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07-10-2003, 07:30 AM | #41 | |
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Future scientist: "They believed what? Wa ha ha ha ha ha. |
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07-10-2003, 07:33 AM | #42 | |
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Helen |
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07-10-2003, 07:46 AM | #43 | |
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07-10-2003, 08:35 AM | #44 |
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The phrase "white hot passion of a thousand suns" gets thirty-four hits in google - hard to say who's the originator.
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07-10-2003, 08:56 AM | #45 | |||||
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Let me use the gay example again. I'm gay. All that means is that I have a same-sex partner. There is no gay lifestyle or gay agenda, and every single gay person is different. The only common denominator between us all is our gayness. So if somebody says, "I don't like all gay people because they all like Barbara Streisand," that would be stupid and innacurate. But if they said, "I don't like all gay people because it really bugs me when people have same-sex partners," then they'd be right on. Sure, it's none of their damn business, just like it's none of my damn business whether somebody chooses to believe in Christ. If nobody infringes on my right to have my partner, and I don't infringe on anybody's right to worship, then everyone's happy. I still don't get why we're morally obligated to try to make friends with the individual? Quote:
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07-10-2003, 09:29 AM | #46 | |
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: anger at Christians
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Actually any theistic based morality potentially suffers from the same problems and quite a few specific to it. First, your claim that atheism has a problem because its "inability to point to an objective moral foundation" puts the cart before the horse. You would need to first establish that an objective moral foundation is necessary to speak of or to hold moral values. This can be easily argued against in many ways such as noting that similar or even identical moral values have arisen from a variety of cultural circumstances. For example, the "Golden Rule" has appeared in different cultures independently even though the metaethical frameworks of those cultures are incompatible. Secondly, claiming a "God" or "The Bible" as an absolute basis of morality suffers from the same "problems" of arbitrariness. We can then ask "Why do I care if god says this is moral" or "How does god decide if this is moral?" When we follow through on asking these types of questions we end up in the same places philosophically, or we end up with a Euthypro's Dilemma, or we end up concluding that might makes right. Thirdly, when we throw the monotheistic problem of evil into the mix and defend evil actions in the world by saying "They serve a greater good" then this gives me license to ignore evil actions. I can ignore and not interfere with a rape on the basis of this because "Clearly the rape serves a greater good unknownst to me and I don't want to interfere with God's greater good." ...and that's just the tip of the iceberg. Claiming a theistic basis for religion is a far greater problem in ethics than claiming the contrary. The best that the theist can do is arrive at the same ethical conundrums as the non-theist (which puts them in the same boat) or worse the theist has to confront unsolvable philosophical problems that do not confront the non-theist. DC |
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07-10-2003, 09:31 AM | #47 | |||||||
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I would disagree that it is morally justifiable to dislike all gay people because they have same-sex partners, even if that is an accurate representation of how they feel. It seems no different to me then your Barbara Streisand comparison. Quote:
You may make friends with whomever you desire, but you cannot morally justify broad stroke, stereotypical generalizations about ALL people. It is wrong because people are more then labels, and have value beyond beliefs, tastes, etc. Furthermore, Christians don't all share the same set of beliefs and just as you are more then a gay woman and an atheist, theists are more then just believers in a God. Quote:
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I am also not sure why you made a reference to racism. Nothing in this threads suggests that anyone is racist for being angry with Christianity (where the anger should be directed), or Christians. Brighid |
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07-10-2003, 09:47 AM | #48 |
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Perhaps we all should just hate the christianity and love the christian?
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07-10-2003, 10:15 AM | #49 | |||||||
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A little chopped up so I can combine smililar things into a single response.
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Yes, the OP mentions anger, but I have been arguing these points: I said: Quote:
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Oh, and the difference between that and the Barbara Streisand thing is that it is inaccurate. Gay people don't all like Barbara Streisand. Gay people do like same-sex partners. I am trying to show that I don't promote generalizing on falsehoods, but if something is true about a group, it's not harmful to generalize that thing about the group. All gays are gay. All blacks are black. All Christians are Christian. Quote:
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07-10-2003, 10:24 AM | #50 | |
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The fact that so many people choose to interpret the bible wrongly and self-servingly or believe it is no longer relevant doesn't mean that God is not the objective standard for morality. |
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