
Is this Christian claim arrogant ?
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But with God, it isn't a matter of opinion. He himself is holy, meaning that he is separate, apart from us, unlike any other. He is not like man (Num. 23:19) and he doesn't have the sinful nature of man. He created us and he created the standards by which we are to live based on his unchanging sin-free nature. Because he does not change, his understanding of right and wrong, good and evil does not change. His laws are in place for all humankind forever. They are not based on whim or fancy, but on what he knows is best for us.To repeat, even with a god of some sort, you still are left with moral relativism.
Gods' opinion about morality DOES NOT constitute a absolute one.
Resident moral subjectivist here. Morality is circumstantial and relativistic full stop, adding a god here doesn't help. When is it okay to take a slave? According to the Bible, when you win a war, when the slave is a foreigner. Oh but that's only for Israelites, Christians don't do that anymore. So much for universal, timeless or unchanging.Elijah John wrote: So the first few posts here are a concession that atheist morality is circumstantial and relativistic?
Golden rule maybe?Or even any atheist ethical maxim that is shared with Theists?
Nah. It is a maxim only because I, a subject, says it is.If so, wouldn't that fit the criteria of "objective morality"?
Bust Nak wrote:On the Golden Rule we agree. But we disagree on whether it's subjective or not.Elijah John wrote:Golden rule maybe?Or even any atheist ethical maxim that is shared with Theists?
Nah. It is a maxim only because I, a subject, says it is.If so, wouldn't that fit the criteria of "objective morality"?
Also, is "the ends justifies the means" part of relativistic, circumstantial and subjective atheist morality? General question, not just to you BN.
There is arrogance in presuming you have a pail full of water and that it's full because you filled it when it's not clear if any of that is true.Overcomer wrote: It isn't any more arrogant to say that objective universal moral values exist and do so because of God than to say that I have a pail full of water and the reason it's full is because I filled it in my kitchen sink. Where's the arrogance in that?
That's the important factor.Nor does it imply that those who don't believe in God can't do deeds that are morally right. They just don't recognize where that conscience comes from.
False by counter-example. I do live as if morality is relative, more accurately as if morality is subjective.Even those who insist that they believe morality is relative never live that way. They can't, because it isn't possible.
Again, not me, I don't do that.If a pedophile kidnapped a three-year-old and brutalized that child, those who insist that everyone is free to choose what is morally right and wrong, whether others agree with it or not, will be outraged by this fact because, quite simply, it is NEVER right to do that to child, not in any culture in any time period.
Not so. More below...As soon as someone insists morality is relative, then they remove their right to criticize anybody for doing anything, however heinous.
You can't get an ought from an is full stop. Naturalistic worldview or not.If we are all the results of random chance, then human beings are really no more important or special than a housefly or a snail. We can all be squashed with impunity because, with a naturalistic worldview to which many atheists subscribe, there is no ought. There's just is. And you can't get an ought from an is which is, of course, one of the things that makes naturalism not just a poor, but untenable lens through which to view the world.
How is this a problem when those without power also get to decide what they think is good or bad, right or wrong?Those with the most power get to make the rules and decide what they think is good or bad, right or wrong. That's the problem with relativism.
What do you mean if? Didn't you just claim that it's impossible? You are undermining your own thesis with this question.But I return to my example of the pedophile who brutalizes toddlers. Do you think, Willum, that it is ever right to do so? If you do, God help you!
It came from us human beings.Where does that understanding of right and wrong come from?
That appears to be a non-sequitur, how did you jump from the premise "there is no inherent right or wrong" to "right or wrong cannot have came from human?"it can't come from human beings even if atheists insist that it does because, according to their naturalistic worldview, everything just is and there is no right or wrong inherent in anything.
This is such a common misconception. Would you like to have a go at justifying that claim?If we are all just dancing to our DNA as Richard Dawkins claims then we have no right to say that the pedophile is wrong.
It is when I say it is, it isn't when I say it isn't. That's what relativistic, circumstantial and subjective morality entails, every subject decides for themselves, depending on the circumstances.Elijah John wrote: Also, is "the ends justifies the means" part of relativistic, circumstantial and subjective atheist morality? General question, not just to you BN.
There is no such thing as an atheist morality or ethic. Many atheists might subscribe to a secular humanist morality and ethic, though.Elijah John wrote: [Replying to post 3 by bluegreenearth]
So the first few posts here are a concession that atheist morality is circumstantial and relativistic? Correct me if I am wrong.
Is there any atheist ethic that is:
a) universal
b) timeless
c) unchanging?
Or even any atheist ethical maxim that is shared with Theists?
If so, wouldn't that fit the criteria of "objective morality"?
Something is determined to be objective when its properties do not change in accordance to anyone's opinion. For example, the force of gravity is objective because its properties do not depend upon the opinion of the person interacting with it. Because the properties of gravity are not contingent upon anyone's opinion, it consistently has the same effect on everyone and everything interacting with it. Consequently, everyone's concept of gravity is identical. If morality is objective in the same sense, then we would expect its properties to consistently affect everyone and everything in the same way. Is this what we observe? No. Different groups of people have different concepts of morality which shouldn't be possible if morality is objective like gravity. So, morality cannot be objective in that sense.1213 wrote: I dont think it is arrogant, especially because I dont know how you could determine objective moral without God.
But it is clear to many, if not you. Would it not be arrogant to assume that the individual is the sole arbiter of right and wrong? What gives him or her the right or ability?There is arrogance in presuming you have a pail full of water and that it's full because you filled it when it's not clear if any of that is true.
So that means that, if a pedophile lived next door to you, you wouldn't have a problem with it. You'd be fine with him brutalizing toddlers. Or you'd be fine with a man raping your mother because morality is subjective and relative and if that's what that man thought was the right thing to do, who was to say differently? You'd have been fine in Nazi Germany and wouldn't have minded at all that millions of Jews were murdered because you believe that morality is relative and, as such, morality is merely an opinion and you can't say that somebody else's moral choices are right or wrong, just different. Is that really the way you live? Really? Because you see, the issue isn't that you yourself would absolutely NOT do things that you think are wrong, like molesting a child. The issue is that you don't have the right to tell anybody else that the things they are doing are wrong because moral relativity dictates that you can't.False by counter-example. I do live as if morality is relative, more accurately as if morality is subjective.
But other worldviews contain an element of morality. Christianity contains an element of morality. Mormonism contains an element of morality. Islam contains an element of morality. And all ideas about morality in religious belief systems, be they right or wrong, stem from their idea of who God is and what he demands. Naturalism contains NO element of morality. Things just are. There's no right or wrong to them. Atheists have to borrow from religion to get moral standards whether they like it or admit it or not. See here:You can't get an ought from an is full stop. Naturalistic worldview or not.
It's bad because those in power can inflict their ideas of right and wrong, good and bad on those who are powerless. This means Hitler and the Nazis could murder six million Jews as well as blacks and the disabled and anybody who stood in their way because they had the power to do so. The same is true of all the godless dictators who ever lived -- Stalin, Idi Amin, Pol Pot, Saddam Hussein, etc. It leads to the belief that might is right -- and, of course, it isn't always.How is this a problem when those without power also get to decide what they think is good or bad, right or wrong?
Bust Nak responded:But I return to my example of the pedophile who brutalizes toddlers. Do you think, Willum, that it is ever right to do so? If you do, God help you!
I'm sorry if I wasn't clear. What I meant was this: If somebody really believes it's okay to brutalize toddlers, then they really do need God to show them the wrongness of it and deliver them from the evil that possesses them.What do you mean if? Didn't you just claim that it's impossible? You are undermining your own thesis with this question.
Bust Nak responded:Where does that understanding of right and wrong come from?
Since human beings differ about what is right and wrong, how do we decide who has the correct idea? Do you choose it depending on what is going to benefit you the most? What if what one person chooses seems right to you, but it hurts somebody else? If the majority wanted it, would you still go along with them? Again, think of Hitler and the Nazis. Wouldn't you stand up to them? Or would you just say, "Well, I wouldn't do what they're doing, but if they think it's the right thing, then they can go ahead and do it." If you take moral relativism to its logical conclusion, that's what you end up with.It came from us human beings.
My apologies for not being more clear. I am saying that human beings, being made in the image of God, have some reflection or echo of right and wrong in them. But they have been born with sin natures. Therefore, the correct idea of right and wrong has been damaged by sin. This means that, while some people may do good deeds, it's because of God and HIS sense of right and wrong. However, the person who believes in a naturalistic worldview has nothing in which to ground his/her ideas of right and wrong because he's just an evolved creature and who is to say that he didn't evolve badly or incorrectly?That appears to be a non-sequitur, how did you jump from the premise "there is no inherent right or wrong" to "right or wrong cannot have came from human?
If we are all just dancing to our DNA as Richard Dawkins claims then we have no right to say that the pedophile is wrong.
I don't have to justify it. Dawkins is the one who made the statement. He's the one who said we behave the way we're programmed by our DNA. In other words, whatever behaviour we manifest is part and parcel of who we are, how we evolved, at the very core of our being. If you take that to its logical conclusion, that means that we aren't responsible for the way we evolved and have no control over it or the ability to change it. As I said, in a naturalistic world, there just is. How do we criticize what just is?This is such a common misconception. Would you like to have a go at justifying that claim?
Thank you for providing an example of what I stated above -- that even a person who claims to be a moral relativist thinks in terms of absolute moral standards. Moral relativism means that we are all free to choose what we think is right or wrong according to our own ideas about it. Yet here you are, Willum, attacking God because you think his moral standards are wrong. In other words, you're arguing that what you believe about right and wrong are ABSOLUTELY right and that God doesn't line up with your own standards -- and you think he should!.He stated standards that excuse rape, slavery and gave an instruction-book for when genocide is appropriate.