objective) sources of morality might be, is discussed in large parts of moral philosophy and ethics and there is no need (and not enough space) to repeat that discussion here. (20-50 years of study would not be enough. And I'm sorry to say that, but if you think that you have grasped it all, then I'm inclined to think that you have not understood it. This is meant as an expression of my hesitation to take your word on that, not as a judgement of your intelligence.)
Secondly, the claim that "atheism leads to the conclusion that life is meaningless" seems to require a very thorough argument as well: Again, atheism might not provide a meaning for your or anyone's life, but it does not rule out meaning either. And again whatever you might intend by 'meaning' can have sources elsewhere. (I personally have found sources for both morality and meaning--albeit subjective.)
Therefore, although you seem to imagine atheism to be a dark and desolate place, it is not necessarily so. Yes, it might require some work to establish all of those things. (It's worth the time and thought for me at least. And I don't see anyone solving the theodicee problem anytime soon.) — ivb
With all due respect for my fellow atheists here, I don't think you are helping the argument.
Moral realism, innate morality etc... is no real justification for morality. All i have to say to you is, like he's been saying all along, I feel/think differently, and we are back at moral relativism. Why should I put my moral beliefs aside for yours?
There is no objective morality without god, you're trying to have your cake and eat it too. — ChatteringMonkey
a person whose heart is pure will not be satisfied with atheism and want a way out- will crave for there to be a God (and thus justice as without God this world is one of injustice and there is no justice for people) — Ram
Materialism's gaping hole is its brute-fact, and Materialists inability to define the "objective reality", "objective existence" and "actuality" that they attribute to this material universe, to argue for Materialism over Idealism.
Some Materialists declare that the world of their Materialism is absurd (They're called "absurdists"). Of course they're right about that. ...but it doesn't seem to make them question their Materialism.
I'm dismayed by the way this thread is going. Yes, Ram's post spoke of some negative things, but so, uniformly, do the shorter posts of our aggressive Atheists.
When I reply to aggressive Atheists here, I reply to at least some of the points that they make in their posts and which I disagree with. That's what a reply is. I don't use one-line dismissals of what they say.
Michael Ossipoff — Michael Ossipoff
Why so negative? This is an excessively long post, and the vast majority of it is a denigration of others rather than an explanation of your own position.
If atheism conforms to your desires, perhaps you won't want to leave atheism- so as not to leave desires. I hope you are not like an animal. The "Enlightenment" is so "enlightened" I might get banned if I think outside its perspective, as having an alternate view is deemed unacceptable by its guardians.
— Ram
I too am unenlightened. But you might well get banned if you go on in this way. Stop telling us how awful we are or are going to be, as if you were seeking virtual martyrdom at the hands of the terrible atheists, and tell us what you have that is better. My background is more Christian, and my interest has turned more to Buddhism, so I know relatively little about Islam. But you are not making it very attractive at the moment. — unenlightened
The "Enlightenment" is so "enlightened" I might get banned if I think outside its perspective, as having an alternate view is deemed unacceptable by its guardians. — Ram
I'll start simple.
Killing other human beings is wrong according to your belief in an innate moral sense. Adherents of theistic religions kill other human beings, in mass in some circumstances. The very notion of Jihad (holly war) is an exemplar of corruption. — praxis
Okay, so you wouldn't find it personally insulting. Just kind of dumb? — S
Would you find it insulting if I suggested that theists support terrorism? I could show you this video, but I think you get the point. — S
That's insulting to a lot of people. I think that maybe if you had a taste of your own medicine, you might realise why it's insulting. — S
??? It is the exact issue. — praxis
Yes, persuasive to me. — praxis
Wasn't it you who posted that video of people expressing sympathy with people who partake in incest in a topic that's supposed to be about atheist morality? — S
Can you present a persuasive argument against the thought that theism or religious beliefs in general are not the corruption? — praxis
Atheists are human and according to your beliefs humans have an innate moral base. Problem solved. — praxis
The flaw with any religion or individual claiming a moral basis that applies to a group is obviously evident when you understand how a human experiences 'life'.
Your body gathers raw input through its senses which your subconscious translates into concepts using the knowledge and experience you have available. You are only aware of the end product, the subconciously translated concepts, not the raw input.
When you discuss Islam, you discuss your own personal understanding of it which is derived from fundamental aspects such as your society and family culture, your language and all sorts of experiences you've had. That knowledge is from where? Your teachers taught you based on their understanding which was taught to them by others and so on. The very religous texts your belief is based on was written in a culture which no longer exists in that exact form and is translated by other humans using their own understanding to decide the correct wording.
If you follow this to its inevitable conclusion, you end up in a place where each individual lives according to their current understanding of the universe and everything in it. No two individuals understanding of a religion or its moral code is going to be exactly the same. And that understanding is subject to change every second you experience life unless you go to great lengths to isolate yourself from anything new or different.
Hence why religions in general always include some form of isolation policy. — Kramar
I support secularism and I don't personally like or feel comfortable with hard-core divine-command-theorists — yazata
on the other hand it's... what?... personal intuition? Gut feeling? — yazata
Seems like Trump is part of a wider global or at least Western trend, in which 'average' people are trying to gain some control over the direction of their countries within the context of an increasingly globalized, neoliberal world order. Outsourcing of manufacturing jobs + mass immigration + increased automation + cultural shifts have combined to create a sense of disorientation and alienation for the masses.
To be fair I think these larger issues should be factored in as contributing causes rather than simply dismissing everything other than racism and xenophobia in a reductionist way, although these also play a role in scapegoating the 'other' both within (elites who benefited a great deal from previous arrangements) and without. Once Trump is gone these issues will linger on and need to be addressed; the fact that they weren't handled proactively by previous leadership - at least not well enough - is part of the reason for Trump's ascendancy in the first place.
IMO as always. Too easy to lay the entirety of the blame for our disturbing situation on dumb, uneducated, racist Trump worshipers, as if things were running smoothly and all was well until he showed up. That wasn't the case, and we should start talking honestly about possible ways to alleviate the suffering of our nation's less fortunate citizens moving forward. — Erik
I'd also add the unpopular opinion that if you are a middle or lower class, patriotic, religiously inclined white person then the alternative to an imperfect (to state it mildly) Republican Party under Trump's leadership is not ideal. Think about it. You have been made the enemy, the 'other' in a Schmittian way, for progressives whose overall worldview is radically opposed to yours in almost every essential aspect.
That 'lesser of two evils' position helps explain why, I think, so many white people whose economic interests would seem to align with the Dems choose to vote against those interests by supporting free market Republicans. The cultural issues outweigh the economic ones. And outside of Bernie Sanders I don't think the Dems have hammered home that more class-oriented economic message very well. This shift away from working class whites started with Clinton if not earlier. Listen to them rattle of the groups they represent: blacks, Latinos, women, young people...
So I'd ask, Why should those maligned lower and middle class white citizens vote for a party that's made it very clear they're not welcome under the Democratic Party's umbrella? Or is this an exaggeration? Perhaps I'm mistaken but calculating shifting demographic trends seems to be the preferred tactic of Dems. Probably a winning strategy in the not-too-distant future. Trump cultivates those right-wing resentments while Dems do so among traditionally marginalized racial (and other) groups. We're pretty much fucked. — Erik
There really were no free-market Republicans. This was merely dog whistle politics. The GOP slogans of "smaller government" never once brought about an actually smaller government. "Smaller government" was simply code for --- "we'll cut off welfare, which will hurt colored people." Poor white people in the USA have often gone along with policies that hurt them, simply because they liked the idea of hurting colored people in the process. The same with slogans like "law and order," which was code for, "we'll lock up colored people."
Since Trump is now out in the open with white-nationalism being the party platform of the GOP, the dog-whistles have gone silent, and now we have blatant white-nationalism as a matter of policy. From the pardoning of a racist sheriff in Arizona, which was a high-five to the Nazis in Virginia, and an assault against the judicial branch of government, to the racist symbolic border wall, to the myths about lazy Hispanic immigrants stealing our jobs. If they're so lazy, then how can they be stealing jobs?
America First was the slogan of Americans who supported Hitler before our entry into WWII, and it is not a coincidence that this is now the slogan of Trump and the GOP. — LD Saunders
There are clearly atheists who believe they have such a basis. Moral realism is a position which at least a plurality of atheists hold. I'm not sure of the exact numbers, but I've come across it enough to see that there are those who believe as much. In fact I'd say that as long as there exists a person who believes two things to be true they'd count -- as long as there exists a person who believes God does not exist, and believes that at least one statement is both a moral statement and true, then I'd be inclined to say that it's at least possible to hold both beliefs.
But you want a demonstration, and not just an example. And you're interested in not just consistency, but whether or not the foundational principle of morality is strong, rather than weak.
Am I right so far?
If so -- it'd be helpful to hash out what counts as a demonstration, what makes a moral foundational principle strong rather than weak, and how what you currently believe actually fits those criteria in a way that does not assume its conclusion.
Because if submitting to Allah is good because submitting to Allah is good then clearly no atheist will be able to meet that criteria, but it will also just sort of assume the belief from the outset in a way that rational disagreement or discussion couldn't take place. — Moliere
You still haven't answer my suggestion that convention or agreement in a given group is the basis for a non-objective morality. It isn't necessary that everybody literally agrees with it, it's enough that most do, tacit or explict, or that this happens via representation...
To take your example, it doesn't matter that the Columbine Shooters personally believed that what they did was not immoral. They would be put into jail anyway, not because God ordained it, but because (the large majority of) people collectively agree on the rule that murder is wrong. — ChatteringMonkey
So we must have some fundamental principle of morality that is both secular, and believes there is a right and a wrong -- we might say something akin to the way we know that 1 and 1 make 2, regardless of our belief, we can also know that there are moral propositions which are true regardless of what we believe about them. If we had a theory that fit both of those requirements then it would seem that we could conclude that it is at least not necessarily the case that secular beliefs imply subjective morality.
Yes or no?
I am not degrading you or asking my questions rhetorically. I'm laying a groundwork for meaningful disagreement. I surely disagree with your assertion, but that's neither here nor there. Disagreement isn't interesting unto itself -- else you just end up re-asserting what you already believe in increasingly strong tones.
What's interesting is how and why we disagree -- hence why I'm asking questions about what are seemingly simple words. But usually they are not so simple or innocuous as they might seem at first blush. — Moliere
Again, you're only demonstrating your lack of understanding about what moral relativism entails. It does not entail, "Do whatever you want! There's no right or wrong!". — S
Yes, I have a combative and critical style. Get over it. If your thoughts and justifications for religion can't withstand that kind of exposure, then they can't be of much worth, philosophically.
— S
If you think philosophical matters are best addressed combatively, then we must disagree. Discussion is a co-operative consideration of matters concerning (in this case) religion. It's not a fight (combat), or it shouldn't be if we hope to gain the most benefit from our discussions. — Pattern-chaser
What's a basis? Is it the same thing as saying that morality is objective? So that your second statement is a restatement of the first?
And why would a secular position entail necessary subjectivity? Why not simply say that a secular morality is subjective? What's the difference?
I don't think that atheists are quite as homogeneous as you believe. As if you could just read Sartre and then know what all consistent atheists should believe. — Moliere
Subjective morality wouldn't mean that morality isn't real, it would just mean that it's subjective — S
The clue is in the name. The basis for subjective morality is... drum roll... subjectivity! — S
But one thing's for sure, there certainly is a basis, even if you refuse to acknowledge it as such, perhaps because it doesn't suit your agenda, which appears to be to discredit these positions by any means. — S
So, how is it that Trump, a person who seems only interested in promoting himself, is supported by about a third of the American population? Is it that they don't comprehend good and evil? — LD Saunders
Jews, Christians, Moslems, Buddhists, Zoroastrians, Hindus, Jains, etc. have been busy trying to explain/defend/make sense of their religions for a long time.
Man is the author of the Gods. Our Gods generally demand a great deal more of humans than we feel like delivering on most days, so we disappoint our gods. We have to find a way to get around the problem of disappointing, angering, and enraging our various gods, less they smite us. How can our created gods harm us? Of course they can't, but bad things are always happening -- fire, wind, earthquakes, boils, itchy skin, tumors, stinging wasps, snakes, poisonous algae, ponzi schemers, lions, communists, radiation leaks, rats... there are a lot of things out there waiting to get at us, and periodically succeed. We can charge all these bad things to our Gods' accounts.
I found it liberating to just stop thinking about it from the POV that I was liable to eternal damnation--or heaven, either.
BTW, I think creating gods was a major (the major?) cultural achievement of either the very early modern period or the very late stone age period -- around 20,000-30,000 years ago, give or take 15 minutes. — Bitter Crank
There are, however, quite a few Americans who believe in a divine-command theory of morality — LD Saunders
(in fact the Muslim Ibn Rushd is thought by some to be the father of modern secularism, though Wikipedia as usual dumbs it down.) — SnoringKitten
Of course there is. If morality from a secular position is necessarily subjective, then that subjectivity is the basis for secular morality. That's the basis for determining what is and isn't immoral. The contradiction arises from you saying, on the one hand, that there is no basis, but then, on the other hand, suggesting that there is a basis.
Moral relativists have a basis for morality, so you can't lack a basis for morality and be a moral relativist.
You're either not saying what you really mean or you can't do basic logic. And you've given me reason to doubt that you know much about what you're actually talking about. — S
There are normative criteria to define what constitutes doing philosophy. They are pretty broad and yet what you are doing seems to fall outside their province. — Janus
There is simply no secular basis for morality.
— Ram
They claim that religions are immoral- but they have no basis for determining what is and isn't immoral.
— Ram
Morality from a secular position is necessarily subjective.
— Ram
they lack of a basis for morality and are moral relativists
— Ram
You've contradicted yourself. — S
Actually, Christians - above I think I qualified that as real Christians - don't. If you meet self-proclaimed Christians who do, they aren't.
Not everyone correctly distinguishes between belief and fact. Peel those you speak to back a bit, and they should correctly revert to belief. If they don't, they're 1) ignorant, 2) not Christians, or 3) at best part Christians. Some fundamentalists fall into this latter category.
But this isn't up for debate, it's simply the fact of the matter. Move on. — tim wood