POI wrote: ↑Thu Feb 08, 2024 12:39 pm
The given definition is a broader definition than your given definition. This means that, under the term
chattel slavery, the chattel slave owner may do anything within my given broader and more detailed definition with impunity as well.
When your definition has to add "which may include torture and other brutality, excessively bad working conditions, and sexual exploitation", then it is narrowing it, not broadening it. What if I add "which may
not include torture and other brutality, excessively bad working conditions, and sexual exploitation", is that narrowing it or broadening it?
Here are some more dictionary definitions of chattel slavery:
"slavery in which a person is owned as a chattel."
https://www.merriam-webster.com/diction ... %20slavery
"slavery, condition in which one human being was owned by another. A slave was considered by law as property, or chattel, and was deprived of most of the rights ordinarily held by free persons."
https://www.britannica.com/topic/slavery-sociology
"The condition in which one person is owned as property by another and is under the owner's control, especially in involuntary servitude."
https://www.thefreedictionary.com/Chattel+slavery
Whether there exists or does not exist torture, brutality, oppression, or rape does not define chattel slavery. Chattel slavery is simply owning a slave as property.
POI Under the umbrella of a deemed chattel slave, it's all okay by the God you believe in.
You've just contradicted yourself by acknowledging my definitions are umbrella definitions, which means your definition is narrower.
POI Afraid not. Chattel slavery is a term you obviously do not like, so you wish to only argue the parts you feel you can 'defend' or justify.
More false accusations. We've been talking about chattel slavery for pages. Rather, why are you arguing against dictionary definitions that I've provided?
(U) What would you call slavery where a master owns another person and he treats him humanely?
POI A chattel slave owner.
Exactly.
And in that case is it morally wrong? No.
Since there are cases where chattel slavery is morally acceptable, chattel slavery (as the dictionaries I've presented have defined it) is subjective.
What would you also call a chattel slave owner who beats their slaved short of death, breeds them, and never lets them go free?
Beating someone short of death would be abusive chattel slavery and it would be morally wrong.
If people voluntarily breed, then it is not morally wrong. Never letting someone go free would be subjective since there are differing situations for that.
A chattel slave owner as well. God does not have any problem with that, do you?
Chattel slavery by itself is subjective. So, no, I don't have a problem with chattel slavery. But there is a case under chattel slavery which would be wrong and that would be abusive chattel slavery.
(U) Slave beatings would be a separate issue. It happens also to other slaves and not exclusively to chattel slaves.
POI It is not a separate issue.
Yes, it's a separate issue from chattel slavery because there are two forms of chattel slavery - abusive chattel slavery and non-abusive chattel slavery. Abuse in any situation would be morally wrong. If there's no abuse, then it would not necessarily be morally wrong.
POI The 'evasion' is you skipping my direct analogy of your given rationale. By replacing a single word phrase (chattel slavery with economics), and still using the exact same set of points, you still have the exact same rationale.
Even the rationale doesn't apply as
I've pointed out before:
"Wow, that guy is filthy rich" does not have any is-ought judgment in it.
I guess we cannot ground economics without an implied supernatural force either?
Another straw man. Nobody is claiming we need to ground economics on God.
(U) Why only bring up a mafia boss and dictators? Is it only because of bringing up extreme forms of authority that it is the only way to make your case look better?
POI Chattel slavery, as defined and granted by the God you believe in, does not include "extreme forms of authority"?
It includes any form of authority, including extreme forms. But by you only including extreme forms, you are fallaciously
appealing to extremes.
POI All under "God". Under your belief, God is the ultimate authority, and all other said systems are still under him. Thus, I guess many governments are now wrong, by completely abolishing slavery rather than to continue permitting slavery?
You're switching the topic. We're addressing chattel slavery now, not talking about slavery in general. If you want to argue about the general case of slavery, we can discuss that after chattel slavery.
(U) How do you know God is making an opinion decision?
POI For the exact same reason you state I am making an opinion decision. Your entire argument is that God has a "nature." Well, so do humans then. You are merely replacing one 'moral agency' with another 'moral agency'. Case/point (paraphrased), 'we inherently know murder and rape are wrong, because it is in our given nature to believe so, and it is God who gives us this nature."
Is it peoples' opinions that murder and rape are wrong?
You are not solving the problem you attempt to create, but instead just pushing the problem over.
There is no need to solve all the problems, but only need to find what is the most viable explanation.
Thus, is stating 'chattel slavery is wrong' an opinion or not?
What we're talking about is objective moral values, not subjective moral values. Chattel slavery would be subjective, not objective. So, chattel slavery is not relevant to the discussion of God being the basis of objective morality.
Well, if God supplies us humans with his nature, because we realize the difference between objective right and wrong, then why did we eventually abolish chattel slavery in most parts of the world? Are we now on the side of 'evil'? God's nature instead tells us to permit/condone/allow chattel slavery.
Again, chattel slavery is subjective, so your question is meaningless.
God commands impunity for slave beatings, as long as they do not die.
Where does the Bible
command slave beatings short of death? There is none.
The end. Deal with it. Do not instead merely whitewash it. Again, what version of "love" allows for such actions? Illogical.
I have dealt with it:
otseng wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 10:14 am
These are not instructions per se, but case law to handle certain situations. Here's the passage:
[Exo 21:26-27 KJV] 26 And if a man smite the eye of his servant, or the eye of his maid, that it perish; he shall let him go free for his eye's sake. 27 And if he smite out his manservant's tooth, or his maidservant's tooth; he shall let him go free for his tooth's sake.
And this also is similar to other laws in the ANE.
As for beating slaves, I don't recall the Bible either condoning it or condemning it. Not saying anything about one of them does not necessarily mean it supports the other. But, I would say the general principle of the second greatest commandment would apply. Also, they were to remember they were once slaves in Egypt with the implication they are to treat others like how they would've wanted to be treated while they were in Egypt.
[Deu 15:15 KJV] 15 And thou shalt remember that thou wast a bondman in the land of Egypt, and the LORD thy God redeemed thee: therefore I command thee this thing to day.
[Deu 16:12 KJV] 12 And thou shalt remember that thou wast a bondman in Egypt: and thou shalt observe and do these statutes.
[Deu 24:18 KJV] 18 But thou shalt remember that thou wast a bondman in Egypt, and the LORD thy God redeemed thee thence: therefore I command thee to do this thing.
[Deu 24:22 KJV] 22 And thou shalt remember that thou wast a bondman in the land of Egypt: therefore I command thee to do this thing.
(U) Yes, you are making a moral judgment with your implication that chattel slavery is morally wrong. You've admitted you have no basis for making any objective judgment.
POI I'm not making a moral judgement.
OK, if you're not making any moral judgment about chattel slavery, then there's nothing morally wrong with it. Do you accept that?
I'm instead stating the God you believe in does not follow his own logic, unless you have a differing version of the term "love", for which I have never read or heard about. <Chattel slavery and love> are not compatible with one another logically -- (by definition).
Chattel slavery would be subjective, so it's not possible to make any objective moral statement about it. We need to look at forms of chattel slavery to make an objective moral judgment about it. Abusive chattel slavery would not be compatible with love. Non-abusive chattel slavery can be compatible with love.
(U) False attribution. Where have I said anything is objective regarding chattel slavery?
POI Yet again... God's nature/opinion/rulings are not objective? God states such practices are okay. Does this make chattel slavery objectively okay or not? Much of the globe now states it is not okay. Is most of the globe now objectively wrong?
You're conflating two issues - the grounding of objective morality and the subjective nature of chattel slavery.
POI Then I guess it is "morally right" to beat slaves, (as long as they do not die, masters can breed them, and masters can keep them for life against their will).
Abuse of slaves would not be morally right.
And what I've been showing is you're equivocating between chattel slavery and abusive chattel slavery.