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#1 |
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I have a couple of questions for all those atheistic (or not) ethicists out there; these questions have been confusing me so please excuse the fact that they seem disparate. Consider atheistic morality.
Thanks in advance! Joe |
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#2 | |
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If your home was knocked down, would you like it if your neighbors would help you get back on your feet again? Then you should give to help people whose homes got knocked down. Notice that this set of morality allows for a lot of leeway, but has some definite bounds. For example, in an extreme case (none of us would ever take such a case, and it denies biological facts), you might outlaw homosexuality if you saw it as being such a danger to society that fining homosexual activity would be appropriate. You would (improperly) weigh the value of a homosexual-free society as being high enough that you might fine a person for it. However, unlike in the bible, an atheist would never condemn a homosexual to death for the same offense. The bible says "kill them", but even the most ardent anti-homosexual atheist would check instead with the "do unto others" clause and say "oh, this is a misguided person who needs help, and they haven't kiled or seriously harmed any other people." See how it works? |
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#3 | |
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I understand and agree with this fairness principle, but isn't this really an ethical consistency principle and not a moral principle at all? I mean, couldn't one ask, "Why do unto others as you would have them do unto you?" I think the answer to this might be because you desire profound and enduring happiness, but I'm confused as to whether or not this is an objective statement or a subjective one. Also, I don't think a supernatural deity or anything supernatural is required. My question was ill-posed. Perhaps I should have asked, how can a naturalist believe that morality is objective instead of subjective like me liking a work of art might be? |
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#4 | |
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#5 | ||
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Atheism is an ethically empty philosophical stance. To support this, I will submit the "Complete List of the Tenets and Standards of Atheism" (loud cheers): Quote:
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#6 | |
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#7 | |
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Nevertheless, neither naturalism nor atheism provide an ethical framework. An atheist can either be a humanist or a social darwinist or Stalinist. Just like a theist could be a peaceful Quaker or an Islamic yihadist. |
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#8 | ||
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Claims like those are not always right, not in every specific case (instance: someone who'll be hit by a bus in two weeks might arguably be better off getting drunk every night that remains to him if he loves getting drunk) but I think it's fair to say that they are generally necessary to the health and pleasantness and success of any society. I posit that rules of this nature are what we mean by morality. To the extent that they work (that is, to the extent that they accomplish what they intend, by increasing happiness and making societies more healthy, pleasant, and successful) then they could be said to be "real." Thus, moral realism. So long as that is all you mean by moral realism, then moral realism is true. crc |
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#9 | |
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But if all we are saying is that there are these tendencies because there are certain strategies that make group cooperation more or less successful, then I guess one could call it "real", in the sense that it really is a pattern we see. |
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