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07-16-2003, 05:36 AM | #241 |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Keith
You seem to be expressing your own subjective views about what would be "better" for society and inferring that this must be true for society. I can't tell if you were just giving me your own opinion, or if you meant that society OUGHT to be that way for another reason (other than what seems "better" to you). Of course I've been giving you my own opinion. And I said society IDEALLY would be that way, not OUGHT, and that it was VOLUNTARY on each person's part. How much clearer could I have made it? You're preaching the OUGHT side for some other reason - but that, too, is your own subjective view, your own opinion, and is what would seem better to you. |
07-16-2003, 07:21 AM | #242 | |
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07-16-2003, 08:07 AM | #243 | |
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I do recall saying that it was voluntary and obviously idealistic to expect everyone to voluntarily follow such a system, that due to human nature the real world doesn't work that way, and that's why we have to have codified systems to encourage or enforce "moral" behavior. |
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07-16-2003, 08:32 AM | #244 | |
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Apparently you haven't been listening. Societies agree upon and adopt moral standards that declare certain actions as morally wrong under that moral standard. In the case of murder and rape, a society's moral standard may include "murder and rape are morally wrong for all humans, under all (or depending how you define "murder", under most) conditions". Obviously, not all people consider themselves under that moral standard, or may for other reasons violate the moral standards, so the society has a "moral" that says "it is right to punish those who violate our moral standards, including those who commit rape and murder" and may codify laws to enforce at least some of the society's moral standards. [Edited to add: that's why we call it "civilization"] Outside these human-invented moral standards, there is no moral wrong. You yourself implied this when you said that if one does not "know" or "realize" an action is morally wrong, then one, in doing the action, is not committing a moral wrong. (And there isn't anything "written on our hearts". If you've had children, you should know that one has to teach them what to do and what not to do). And please provide this objective moral standard. If it's objective, you should be able to. |
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07-16-2003, 10:43 AM | #245 | |
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07-16-2003, 10:53 AM | #246 | |
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07-16-2003, 11:01 AM | #247 | |
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07-16-2003, 11:01 AM | #248 |
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The fact that people are willing to fight wars over their religious disagreements isn't proof that God's moral law is unclear to us all.
Once again, if it's so clear, state this moral law that is clear to all Christian religions. Many (and I mean many) religious disagreements are over moral issues. It's clear that various Bible-based religions have interpreted the alleged moral laws of God differently, with both sides using the Bible to defend their side. For example, most Protestants do not think birth control is immoral, but the RC Church officially does. Some Protestants think one or more of gambling, drinking, and dancing are immoral; the Catholic Church has fewer if any moral restrictions on those. The RC church uses the Bible to defend not allowing women priests, as do some other Protestant denominations; other Protestant denominations use the bible to defend allowing women ministers. Some Christians use the Bible to defend the stance that executions are morally wrong; other Christians use the Bible to defend the stance that executions are morally right. In the 19th Century, some Americans used the Bible to show that slavery was morally wrong; others used the Bible to defend slavery. The list of moral disagreements based on the Bible goes on and on. Is it right to use a rod to discipline your child? Should wives be "submissive" to their husbands? What does "submissive" mean? Should women be silent in church? Should women cut their hair? Should women wear makeup? I've seen serious disagreements on all these issues. Clearly, the Bible is not an objective guide for determining morals. How can YOU decide what is right for others? Who said any of us should decide what's right for others? What I've been saying is that we, as groups, get together and decide what's right for the group. That's the way it's always worked; that's the way it works in religious groups and secular groups. |
07-16-2003, 11:12 AM | #249 | |
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Once again, you can find the objective and right moral standard in the bible. Its source, is God. |
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07-16-2003, 11:47 AM | #250 | |
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