Hi Paul, I was going to make a comment on that statement above but Jeff250 explained it better.Paul wrote:I believe that a realistically-grounded system of morals must ultimately be based on divinity.
By the way.....welcome to the DBB.

Bettina
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
Hi Paul, I was going to make a comment on that statement above but Jeff250 explained it better.Paul wrote:I believe that a realistically-grounded system of morals must ultimately be based on divinity.
I think you've understood me pretty well. For there to be absolutes, they must be built upon something... you can't derive "morality" from laws of nature and logic.Jeff250 wrote:I don't know if I like where this is going in general though anyways. If you're suggesting that we ought to believe in a higher power so that we can have a basis for morality, this argument just seems like an appeal to consequences. That is, suppose that there was conflicting evidence concerning whether or not a meteor was hurtling toward earth. It wouldn't be right to conclude that a meteor isn't heading toward earth because then all of humanity would be wiped out. I know that all you've said is that objective morality must be based on a higher power, but it sounds like its awfully close to saying that we ought to believe in God because then we would have an objective basis for morality. This last sort of statement I don't believe would be correct to argue.
ThanksBet51987 wrote:Hi Paul, I was going to make a comment on that statement above but Jeff250 explained it better.Paul wrote:I believe that a realistically-grounded system of morals must ultimately be based on divinity.
By the way.....welcome to the DBB.And I also wanted to say your post had a lot of warmth and I like that a lot.
Bettina
You are only telling me that you have neither understood the concept nor the necessity nor the responsibility of freedom, nor do you appreciate it exists, because without it you wouldn't even be able to ask the questions you do.Bet51987 wrote:Your right about hatred. I hate child molesters and would throw the switch myself if given the chance. And, your remark "HOW THE F* COULD YOU LET THIS HAPPEN WITH YOUR F*N DESIGN OF THIS WORLD WHERE YOU ALREADY KNEW WHERE THIS ALL WOULD BE HEADING!" is pretty much why I reject him entirely. He is a false god. I could go on, but I've already gone thru this.
Thanks for trying anyway...![]()
Bettina
Diedel....As an A- honor student my intellect goes a little beyond my nose. However, I agree with you that I get an "F" for religion. I always get an "F" because I'm false. I've got my religious intructor believing that I stand next to god so I've become a good actress as far as religion goes.Diedel wrote:You are only telling me that you have neither understood the concept nor the necessity nor the responsibility of freedom, nor do you appreciate it exists, because without it you wouldn't even be able to ask the questions you do.Bet51987 wrote:Your right about hatred. I hate child molesters and would throw the switch myself if given the chance. And, your remark "HOW THE F* COULD YOU LET THIS HAPPEN WITH YOUR F*N DESIGN OF THIS WORLD WHERE YOU ALREADY KNEW WHERE THIS ALL WOULD BE HEADING!" is pretty much why I reject him entirely. He is a false god. I could go on, but I've already gone thru this.
Thanks for trying anyway...![]()
Bettina
You also don't seem to be capable to look beyond the intellectual tip of your nose, or you would see from my post that God has an answer to your questions as well as a solution for suffering that goes way beyond your very limited understanding of this world.
What I conclude from your replies so far is that actually you are not interested in following lines of thoughts that could lead to undermine your attitude. You are only reading what you like to hear from my posts, completely ignoring the rest and the conclusions that follow from it. Not only from my posts, btw.
If you want to define yourself via opposition, so be it. It's another act of free human will.
Go accuse God some more, I am sure it will make you happy and give you the feelings of warmth you like so much. I am not gonna play your game any more.
Although I think C. S. Lewis makes a very interesting argument in "Mere Christianity".Paul wrote:I don't think you ought to believe in God just to base your morality on something.
I think that Bettina was referring to "natural evils," a problem not so easily addressed as saying that they are our fault.Diedel wrote:Your last remark is a blatant example of this: It is not God who inflicts pain on others, it's human beings.
I think yes, but put "murder" in the place of "killing". If you still start to argue "how can God kill then?" next, let me tell you that God holds the right to judge as well as to execute his judgements, and he does so rightfully. The reason non-Christians cannot acknowledge that is that they do not understand how horrible a crime "sin" (let me use this terminus to describe every action that is in some way or the other directed against God) is.Jeff250 wrote:When you guys say that you believe in absolute morals, what exactly are you saying? That you think there are objective and uncompromisable morals out there, i.e. killing is always wrong, lying is always wrong, etc.?
The "bible god" gave man free will already knowing what evil would be done to the little kids, so to me, he is to blame....and how can you prove me wrong....by showing me lines in a book?Diedel wrote:Bettina,
I couldn't care less of your grade as a student. I can see well enough how far your intellect's reach goes in the discussions going on here, and that's as far as I said already.
You hate God because you personally chose to do so, and I find your arguments short sighted, self centered and ignorant. It's the hatred in you that has looked for and found a target, not the target that has made you hate.
You are deliberately ignoring everything that leads your beliefs and attitude ad absurdum, because you simply don't want to hear it and be proven wrong.
You avoid every argument, be it as clear as it could be, that would require you to question or at least honestly discuss your views.
Your last remark is a blatant example of this: It is not God who inflicts pain on others, it's human beings.
I consider it however a waste of my time to discuss with somebody who only constantly wants her own views confirmed and plainly ignores every valid counter argument, and have come to the conclusion that further discussion with you about faith and God will lead nowhere.
Diedel out
Jeff250 wrote:When you guys say that you believe in absolute morals, what exactly are you saying?
Bet,Bet51987 wrote:The "bible god" gave man free will already knowing what evil would be done to the little kids, so to me, he is to blame....and how can you prove me wrong....by showing me lines in a book?
There is nothing I can do about the "Diedel out" remark. That one hurt. I didn't think you took my disgust for god so personal. Your still ok with me.
Bettina
Geez, with all the past posts I've written about how I felt when I saw old people in church, or read about a little boy or girl that was hurt, this would have been the last thing I thought I would ever hear anyone say to me.Diedel wrote:Oh, and btw, stop yelling at God because of all the cruelty towards helpless children, when your actually angry because of what has happened to yourself.
No, you're selling it short, as I defined it. Revelation is learning from an authoritative source or being taught by an authority. Where it's simply re-transmission of other methods of learning (e.g., in a physics paper--you should be able to reproduce the results from first principles), it isn't that interesting.Tricord wrote: Revelation can be seen as the record or the transmission of the result of any of the other three methods to gain knowledge. While it probably is the most easy way to gain useful knowledge, I discard it as uninteresting.
I disagree with this. As a mathematician, I have learned to trust my mathematical intuitions that "that fact shouldn't be true." Not that I believe it based on that, mind you--but I believe it well enough to try proving it false, first. So I clearly have enough faith in that intuition to burn a few minutes.Intuition is something inherently human -- it is personal and subjective, and as such it is worthless by itself.
Wait a minute. Logic isn't universal, but I said it wasn't universal because secure axioms are hard to come by. Where are you getting determinism from?logic isn't as universal as you think because it doesn't work without determinism; you need determinism as a prerequisite before logic can yield any useful result as a method to gain knowledge.
this of course would infringe on free will. However, I have lost count of the number of "near misses" I've had in my life time, not to mention the ones I've seen in my duaghter's. This doesn't even take into account of the near misses I'm NOT aware of.Paul wrote:..... However, I certainly believe God knew that the person would get hurt and has the power to stop the hurt....
Kilarin wrote:BUT, and here is the important point, we can ONLY have a debate or discussion about the issue IF we agree that there really IS such a thing as right and wrong. IF there is an absolute judge of ethics that is outside of ourselves that we are attempting to measure up to. And THAT is what we mean (or at least what *I* mean) by saying there is such a thing as absolute truth, and an absolute standard of ethics.
Throughout the ages, there have been a lot of suggested measuring rods for ethics that do not involve God. Some might suggest that we ought to perform actions that produce the best net happiness. Others would say that we ought to follow the "categorical imperative." How would choosing one of these standards be different than choosing the standard in the Bible? And I don't mean that question in the sense that you may think that the Bible might be slightly better or worse at the job. I mean in principle, how would it be different? Is it because God would provide an "ultimate judgment"?Lothar wrote:The way I would argue it is simple: most of us would agree that we can say definitively "the Nazis were wrong to do what they did." And we think we can say to other people "it was wrong for you to do that thing in that situation; you shouldn't have hit that guy." That is, most of us believe there is some standard by which we can say someone has acted right or wrong -- and while we may not know what exactly the standard is all the time, the fact that we even discuss ethics demonstrates that we think there is one.
What determines whether the consequences are good or bad? Suppose you kill a street bum with no friends or relatives. He was an economic drain on society, an eyesore to everyone who saw him, and he decreased their happiness by making them feel guilty. Based on the consequences, maybe killing this guy was a good thing!Jeff250 wrote:Still, why is it necessary to even have an external standard to begin with? I mean, if you can't take an action and explain why it would be wrong according to the consequences themselves, then it probably shouldn't be considered wrong anyways.
Why do you think it is wrong to murder? What are these "consequences" you keep mentioning, and how are they to be judged? Someone somewhere has to determine whether the consequences are "good" or "bad," and if that person is a human, another human could just as well determine the other way. You need someone external to the system to establish an absolute framework.Jeff250 wrote:I think that using an external standard such as God that doesn't directly correspond with the consequences of one's actions is an unnecessary abstraction. (I'm not saying that the Bible doesn't often explain why some things are wrong with regard to the consequences, but ultimately using God as the ultimate standard comes down to "because God said so."). But consider this: If God said that murder was right, would that be ethical? I would hope not. That's because somehow we can judge that it would be wrong to murder according to its consequences in themselves without God.
Jeff, I recommend that you read the entirety of Leviticus and Deuteronomy, Murder is explained quite thoroughly. ..It's a long read I know, but God gives some very complete parameters to judge by.Jeff250 wrote:...murder is always wrong." I think this once again leaves us in exactly the same position we were in before the Bible. Well, what exactly is murder? Killing that is wrong? So what makes something right or wrong? It seems that at some point or another, it just becomes the same old question again and it's up to human contrivance. Then again, this part may be a moot point. I know that to many people it's necessary to have an absolute moral standard, but I recall anyone saying that it had to be in any way revealed to us?
A standard that says how people "should" behave comes from something that is valued (morals come from values, not from thin air), and nature doesn't value anything but following the laws of physics. A standard that says "maximize happiness" comes from a shared cultural valuing of happiness, and there's no way to extend that beyond your culture to one that doesn't share that same value. You can't say "the Nazis were wrong" unless you have a transcendent basis for saying happiness should be valued the most. A standard that says to follow the Categorical Imperative ("act such that if everyone acted like you, the world would rock") comes from individual values of fairness, but you have no authority on which to extend that to someone who doesn't share that value -- if somebody else acts according to the principle "game the system and abuse the fact that everyone else acts according to the CI" you have no recourse.Jeff250 wrote:Throughout the ages, there have been a lot of suggested measuring rods for ethics that do not involve God.
How do you determine which consequences are good or bad, right or wrong? Again, this comes back to what you value. Many of us would disagree with each other about whether specific actions were right or wrong, even given all the same facts about the situation, simply because we value things differently from each other.if you can't take an action and explain why it would be wrong according to the consequences themselves.....
Exactly right. Using God as the ultimate standard says "God's choice of what to value is the correct choice for all people".ultimately using God as the ultimate standard comes down to "because God said so."
That God would have to have an ethical system based on values, in which "murder is right" fits. It's not simply a matter of saying "murder is right", but of saying "life is valued below [other things] such that murder ends up being the right thing to do whenever [other things] come in to play".If God said that murder was right, would that be ethical?
I would strongly disagree with Diedel here. There is no absolute morality -- it's not that killing is ALWAYS wrong regardless of circumstance, or even that murder is ALWAYS wrong regardless of circumstance. Rather, there is a value system in which killing and murder both damage one of the things that is valued, and killing and murder only become acceptable if, in the specific circumstance, they protect or enhance other things that are valued more than they damage the value of "life".Earlier, I asked if absolute morality were something like "killing is always wrong," to which Diedel responded to the effect of "not quite--murder is always wrong."
A few years ago there was a woman in texas, who killed all of her children. She claimed that God told her to do so. Lets assume that God did tell her to kill her children. Would she be right in doing so?You need someone external to the system to establish an absolute framework.
Why the "ought"? The only reason we "ought" to increase net happiness is that it would be GOOD to increase net happines. In other words, the ought assumes an external standard.Jeff250 wrote:Some might suggest that we ought to perform actions that produce the best net happiness. Others would say that we ought to follow the "categorical imperative."
You can explain why something would be inconvieniant according to the consequences, but how can you explain that it would be WRONG? I elaborated my position on absolutes in this postJeff250 wrote:Still, why is it necessary to even have an external standard to begin with? I mean, if you can't take an action and explain why it would be wrong according to the consequences themselves, then it probably shouldn't be considered wrong anyways.
God's "Goodness" is not arbitrary. See Aquinas: "Summa Theologica".Jeff250 wrote:If God said that murder was right, would that be ethical?
True, but a very UNATRACTIVE answer. The only possible reason I can come up with for planting a fake fossile record is to decieve us. And creating light from stars that never existed just seems... untidy. I really do NOT like this option, and I think it is unecessary to call upon it.Diedel wrote:if there is an omnipotent God, he may easily have created the universe(s) and our earth in an instant and have it look like everything was ages old ("built-in" age so to speak).
I'll have to disagree with you there. If God's intention was to create a universe that was red in tooth and claw; where creatures lives were nasty, brutal and short; where parasites eat their victims alive and the beautiful tiger can only survive by ripping the life out of a baby gazelle... Well, if that was the way it was MEANT to be I have some SERIOUS questions for God.Diedel wrote:Nature isn't evil. Being evil has something to do with your motivation and purposefully executed actions.
This IS one of the difficulties of abandoning a young earth theory. But it CAN be easily reconciled. The Bible teaches us that Satan fell before (presumably long before) the garden of eden incident. The assumption would have to be that somehow, Satan ended up having influence on this universe from long before man arrived, probably from the big bang. We weren't given the details on this event because, as C. S. Lewis says, "That's someone ELSES story". The Eden story then takes on a very different perspective. The first true Man and Woman were were placed in a perfect, isolated, protected garden and given a chance to regain rulership of this universe. They chose to stay under the rulership of Satan. A very unfortunant choice.Jeff250 wrote:Well now I'm curious. For those of you that accept the Bible and an old earth and to some extent evolution, how would you explain the existence of natural evil before man was created?
um.. what happened to "You shall not murder."?? o_0Lothar wrote: I would strongly disagree with Diedel here. There is no absolute morality -- it's not that killing is ALWAYS wrong regardless of circumstance, or even that murder is ALWAYS wrong regardless of circumstance.
Where is #2 coming from? I have never heard that anywhere. People giving into temptation, I've heard of. I am just curious.Kilarin wrote:Which is, even from a Christian perspective, a LOT of speculation and very few facts. But from a Christian perspective, it's not actually considered to be an important question. We have been told the following:
1: God created everything that is.
2: Satan is in control of this universe, and thats the reason it is in such bad shape.
3: Mankind's choice is in some manner responsible for Satan being in charge.
4: Christ came to reconcile God and Man. To suffer the results of sin so that we wouldn't have to. To do the one thing Divinity had never done, surrender, so that He can teach US to surrender.
Anything else is just gravy.
What I mean to say is natural calamity, such as disease, flood, etc. It may be the wrong term, but it was a term I've heard used before.Diedel wrote:what is "natural evil"? Nature isn't evil. Being evil has something to do with your motivation and purposefully executed actions.
OK, I agree that this is wrong, and I could go on to explain how the perpetrator hurts for doing the deed, how it is deleterious to society, or how life has inherent value, but how are you in any different of an obligation? Does God make ethical decisions arbitrarily, or are they not for our best interests? If you were in a society that did not believe in God, how would you explain why this is wrong?Paul wrote:What determines whether the consequences are good or bad? Suppose you kill a street bum with no friends or relatives. He was an economic drain on society, an eyesore to everyone who saw him, and he decreased their happiness by making them feel guilty. Based on the consequences, maybe killing this guy was a good thing!
What if everything you said so far was true? There is a God, and he legislates right and wrong. But now I'm going to add something: suppose that there is no heaven or hell or any sort of divine reward or retribution. Everyone gets the same thing when they die. How is having an externally-founded framework significant now?Paul wrote:Someone somewhere has to determine whether the consequences are "good" or "bad," and if that person is a human, another human could just as well determine the other way.
Well, different cultures may disagree about what happiness consists in, but can you really point out a person that would not be happy with happiness? I think that just the way the terms are defined makes it impossible.Lothar wrote:A standard that says "maximize happiness" comes from a shared cultural valuing of happiness, and there's no way to extend that beyond your culture to one that doesn't share that same value.
Whereas otherwise, you could tell him that he is going to hell? Or what's the significance in having an external framework?Lothar wrote:if somebody else acts according to the principle "game the system and abuse the fact that everyone else acts according to the CI" you have no recourse.
I agree. (I think that a godless argument could be made against Nazism, but first I'd like to know:) Why is it necessary that we have the ability to judge other cultures? Would the universe fold in on itself if we couldn't?Lothar wrote:But I think all of us would say, Nazi Germany really WAS wrong
Well, I think that this demands the question whether something is right because God says that it is right or whether God says something because is just right. I really think that if a God said that murder was OK that that would still be unethical. The only reason why following God's commandments would work would be if we thought that they would be in our best interests to begin with. Otherwise, an external framework is worthless.Lothar wrote:Now, I think that fictional God's value system is messed up, because it doesn't match the value system my God has given. I don't see any reason why, in principle, there couldn't exist a universe with a God that didn't strongly value life... but it's not this universe.
If you don't mind, I would be interested to hear your explanation of how it is deleterious to society (and why that matters) and how life as inherent value.Jeff250 wrote:OK, I agree that this is wrong, and I could go on to explain how the perpetrator hurts for doing the deed, how it is deleterious to society, or how life has inherent value, but how are you in any different of an obligation? Does God make ethical decisions arbitrarily, or are they not for our best interests? If you were in a society that did not believe in God, how would you explain why this is wrong?Paul wrote:What determines whether the consequences are good or bad? Suppose you kill a street bum with no friends or relatives. He was an economic drain on society, an eyesore to everyone who saw him, and he decreased their happiness by making them feel guilty. Based on the consequences, maybe killing this guy was a good thing!
Supposing God created the universe, he would therefore have the power to define what was right and what was wrong. Now, if there are no consequences, doing what is right may not be most pleasurable to you, and you may not care about whether what you are doing is actually right or wrong (based on the absolute framework). On the other hand, if there is no afterlife, there is not really any point to this life either... sure, you might have some fun, but then you'll be dead and it won't have mattered. Meaningless. Pointless.Jeff250 wrote:What if everything you said so far was true? There is a God, and he legislates right and wrong. But now I'm going to add something: suppose that there is no heaven or hell or any sort of divine reward or retribution. Everyone gets the same thing when they die. How is having an externally-founded framework significant now?Paul wrote:Someone somewhere has to determine whether the consequences are "good" or "bad," and if that person is a human, another human could just as well determine the other way.
What about sadists and masochists? But what's so good about happiness, anyway? It's just a chemical response to stimuli, realized as electrical impulses passing among cells that happen to form a brain.Jeff250 wrote:Well, different cultures may disagree about what happiness consists in, but can you really point out a person that would not be happy with happiness? I think that just the way the terms are defined makes it impossible.Lothar wrote:A standard that says "maximize happiness" comes from a shared cultural valuing of happiness, and there's no way to extend that beyond your culture to one that doesn't share that same value.
Actually, since I believe God created the univese and the absolute morality which allows judgments, I think the universe would never have existed.Jeff250 wrote:Whereas otherwise, you could tell him that he is going to hell? Or what's the significance in having an external framework?Lothar wrote:if somebody else acts according to the principle "game the system and abuse the fact that everyone else acts according to the CI" you have no recourse.
I agree. (I think that a godless argument could be made against Nazism, but first I'd like to know:) Why is it necessary that we have the ability to judge other cultures? Would the universe fold in on itself if we couldn't?Lothar wrote:But I think all of us would say, Nazi Germany really WAS wrong
Why is anything "just right" other than that God said it is? If there is no external framework, you can't say anything is "just right."Jeff250 wrote:Well, I think that this demands the question whether something is right because God says that it is right or whether God says something because is just right. I really think that if a God said that murder was OK that that would still be unethical. The only reason why following God's commandments would work would be if we thought that they would be in our best interests to begin with. Otherwise, an external framework is worthless.Lothar wrote:Now, I think that fictional God's value system is messed up, because it doesn't match the value system my God has given. I don't see any reason why, in principle, there couldn't exist a universe with a God that didn't strongly value life... but it's not this universe.
That's beside the point. The question is not what people would be happy with. It's what is ethical or good -- and I don't think it makes sense to just assume happiness must automatically be ethical or good. (Even so, there are people who would be unhappy with other peoples' happiness, and whole cultures that have considered other cultures' happiness as completely irrelevant. See WWII Germany, the Civil War South, and so on.)Jeff250 wrote:can you really point out a person that would not be happy with happiness?
The point isn't that I could *convince him* or *force him* or anything of the sort. It's not that I could threaten him into compliance.Whereas otherwise, you could tell him that he is going to hell? Or what's the significance in having an external framework?Lothar wrote:if somebody else acts according to the principle "game the system and abuse the fact that everyone else acts according to the CI" you have no recourse.
I'm not saying it's necessary. I'm saying it's something both of us believe to be true.Why is it necessary that we have the ability to judge other cultures? Would the universe fold in on itself if we couldn't?
By definition, something is right if it matches up with the right value system. The "right value system" can't come from nature -- because all nature does is follows the laws of physics. It doesn't care one bit about "right" or "wrong", only energy and entropy and such. It has to come from something that can care about values. If it doesn't come from God, it has to come from a mind bigger than God, which means we've mis-applied the title of God.I think that this demands the question whether something is right because God says that it is right or whether God says something because is just right.
I'm not arguing that the external framework is useful or in our best interests or significant or helpful. Only that we both already believe such a thing exists. Its relevance, usefulness, etc. is of no importance.The only reason why following God's commandments would work would be if we thought that they would be in our best interests to begin with. Otherwise, an external framework is worthless.
So why does God call Rahab "righteous for what she did"? What she did was she lied in order to hide the Hebrew spies. And she isn't said to be forgiven for it, but RIGHTEOUS. That's pretty disturbing from the "not lying is a moral absolute" perspective.Duper wrote:When God says, do not murder or lie, that's absolute.