Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Further on Sev (and EG) vs the Christian Faith in community

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Some of our frequent commenters have recently made fairly explicit claims against/challenges to the Christian Faith, especially as it intersects community. For one, in responding to my earlier headlining of a response to his claims, Sev has now gone on record:

Sev, 2: >> where some Christians imply that the faith as a whole has suffered the same level of religious prejudice as, say, the Jews I’m bound to say that’s an exaggeration to put it mildly. [–> in fact, Pew has noted in recent years, evidence that consistently indicates that the most persecuted religious group in the world is Christians, of course, such is tellingly severely under-reported in the major global media.] How many members of the US Congress now, or have ever, admitted to being atheist or just non-believers? What are the chances of a non-believer being elected to public office in the US? This suggests that Christians of various stripes have had their hands on the levers of power in this country – although not just this country – for a long time. It is a truism that people who have exercised power for a long time are very reluctant to give it up and very resentful when circumstances force them to relinquish it. >>

Similarly, in replying to a side-note on Jawa’s posting of Alexa rankings in the Oscillations thread in which I noted that

[KF, 144] >>Jawa, since c 2015 – 16, there has been a major cold civil war and culture conflict development in the USA. That has sucked Oxygen out of almost any specialised issue. It has not changed the foundational significance of worldviews, logic and first principles and linked foundations of science issues, or of origins issues . . . >>

. . . EG has claimed:

EG, 148: >>we are slowly catching up with the rest of the world. We are slowly realizing that some of the Christian values that we have taken as “gospel” for the last couple centuries [–> note, the severely truncated history] do not hold up to scrutiny. Men can no longer insist that their wives be subservient to them. We can no longer deprive homosexuals of happiness, employment, career advancement and equal treatment in society. We can no longer judge women who enjoy sex with multiple partners different than we do men. We can no longer treat pregnant teens as fallen women. We can no longer deny services to inter-racial couples or homosexual couples and claim religious freedom as an excuse to discriminate. This is a civil war that is long over due.>>

Our civilisation, now usually styled Western Civilisation [and which formerly self-identified as Christendom], has been under increasing worldviews conflicts for generations, a conflict dominated by the push of evolutionary materialistic scientism and its fellow travellers. Where of course scientism blunders when it suggests that that Big-S Science dominates or even monopolises serious knowledge. As Lewontin summarised the attitude, science is the only begetter of truth. But patently, all of this is on worldviews questions and requires issues in logic, epistemology, ontology and metaphysics.

That is, matters of truth and knowledge are inescapably matters of philosophy and indeed even the claim that Science dominates truth/knowledge and warrant is a philosophical claim not a scientific one. Dressing ideology up in a lab coat does not change its core nature.

Likewise, questions of core morality are inherently philosophical, and Ethics is a major philosophical discipline, accordingly.

Now, once ideology enters, so does politics and in the present context, the controversial figure, US President Trump will come up. However, the issues at stake are civilisational, not partisan-political. That is the context in which I think it necessary to headline the exchanges and some considerations (which will necessarily be at some length, to respond to particular claims), as will now follow.

First, in the same thread, I responded to EG:

KF, 149: >> nope, as a civilisation we are re-learning a very old lesson (likely the hard way), as Plato warned us about ever so long ago:

Ath [in The Laws, Bk X 2,360 ya]. . . .[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that fire and water, and earth and air [i.e the classical “material” elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art . . . [such that] all that is in the heaven, as well as animals and all plants, and all the seasons come from these elements, not by the action of mind, as they say, or of any God, or from art, but as I was saying, by nature and chance only [ –> that is, evolutionary materialism is ancient and would trace all things to blind chance and mechanical necessity] . . . .

[Thus, they hold] that the principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that mankind are always disputing about them and altering them; and that the alterations which are made by art and by law have no basis in nature, but are of authority for the moment and at the time at which they are made.-

[ –> Relativism, too, is not new; complete with its radical amorality rooted in a worldview that has no foundational IS that can ground OUGHT, leading to an effectively arbitrary foundation only for morality, ethics and law: accident of personal preference, the ebbs and flows of power politics, accidents of history and and the shifting sands of manipulated community opinion driven by “winds and waves of doctrine and the cunning craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming . . . ” cf a video on Plato’s parable of the cave; from the perspective of pondering who set up the manipulative shadow-shows, why.]

These, my friends, are the sayings of wise men, poets and prose writers, which find a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that the highest right is might,

[ –> Evolutionary materialism — having no IS that can properly ground OUGHT — leads to the promotion of amorality on which the only basis for “OUGHT” is seen to be might (and manipulation: might in “spin”) . . . ]

and in this way the young fall into impieties, under the idea that the Gods are not such as the law bids them imagine; and hence arise factions [ –> Evolutionary materialism-motivated amorality “naturally” leads to continual contentions and power struggles influenced by that amorality at the hands of ruthless power hungry nihilistic agendas], these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is,to live in real dominion over others [ –> such amoral and/or nihilistic factions, if they gain power, “naturally” tend towards ruthless abuse and arbitrariness . . . they have not learned the habits nor accepted the principles of mutual respect, justice, fairness and keeping the civil peace of justice, so they will want to deceive, manipulate and crush — as the consistent history of radical revolutions over the past 250 years so plainly shows again and again], and not in legal subjection to them [–> nihilistic will to power not the spirit of justice and lawfulness].

All that has changed is there is a strong push to move us to evolutionary materialist secularism and fellow travellers.

As you know, a central test is the ongoing holocaust of our living posterity in the womb, which per Guttmacher-UN figures is proceeding at about another million per week. That indicts us globally as utterly morally bankrupt.

A sounder approach, less fraught with hazards for our civilisation would be to recognise that we are inescapably morally governed creatures. That starts with implicit premises in your argument, which your evolutionary materialism [–> from later assertions EG seems to be a fellow traveller . . . no material difference] would overthrow: first duties, to truth, to right reason, to prudence, to sound conscience, to fairness, to justice etc. Discard those and we don’t have a discussion or argument or even a quarrel. Just, a fight as to who will impose their will.

Of course, nowadays, the idea that there is such built in law is “controversial,” but only because some people do not want to face the implication of our being under moral government. Having to bridge IS and OUGHT, only feasible at reality root. And requiring that the source of worlds is inherently good and utterly wise.

But in the end, the choice is that or suicidal nihilism . . . .

And since you have again specifically attacked the Christian faith, I point you here, to a discussion on its core warrant at 101 level. I suggest to you that unless you have a very good argument as to why that warrant fails, you are being dangerously irresponsible. Your grounds for such a confident manner dismissal are ______, and why they hold water in the teeth of evidence as just linked is _______ . Let’s hear your very good reasons, especially i/l/o the minimal facts considerations.>>

Let me add, Feb 14, a video documentary by Lee Strobel:

So far, EG has not responded to the challenge as regards core warrant for the Christian faith, pivoting on the challenge to explain minimal facts regarding the history of Jesus of Nazareth acknowledged by an absolute majority of scholarship.

Let us tabulate:

Obviously, the serious alternatives today — after the failure of the classical Deistic objections — will be the historic Christian claims and some form or other of [psychologically, quite implausible] collective hallucinations. EG is invited to respond.

Turning to Sev, I found it necessary to reply on points. First, I took up the persecution talking point:

KF, 4: >>A quick note on one point that caught my eye:

[Sev:] where some Christians imply that the faith as a whole has suffered the same level of religious prejudice as, say, the Jews I’m bound to say that’s an exaggeration to put it mildly.

Wrong.

First, the 20 centuries of persecution of Christians speak for themselves, in the voice of a horrifically long list of martyrs and confessors. And, in recent years, Christians have been the most persecuted group of people in the world; though of course it does not suit the agenda of major media houses in the increasingly Anti-Christian (not merely post Christian) West to headline and seriously, regularly discuss the problem.

Secondly, persecution was not my primary concern. My concern is the rise of a radical secularism that opens the door to nihilism while undermining rights. No, serious concerns over rights, justice, moral principle and the roots of law in our morally governed nature cannot responsibly be dismissed as in effect complaining over lost prestige and privilege.

And that is what was done in almost so many words.

Let’s remember your characterisation:

the [Christian] faith playing the victim because they are aggrieved that they no longer have the prestige, social privilege and political power they once enjoyed

I added a highlight to show maybe the worst piece of loaded language in your remarks; used, in a turnabout, blame the victim projection. Those are ill-advised, dismissive fighting words that enable a clear and present injustice; you urgently need to reconsider and retract.

And BTW, entrenched- bigotry- against- Christians- and- linked- career- busting- and- worse- sometimes, in the Academy and key professions, the Media and Education systems as well as Government is a serious problem. (It is an interconnected, interdependent, mutually supportive whole.)>>

I hope that we can all agree that persecution is persecution, and that it is inappropriate to blame the victim. In that context, it is also inappropriate to suggest that as other groups have been persecuted, we can in effect dismiss the seriousness of concerns regarding ongoing persecution of the currently most persecuted group. [Alas, the unborn have not been allowed to be born and form or join a group.] Persecution is wrong, whoever the target is, and currently, globally, Christians have been target number one.

I then took up his further points, step by step, a day or two later. This is also where, reluctantly, I have had to speak to specific use of Mr Trump by Sev. In so responding, I make no partisan claims and my core concerns for the US as leading nation in our civilisation are across the board:

KF, 7: >>Let me take some time to remark on further points raised, as these may give some insights on the worldviews and cultural agendas clash confronting our civilisation:

>> How many members of the US Congress now, or have ever, admitted to being atheist or just non-believers?>>

1: Trivially, a significant number, now and in recent years. That is or should be a commonplace, acknowledged fact.

2: More profoundly, this inadvertently echoes the concerns Plato raised, and which are likely lurking as unacknowledged issues connected to sound governance.

3: Namely, that manifestly — and inescapably, we are morally governed creatures under built-in OUGHTs; starting with the sort of duties to truth, to right reason, to prudence [so, to warrant], to sound conscience, to innocent neighbour (and even guilty ones) . . . to fairness and justice. Where, justice is probably best understood as the due balance of rights, freedoms and responsibilities. Where, too, one may not justly claim a right save one is manifestly in the right. Such, for instance, partly reflects thinkers from Cicero to Locke and Blackstone and partly draws out further implications.

4: These all point to a need to bridge the IS-OUGHT gap as a core worldviews challenge. Post Hume, we know that can only be done in the root of reality, on pain of ungrounded ought. Which, requires that the independent (so, necessary) being at the wellspring of all actual and possible worlds, must be adequate to be such. This requires inherent goodness and utter wisdom, and yes, this pivots on the existence of an order of creatures who are morally governed and significantly rationally, responsibly free.

5: Which, is why we are in material part morally rather than wholly dynamically-stochastically governed. Mind carries with it moral government and transcends the limitations of GIGO-constrained causal-chain driven computational substrates. As Plato pointed to in The Laws Bk X, we are self-moved first cause agents, having rational animality, i.e. there is reason to speak of us as embodied, living, rational, responsible, significantly free souls.

6: And though such is often scanted and actively suppressed today by dominant elites influenced by evolutionary materialistic scientism, that perspective is deeply intuitive and ineradicable.

7: Moreover, the frame of thought naturally leads to understanding the only serious candidate — just do the comparative difficulties i/l/o our readily understood status of being morally governed with built in law of our nature — to be that wellspring of reality. Namely, the inherently good and utterly wise creator God, a necessary and maximally great being; one worthy of our loyalty and of the responsible, reasonable service of doing the good that reflects our manifest nature.

8: This is not religious dogma, it is worldview roots analysis pointing to a baseline ethical theism as a natural worldview for one who takes conscience, mind and responsible freedom seriously.

9: Such a view is deeply — and quite explicitly — embedded in the Common Law system and in the US DoI and Constitution; making it foundational to modern liberty and democracy. Though, of course, many today would react dismissively and/or have been aggressively and systematically indoctrinated to think otherwise.

10: Notwithstanding, instinctively, a great many people understand — and devastatingly bloody record of history compellingly substantiates — that dominant governing elites who reject that implicit consensus are exceedingly dangerous. This is Plato’s point in The Laws, Bk X, and it runs right through to the current ruinous warping of institutions and professions of the high ground of culture in support of the ongoing holocaust of our unborn living posterity and linked evils such as the porn-perversion plague typified by the issues that are emerging surrounding that leading web enterprise of perversity, Pornhub.

>> What are the chances of a non-believer being elected to public office in the US?>>

11: Again, trivially, quite good. Recall, non-believer includes one who is theistic as to worldviews but uncommitted as to life choices. In Scripture, we are warned that the very devils know there is but one true living God, and shudder as they contemplate their fate. In short, the pivotal issue extends beyond abstract worldview propositions to the challenge of repentance, renewal, revival and reformation. I would hazard a guess that a significant fraction of the leadership of the US is or has been — for many decades — non-believers in this proper sense.

12: Where aggressive, militant atheism is concerned, such tends to be associated with habits of communication and behaviour that would make it unlikely for such to become top level officials, at least in a reasonably democratic body politic. Such are most likely to seize power by revolution or usurpation and their behaviour is precisely what has given such aggressive militancy a bad reputation indeed.

>>This suggests that Christians of various stripes have had their hands on the levers of power in this country – although not just this country – for a long time.>>

13: The subtext insinuation of improper seizure of and clinging to power amounts to conspiracism. I suggest, a more balanced understanding of the history of our civilisation including the roots and history of the US Republic will be in order.

>> It is a truism that people who have exercised power for a long time are very reluctant to give it up and very resentful when circumstances force them to relinquish it.>>

14: Error and linked insinuations of illegitimacy carried forward

>>That assumes that Christianity is a victim.>>

15: I specifically responded to your rhetorical pattern of tainting and blaming the victim, for cause, in these terms:

[OP:] What is interesting here is the structure of the dismissive rhetoric, which turns rights and justice concerns into “playing the victim” as one is “aggrieved” that the Christian Faith has somehow lost “prestige,” “privilege” and “social power.” Immediately, we can recognise a familiar rhetorical pattern, blaming the victim by first demonising him [see, two can play the rhetoric game, especially if one is familiar with how fallacies work!], but that is not a primary concern just now.

What is, is the underlying vision of moral government and law, thus rights, fairness and justice, also duties to truth, prudence, right reason.

For, what lurks just beneath the surface of Sev’s rhetoric here [as a “typical” representative of such views], is the familiar pattern long since exposed and rebuked by Plato, in The Laws, Bk X (as was noted a few days ago). That is, when one resorts to evolutionary materialistic scientism [and even setting aside the question of how one then gets to a credible, rational, responsible and significantly free mind on such premises] one reduces moral government to “the highest right is might,” which then leads to ruthless factions grabbing power and imposing their will.

Obviously, if that is all that there is, then of course, those who formerly held greater prestige and power but are now denigrated have nothing to appeal to as “justice,” “truth,” or “fairness,” they lost the power struggle and that’s that.

Nihilism, in one word.

Which, is instantly absurd.

Were my fellow blacks simply whining because they lacked social prestige and power when complaints were made against slavery, then Jim Crow [and its like, the colour bar], etc?

Absurd.

Worse, “rights,” “fairness,” and “justice” have now become little more than rhetoric appealing for power. Words, weaponised into means of manipulating the generally dumb public to gain a new power advantage.

For, on such views — and in the practice of those who go along as fellow travellers, there are no enduring principles of right or justice, there is only power struggle with the lurking matter of the preservation of favoured races and classes in the struggle for life. Complete with H G Wells’ twist in Time Machine, that if one becomes sheep for the table of the dominant class and species, then one may be kept as a useful herd animal and preserved as a food source. (Sheep, notoriously, are stupid but they are not about to die out, as they are tasty and provide wool.)

Of course, we usually do not recognise when we have made such a fatal step too far into absurdity.

. . . and I have further documented that Christians, in fact, are the most persecuted group in the world today. (The unborn, victims of the worst and ongoing holocaust, alas, have been robbed of even being born.)

>> It is equally possible that Christianity – or some Christians at least – are playing the victim card in the same way as white nationalists. >>

16: Fallacy of guilt by invidious, gratuitous association. It also suggests an implicit, profound demonisation that views the Christian faith and/or Christians as being what is wrong with our civilisation.

17: That in turn raises the question of Dawkins’ notorious mischaracterisation and bigotry that those who differed with his preferred views and agendas were ignorant, stupid, insane or wicked. There is a reason why most sensible people have rejected the aggressive so-called New Atheists.

>>They present their group as being endangered by some poorly-defined external threat in order to solidify their existing supporter base and to scare others into joining it. It’s an old tactic and often an effective one.>>

18: The bloody, ruinous history of radical secularists since the French Revolution up to the ongoing holocaust of the unborn is concrete and specific enough to expose this suggestion as empty projection.

>>Scapegoating some “other”, such as “evolutionary materialistic scientism”, as a threat to social stability or racial or cultural or religious or political purity is arguably a much greater danger.>>

19: Again, loaded language. “Scapegoating” is not a responsible response to an analysis that in outline has been on the table since Plato in The Laws, Bk X, and in a circumstance where said evolutionary materialism (latterly, clad in a lab coat of Scientism) can first be readily shown to fail the comparative difficulties test as a worldview

20: Plato’s response, suitably annotated, is still highly relevant — and too often side-stepped:

Ath [in The Laws, Bk X 2,360 ya]. . . .[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that fire and water, and earth and air [i.e the classical “material” elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art . . . [SNIP, already present and linked]

>> We have only to look at the treatment of the Jews in Nazi Germany for an example of to what end such an approach can lead.>>

21: Fallacious, further tainting and demonisation by utterly uncalled for invidious association with Hitler. FYI, Hitler was demonstrably anti-Christian. In the memory of the White Rose martyrs (who first exposed the holocaust) I call you to correct your misperceptions.

>> And it is the group which deploys such an approach effectively that often goes on to become the faction which seizes power and holds on to it by using whatever “might” they have at their disposal.>>

22: Further building on unfounded invidious, tainting, demonising associations. Do you realise that you here suggest that Christians are the moral equivalent of Hitler’s demonic mas murderers? I think a reconsideration is more than called for, especially i/l/o the relevant history of our civilisation.

23: Further to such, it is obvious that if a significant number of people with this sort of warped perception of Christians, Christianity and the history of a Civilisation once generally termed Christendom were to gain power, Christians would have reason to be concerned that hunting season has been declared on them. Please, think again.

>>Is it fair or just that members of one faith have exercised almost untrammeled political power in the US since the state was created? No, it doesn’t amount to a full-blown theocracy but quietly, in the background, it hasn’t fallen far short of one. >>

24: Again, the pattern emerges; where of course repetition reinforces error. A better balanced assessment of the history of our civilisation is clearly called for.

>>Would you be so tolerant of it if the faith had been Islam?>>

25: The history of Islam and its embracing of a claimed divine imposition of will — as opposed to the balance that emerges from the premise of a built in law of our nature evident to sound, honest reason — has been very different from that of the Christian faith. The further insinuation of association with Islamic terrorism and Islamofascism, is also a further fallacy of invidious association.

>>And to suggest that Christianity has somehow “lost the power struggle”, at least here in the US, is absurd. >>

26: Red herring led away to a strawman caricature. I spoke specifically to the implications of worldviews that imply that might and/or manipulation make ‘right’/ ‘truth’/ ‘warrant’/ ‘knowledge’/ ‘justice’/ ‘rights’ etc, specifically echoing a line of thinkers since Plato. In that context, there are no rights beyond what one has won by power. That is what you need to answer, and it is what you ducked.

>>When Christians are minority in Congress>>

27: In any serious sense of “Christian,” that has long been the case.

>>and the majority are members of other faiths or openly atheist then you might have a case>>

28: Notice, the further dodging of the issue of a worldview unable to bridge IS and OUGHT thus being amoral and opening the door to nihilist factionalism. And that is the case that by rhetorically diverting attention from you wish to avoid addressing on the worldview merits. Revealing.

>>or openly atheist>>

29: Only likely in something like Communism, as explained.

>>but, until then, it is plainly Christianity that still has the better of the power struggle.>>

30: Really? The ghosts of 63 million unborn children and counting at another 1/2 million or so per year who do not have a vote or voice as they were robbed of the first right, life, need to be heard on this matter.

>>As, for example, in the case of Donald Trump and the Christian evangelicals. >>

31: This blog is not a forum for political discussion and politicking, however, given context above and invidious comparisons made, this is already a serious smear that Evangelical Christians (a significant minority in the US) are here being pushed into the same boat as Hitler et al, along with a particular leading American politician who seems to have sponsored evangelicals as part of the hinterland deplorables despised by the radically secularist coastal and urban elites.

32: It further seems that much of the patently overwrought rhetoric exposed above reflects the reaction of said elites to what they view as a peasant uprising by the ballot box; something echoed in the 2016 US electoral map by counties.

The US 2016 election mapped by counties

[Let me add the recent UK Brexit election result, showing a similar coastal/urban centre vs hinterlands contrast, but with a major regional party in Scotland. Notice, similarly, Boris Johnson is a controversial populist, though of course the UK is far more radically secularised than the US. The point is, peasant uprising:]

33: I suggest as a first remedy, that we look beyond the surface to the worldview issues at stake on the further illumination of history.

[I can add here, a modification of Schaeffer’s analysis:]

Extending (and correcting) Schaeffer’s vision of the course of western thought, worldviews and culture, C1 – 21

[Also, let us note, the mountains of influence picture:]

>>Trump cares nothing about truth or lies, his only concern is that the words he says influence his listeners to go where he wants them to go an do what he wants them to do.>>

34: Political projection. I would suggest that a more balanced picture would be that the power elites of the US and our civilisation in general are in serious violation of the built in moral law that starts with inescapable duty to truth. This particularly includes the media and educators.

35: Notice, [your implicit] appeal to the built in law of our morally governed nature. As part of worldviews analysis, kindly address its import.

>>And in promoting the belief that Trump was, in some way, chosen by God, his evangelical supporters are arguably guilty of both blasphemy and idolatry.>>

36: Actually, no. Rom 13:1 – 10 is very clear that governors are God’s servants tasked to uphold the civil peace of justice. In historic context, 57 AD, including Nero Caesar. The challenge is for them to live up to such. Where, the issue and theology of rulers gone bad is a key root of the American Revolution, Declaration of Independence and Constitution.

37: So, while uncritical support of any political leader is wrong, there is warrant to see a figure who may help restore a situation — such as the generation-long plight of the rust belt — in a favourable light; notwithstanding serious character flaws. For specific instance, the favourable view of the Pharaoh of Joseph or the generally positive view of a Nebuchadnezzar or a Cyrus or Nehemiah’s relationship with a later Persian King are not to be equated to blanket endorsement.

38: Thus, while there is cause for critique of Mr Trump and those who support him in some degree, that needs to be balanced and fair. In particular, one should look askance at the obvious resort to Star Chamber tactics, perversion of Constitutional provisions to remove leaders guilty of crimes comparable to treason and the gleeful participation of a major cross section of the media in slander and obvious political dirty tricks. (Note, it is because of UD’s context that I will not delve on details. Serious analysis substantiating the above can be found elsewhere.)

>>That and the almost complete collapse of any resistance to Trump from within his own party are a measure of how much he has corrupted both the faith and the Republican Party.>>

39: Little more than projection, cf. the above. If instead there were an analysis of the rise of widespread corruption, incompetence and marches of folly stemming from mutiny on the ship of state, Ac 27 has something to say. Across the board.

>>No, we must somehow abandon the comforting belief that it is even possible for us to be in possession of some absolute truth.>>

40: Do you wish to imply that it is not 100%, undiluted, untainted truth that 2 + 3 = 5 or the like? If not, you would be well advised to understand that we can know certain limited truths with utter certainty. In many cases, truth is self evident and undeniable or inescapable on pain of patent absurdity. These are plumbline truths that allow us to test our views and knowledge claims otherwise.

41: Your tone above amply illustrates how the first duties of responsible reason are indeed inescapable, self evident truths. They are controversial only because they are inconvenient to anti-theism. A sign of its absurdity.

42: Beyond such plumbline truths lie objective truths, which may be warranted to degrees of reliability such that we entrust serious matters to their soundness. And subjectively experienced truth is not opposed to either objectivity or even absoluteness.

43: What is legitimate is to be concerned that finite, fallible, morally struggling and too often ill willed creatures can close minds and hearts to well warranted correction. But that fault is not confined to hinterland deplorables in the US or the UK, even when such are engaged in an uprising by ballot box against the ensconced elites and their comfortable establishment.

>>We should not set Science on a pedestal as our only begetter of truth>>

44: That is the error of Scientism, and it is deeply embedded in the more or less respectable view of Naturalism, which is what “evolutionary materialistic scientism” describes. Notice, what Monod stated in the TV interview which builds on his 1970 book, Chance and Necessity:

[T]he scientific attitude implies what I call the postulate of objectivity—that is to say, the fundamental postulate that there is no plan, that there is no intention in the universe. Now, this is basically incompatible with virtually all the religious or metaphysical systems whatever, all of which try to show that there is some sort of harmony between man and the universe and that man is a product—predictable if not indispensable—of the evolution of the universe.— Jacques Monod [Quoted in John C. Hess, ‘French Nobel Biologist Says World Based On Chance’, New York Times (15 Mar 1971), p. 6. Cited in Herbert Marcuse, Counter-Revolution and Revolt (1972), p. 66.

>>any more than we should look to the Bible or the Koran for the same thing. >>

45: No responsible, significant Christian thinker presumes that the Bible holds monopoly on truth; just think, there is no statement therein that 2 + 3 = 5, there is no divinely ordained set of weights and measures, though there is a strong endorsement of just weights and measures. And indeed, there is a strong endorsement of the common sense view that there is a built in law of our morally governed, sound conscience and sound reason guided nature.

[Let me add a chart of Aquinas’ summary;]

[and again, a similar summary of the line of thought:]

>>We should question the findings of science just as we should question what is preached to us from the pulpit. The will and the power to question is ultimately our best defense against tyranny,>>

46: Again, you imply those first duties of reason. Address their worldview import, please.

>>You seem to be supporting the position that a populace is entitled to rise up and overthrow – by force of arms if necessary – what they perceive to be an unjust government.>>

47: Do you notice that you duck the ballot box, which was precisely won for us by hard fighting?

48: Similarly, you resort to the language of subjective perception, when such an uprising beyond the ballot box would only be justified under extraordinary circumstances. In fact, the best summary of my view is in the US DoI. Any reasonably educated person should instantly recognise this connexion, on the right of revolution as last resort when remonstrance fails:

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God [–> notice the appeal to built in law of our morally governed nature] entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident [–> appeal to first, self-evident principles of justice], that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator [–> inference to ethical theism in a generally Judaeo-Christian context] with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers [–> Govt’s first duty is justice, which BTW immediately discredits power games pivoting on Star Chamber proceedings, as — on fair comment [cf Dershowitz et al] — we just saw in the US Congress Intelligence Committee] from the consent of the governed, –That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.–Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government.

49: Note the immediately following appeal to history and facts:

The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

>> But how reliable is the judgement of popular sentiment?>>

50: A Constitutional Republic with significant democratic aspects casts heavy weight on the responsible informed judgement of the people. For cause.

>> What if they are ignorant of much that their government actually does for them?>>

51: This is the precise reason why the massively evident, longstanding failure and propagandistic trends of education and media alike are a betrayal of the interests of our civilisation.

>> Isn’t that the message of Plato’s “ship of state” parable, the dangers of an ignorant hoi polloi seizing control of the ship of state because they do not – and maybe even are not able to – understand how competent and benevolent the existing administration actually is?>>

52: You misread Plato [in Ship of State] here. Hoi Polloi are the Captain, befuddled and drugged by those seeking to usurp power and loot the stores. It is the corrupt, incompetent politically active ruthless factions and the sophists who back them that he identifies as the mutineers. He also warns that many will misunderstand the sound teachings of right reason and/or will pervert such in service to mutiny.

53: The US framers, concerned about this built in many checks and balances. That is why the US is not a pure democracy, to the point that the people vote for electors who then vote for a President, forcing now 50 local elections held concurrently. Similarly, a popular, short term house is balanced by an upper house of ambassadors of the states, two per. This way, no few power centres acting in concert can dominate the whole, the pivot of the Connecticut compromise. More can be said, but this outline is enough.

54: The judgement on competence and benevolence is left to an audit by general election every four years.

>>As I have said many times before. I do not – and cannot – rule out the possibility of extraterrestrial intelligent design but neither have I seen compelling that it actually happened.>>

55: There is more than adequate scientific evidence in the coded algorithmic (thus purposeful) language in DNA and in the linked fine tuning of a cosmos that enables C Chem, aqueous medium cell based life. Multiply by the existence of morally governed creatures as a requisite of responsible reason and science and it is decisive. Save, to those locked into Monod’s a prioris.

>>At root, the greatest danger to ourselves is fear. We should not fear questions, divergent opinions, threats to our power or reputation or religious beliefs.>>

56: Principled concern informed by the sort of issues and insights above are not irrational fears.>>

I trust that we may be able to have a more balanced discussion going forward. END

F/N: As the issue of how to manage change and conflict is on the table, I will draw on some charts I use in strategic change consultations. First, on the change challenge:

That is the more “theoretical” framework, here is how we can use these ideas in a stakeholder consultation process, if people are willing to recognise the need to change or reformation and are willing to commit to such — at least as a critical mass:

I am now pessimistic that we will be willing to move beyond the business as usual path locked in by dominant factions who hope to benefit from it (and are likely blind to the signs of the times regarding potential disaster), until we have gone off the cliff as a civilisation, yet again. I again point to the need to go back to truly foundational questions on the sort of issues that are on the table now.

Notice, especially, Machiavelli’s hard-bitten counsel.

Santayana’s is similar, that history teaches two lessons. First, that those who refuse to learn its lessons doom themselves to repeat its worst chapters. Second, by and large, we refuse to learn from history.

From this we come to Marx’s corollary: history repeats twice over, once as tragedy the next time as farce. (He had in mind the chain of disasters that happened to France in the 100 years from the storming of the Bastille, and particularly the two Napoleons.)

Comments
PS: A reminder, from the foot of the cliff, by Plato:
Ath [in The Laws, Bk X 2,360 ya]. . . .[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that fire and water, and earth and air [i.e the classical "material" elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art . . . [such that] all that is in the heaven, as well as animals and all plants, and all the seasons come from these elements, not by the action of mind, as they say, or of any God, or from art, but as I was saying, by nature and chance only [ --> that is, evolutionary materialism is ancient and would trace all things to blind chance and mechanical necessity] . . . . [Thus, they hold] that the principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that mankind are always disputing about them and altering them; and that the alterations which are made by art and by law have no basis in nature, but are of authority for the moment and at the time at which they are made.-
[ --> Relativism, too, is not new; complete with its radical amorality rooted in a worldview that has no foundational IS that can ground OUGHT, leading to an effectively arbitrary foundation only for morality, ethics and law: accident of personal preference, the ebbs and flows of power politics, accidents of history and and the shifting sands of manipulated community opinion driven by "winds and waves of doctrine and the cunning craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming . . . " cf a video on Plato's parable of the cave; from the perspective of pondering who set up the manipulative shadow-shows, why.]
These, my friends, are the sayings of wise men, poets and prose writers, which find a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that the highest right is might,
[ --> Evolutionary materialism -- having no IS that can properly ground OUGHT -- leads to the promotion of amorality on which the only basis for "OUGHT" is seen to be might (and manipulation: might in "spin") . . . ]
and in this way the young fall into impieties, under the idea that the Gods are not such as the law bids them imagine; and hence arise factions [ --> Evolutionary materialism-motivated amorality "naturally" leads to continual contentions and power struggles influenced by that amorality at the hands of ruthless power hungry nihilistic agendas], these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is,to live in real dominion over others [ --> such amoral and/or nihilistic factions, if they gain power, "naturally" tend towards ruthless abuse and arbitrariness . . . they have not learned the habits nor accepted the principles of mutual respect, justice, fairness and keeping the civil peace of justice, so they will want to deceive, manipulate and crush -- as the consistent history of radical revolutions over the past 250 years so plainly shows again and again], and not in legal subjection to them [--> nihilistic will to power not the spirit of justice and lawfulness].
Such are the matches we are playing with.kairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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JVL- I can't help people who deny the obvious. But they will prevent us from reaching the goal. If that is the world you want then I think you are being selfish and short-sighted. Gay marriage? Why stop there? If we are one big family tree of organisms, why limit it to human-human? Procreation is the key. Male and female hold that key and the lock. And don't even bother mentioning the very small % of men and women who cannot procreate. Only a male successfully mating with a female can procreate.ET
February 14, 2020
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JVL, at a certain point, I am afraid, the issue in the end is beyond debates and opinions; especially when core principles are forfeit. I believe that -- regrettably -- such is where we are today, as a civilisation. We are in a challenge, either it is real and accurately described that we are morally governed as rational, responsible creatures or else this perception is a grand delusion; a gateway for manipulation by power. If the latter, rationality collapses, that is enough to see that it is absurd. The former has fairly definite, inescapable first duties of responsible reason: truth, right reason, prudence [so, warrant], fairness and justice etc. Those principles raise issues connected to IS-OUGHT, thence world roots. If a "majority" or even just a "critical mass" refuses such principles [which are conscience-attested], then that injects chaos into society, leading to ruin. The issue, then, is not disagreement or agreement and discussion, but is there moral knowledge and are there indeed first duties. Credibly, there are, so if we resist and wish to remake such to suit ourselves, we will fall under the cutting edge of Kant's Categorical Imperative: flouting core principles wrecks civilisation. For example consider general or even just critical mass rejection of duty to truth and to prudence, or fairness and justice, or first principles of right reason. What is happening is that as those who reject those seize cultural power, they create a breach in the civil peace of justice. For instance, for nigh on fifty years, the US has cultivated holocaust of unborn posterity in the womb, amounting to 63 millions and another roughly half million per year. What compromise is there between mass slaughter and the right to life; especially as the balance of the relevant courts threatens to shift? And that is just one issue. Soon, unless we turn back, people will conclude that we face misanthropes intent on grave harm, and we will see civil breakdown of ever greater magnitude. That will lead to secession, and deeper civil conflict. In short we are more or less at Bleeding Kansas phase, and we may be just one election shy of a Fort Sumter moment. So, all I can say to you as an onlooker is, please, ponder the abyss and turn back. Otherwise, we will face the sort of shattering crash Athens did, which is what opened minds to listen to the heirs of Socrates, sentenced to hemlock by order of Athens' highest court. KFkairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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I don't want to salt the battlefield but would it be instructive to consider a particular topic? Like gay marriage. I'm sure we all have particular and maybe strong views on that and I'm sure we'd all like to argue our perspective. But what I'm interested in is: how does a progressive and enlightened modern society make a decision about a topic like that? I'm NOT saying what that decision should be, I'm only asking how to arrive at a decision.JVL
February 14, 2020
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KF Clearly you are a very moral person which is admirable of course. I'd like to think that I am such a person as well. But I'm not sure what you propose for considering large groups of citizens who have different beliefs from yours. I'm not judging anyone, I have no claim to a greater understanding than anyone else. And there are groups of people whose views I find extremely difficult to appreciate. But I try hard to remember that all human beings deserve respect and protection. And I always try to look for a middle ground where everyone's views and beliefs can be respected and protected, if possible. So, how do your propose we proceed? ET, how do you propose to create a safe and secure society for everyone even those who may not agree with your purpose driven view? Surely Christians and Jews and Muslims and Hindus and Sikhs and Janes and Buddhists and Zoroastrians and Confucianists and Bahias and agnostics and atheists deserve the same basic legal protections and rights. Sorry if I left someone out! :-) My point is that I think we must, at least, work towards some kind of basis of commonality that respects all faiths and beliefs. Surely that makes sense and is a worthy goal. I hope something we can all agree on.JVL
February 14, 2020
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Clearly "Ed George" has never been outside of the US or Canada. Either that or "Ed George" has been hit on the head, repeatedly. There is a huge difference between being treated equally under the law, and forcing the majority to bend to the ill will of the minority.ET
February 14, 2020
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JVL@40, I think you have hit it on the head. How do you get common ground between people who think that people on the margins of society (and women) deserve equal protection under the law and those who do not? “Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”, as long as you were born with a white penis and are sexually attracted to the opposite sex.Ed George
February 14, 2020
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Morality by consensus? Really? Perhaps if we stop messing around with the screwball idea that is evolutionism, we could focus on what matters. That being why are we here? Because if we have a real purpose for existing then that needs to guide how we all go about living. But those who live in denial of that purpose will continue to think that morality can be had via some consensus. Good luck with that.ET
February 14, 2020
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JaD
The P.C. garbage, which is presently being crammed down EVERYONES throat, comes from SJW secular progressives not from Christians.
I’m not a fan of PC either. But that is not the same as granting equal protection under the law for previously marginalized groups.Ed George
February 14, 2020
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JVL, the issues are truly foundational and can only be worked through at worldviews level. Absent a sudden awakening to our peril, we are going over the cliff, see my comments to JAD. It is, on present track, out of shattering pain, that we will reconsider the path of wisdom we have so unwisely discarded. It pains me as a convinced democratic person but that is likely one of the casualties. We are burning down our civilisation and refuse to stop. With nukes in play. KFkairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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EG, please see my comment to JAD. As for marriage, Jesus' analysis is light years ahead of yours. All I will add is that Plato's remarks as cited above came after Athens' democratic experiment collapsed at great cost, through a 30 years civil war of the Greeks, the Peloponnesian war. A sobering lesson of history. KFkairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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JAD: Spot on, unfortunately. There is a deep rooted failure to understand the centrality of first duties, not only on legal and "moral" subjects but intellectual ones. That is compounded by deep rooted hostility to the implications of our being inescapably governed by built-in law expressed first and foremost in these principles. The litmus test result that reveals our civilisation's moral bankruptcy is that we are sustaining under false colour of law the worst holocaust in history, reportedly mounting up at a million more per week. With that on the table, the only way to restore soundness to moral thought, law, government, education, media and even rationality is to go back to first self evident truths of moral government, further informed by sobering history. And worldviews analysis; that we are inescapably under moral government points to the nature of the root of reality. Precisely what there is an obvious widespread refusal to soberly address as a civilisation. On this track, the onward path is liable to flow from the spreading numbness set by the moral breakdown [and moral preening to compensate!] that we see. I fear, things will have to go over the cliff before shock and pain begin to wake us up. Sad. KFkairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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John_a_designer and KF and Ed George I think we can all agree that most modern societies have a wide and varied mix of beliefs and cultures and we need to figure out a way to accommodate them all under law. I am also going to assume, correctly I hope, that we all appreciate the need for compromise on all sides to arrive at some kind of consensus. So, how should a progressive society deal with this situation? Ed George has suggested a cultural wide conversation, trying to find common ground and not offending too many. But I'd like to hear from KF and John_a_designer regarding suggestions for moving past the impasse. I understand you are very sure of your standards and want to stick with them. But the world is a very complicated and diverse place so . . . how do you propose we proceed? How do we find some common ground? Given that you will always have to address some dissension and disagreement from people who have the same legal status as you.JVL
February 14, 2020
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I know that we have and will continue to make bad choices.
And you seem to think that leads to a better world.
Women no longer have to tolerate abusive husbands.
They never had to.
My marriage has not been affected one iota.
The institution of marriage has. Where do we stop and why, Eddie?
Until someone can show me how granting equality under law to women, minorities, homosexuals, transgendered, etc. causes actual harm to society, I will support their cause and oppose those who try to stand in their way.
Why should the vast majority have to bend to the minority, especially when it is just about feelings? Why do we have to redefine words and terms to suit minority opinions? Why can someone use the proper words and get in trouble for it? Obviously harm has come to society.ET
February 14, 2020
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The P.C. garbage, which is presently being crammed down EVERYONES throat, comes from SJW secular progressives not from Christians. The problem is that modern secular progressivism, which is the source of this garbage, has emerged out of a culture infested with moral relativism, subjectivism and nihilism. Those kind of beliefs provide absolutely no basis for any kind of viable interpersonal morality, human rights or the kind of cultural consensus which is absolutely essential to have any kind of functioning democratic society.john_a_designer
February 14, 2020
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KF
1: The presumption of progress is, historically ill-founded.
I don't presume progress. I just accept the fact that there will always be change. All we can hope for is that the change is well thought out and has the minimal of negative impact on most people.
4: The US founders started from the first duties, and drew out issues of justice as expressing built in law of our morally governed nature as endowed by our creator.
But their idea of justice did not extend to blacks, Chinese immigrants or women.
6: Notice, the particular concern about usurpation and a train of abuses pointing to rising tyranny.
Yes, the tyranny of equality for women, for African Americans, for homosexuals, etc. What a horrible world we have created.
8: You exaggerate our ability to know and to make law, especially in a context where the first duties are being side-stepped and undermined: to truth, to right reason, to prudence, to fairness and justice, etc.
I don't exaggerate this at all. I know that we have and will continue to make bad choices. But that is no reason to stop trying. Exactly what first duties are being side-stepped? Fairness and justice are certainly much better now than they were fifty years ago. There is still a long way to go but I would not want to take any steps backward. Women no longer have to tolerate abusive husbands. Homosexuals can now express affection for the person they love without risking loss of employment or imprisonment. They can now enjoy marriage and the obligations and benefits it entails. Teen girls who become pregnant are no longer treated as pariahs in society. They are allowed to continue their schooling with their friends. Couples who decide to live together but not get married are no longer treated as sinners; in addition, they now enjoy the same legal protection and support as any married couple does. Teens now have the tools (comprehensive sex education and access to reliable birth control) necessary to make good life choices. All of this is a great improvement over historic times.
9: You conflate genuine reform rooted in first duties with fashionable perversity corrupting to the foundational framework of society, the family.
How you can say that equal treatment under law for women, minorities, homosexuals and others that do not share your narrow view of morality is perversity is simply insupportable.
11: In particular, some things are built into our morally governed nature. Governments do not invent them, nor can decrees under false colour of law change such.
Who decides what moral values are the correct ones?
For instance, sacrilegious blasphemy under false colour of law cannot change what marriage is [something literally written into our XY and XX chromosomes], it will only embed and entrench corruption in the place of soundness, to our detriment.
Marriage has changed throughout the centuries. We no longer require brides to swear an oath of obedience. That was a huge change to what marriage is. I have been married for 37 years. SSM has been legal for over ten years. My marriage has not been affected one iota. I don't agree with everything that goes on in society. Nobody does. But living in a society requires tolerance and compromises. Until someone can show me how granting equality under law to women, minorities, homosexuals, transgendered, etc. causes actual harm to society, I will support their cause and oppose those who try to stand in their way.Ed George
February 14, 2020
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EG, I will note on some steps of thought, in hope that maybe someone will begin to wake up before it is too late: >>We move forward the same way that societies have done for centuries. >> 1: The presumption of progress is, historically ill-founded. Many hope to continue reaping the fruit of an extremely unusual breakthrough of government, while discarding its explicit foundations. 2: I again quote the US DoI, 1776:
When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God [–> notice the appeal to built in law of our morally governed nature] entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. We hold these truths to be self-evident [–> appeal to first, self-evident principles of justice], that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator [–> inference to ethical theism in a generally Judaeo-Christian context] with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers [–> Govt’s first duty is justice, which BTW immediately discredits power games pivoting on Star Chamber proceedings, as — on fair comment [cf Dershowitz et al] — we just saw in the US Congress Intelligence Committee] from the consent of the governed, –That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.
3: See some familiar themes you keep ducking away from? You should. 4: The US founders started from the first duties, and drew out issues of justice as expressing built in law of our morally governed nature as endowed by our creator. This, in the further context of the double covenant understanding of nationhood and just government under God . . . part of the theology of the Reformation. 5: In that context existing or emerging lower magistrates [or representatives analogous to a Moses etc] are as must the servants of God duty bound to defend the civil peace of justice as are higher ones, and in cases of mounting abuse if remonstrance fails, orderly secession and defence of liberty and justice from tyranny is just. 6: Notice, the particular concern about usurpation and a train of abuses pointing to rising tyranny. 7: In our day, it is the overthrowing of first duties which is the telling marker of where those who imagine themselves to be the vanguard of progress wish to lead us. That is a strong sign indeed that power in such hands is exceedingly dangerous. Much as the danger the Chinese civil authorities pose to their own people today. >>We talk, we negotiate, we make rules and laws based on the knowledge we have and the goals we are aiming for. >> 8: You exaggerate our ability to know and to make law, especially in a context where the first duties are being side-stepped and undermined: to truth, to right reason, to prudence, to fairness and justice, etc. >>Sometimes this will work well for a time (e.g., same sex marriage, de-stigmatizing sex, expanded rights for women and people on the fringes of society, etc.)>> 9: You conflate genuine reform rooted in first duties with fashionable perversity corrupting to the foundational framework of society, the family. As has been long since pointed out at due length. Just, such is inconvenient so it is smeared and dismissed. 10: The end of such perversity is progressive all right: progressin to and over the cliff is a form of progress. Only, not a good one. 11: In particular, some things are built into our morally governed nature. Governments do not invent them, nor can decrees under false colour of law change such. For instance, sacrilegious blasphemy under false colour of law cannot change what marriage is [something literally written into our XY and XX chromosomes], it will only embed and entrench corruption in the place of soundness, to our detriment. >> and other times it will go horribly awry (e.g. the holocaust, Stalin, Mao, etc.).>> 12: As is currently happening. KFkairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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JVL, our problem today isn't moving ahead, it is turning back from catastrophic civil war, of which we have entered the early stages across our civilisation. That is one reason why I am going back to first principles; here, the first duties of reason. Once we are willing to acknowledge such and recognise the force of the worldviews issues they lead to, we can find a way back to sanity. Otherwise, nihilism will lead us over the cliff. Which is the current track. On long history, it is likely to take the crash at the bottom of the cliff to restore sanity through pain. My hope is that we will wake up to our needless peril and pull back from the bring before it collapses underfoot. KFkairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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JVL
Interesting discussion. So, I’m wondering . . . How to resolve the situation. How does a society move forward with social services and such when there is a gap evident in this thread. I don’t have an answer but it seems like one must be found.
We move forward the same way that societies have done for centuries. We talk, we negotiate, we make rules and laws based on the knowledge we have and the goals we are aiming for. Sometimes this will work well for a time (e.g., same sex marriage, de-stigmatizing sex, expanded rights for women and people on the fringes of society, etc.) and other times it will go horribly awry (e.g. the holocaust, Stalin, Mao, etc.).Ed George
February 14, 2020
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Interesting discussion. So, I'm wondering . . . How to resolve the situation. How does a society move forward with social services and such when there is a gap evident in this thread. I don't have an answer but it seems like one must be found.JVL
February 14, 2020
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BA77, thanks, useful list. I added to OP a full length YouTube of Strobel's documentary. KFkairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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I would be shocked if anyone who comes to this site doesn’t remember when the Beatles came to North America.
We would be shocked if you ever presented a coherent argument. Or an argument you could actually support.ET
February 14, 2020
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Acartia Eddie:
Which, in short, has been frequently centred on the Christian history with homosexuals.
And that proves you are ignorant. The OLD Testament pertains to Judaism, although the Christians also hold it to be true. And you cannot question the veracity of something you clearly don't know anything about.ET
February 14, 2020
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Since E.G. will not be fair and reasonable to the empirical evidence in the here and now that unequivocally points to intelligent design. then it is hardly surprising that E.G. refuses to be fair and reasonable to the historical evidence, presented by kf, that unequivocally points to the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Here are some more resources, on top of what kf has already presented, that show us that, as far as the historical evidence itself is concerned, Jesus assuredly rose from the dead.
Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? - Part One: The Facts - William Lane Craig - video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qhQRMhUK1o&list=PL3gdeV4Rk9EdjtIgl2mjC854P-0SlcYcJ&index=1 The (Unmatched Historical Reliability of the) Resurrection of Jesus - Dr. Gary R. Habermas (On Guard Conference 2013) - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNdmSQKyzgc How Reliable Is the New Testament? – Dr. Daniel Wallace (16:30 minute mark of video “The New Testament has an ‘embarrassment of riches’ compared to other ancient texts”) – video (Dr. Wallace publicly debated Bart Ehrman 3 times) http://www.watermark.org/media/how-badly-did-the-early-scribes-corrupt-the-new-testament/2305/ The reliability of the New Testament compared to other ancient texts - graph http://visualunit.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/nt_reliability1.jpg What are the proofs for the resurrection of Jesus? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Je9lI5jPTnQ The Case For Christ - Lee Strobel - video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67uj2qvQi_k Peter Williams - Historical Evidence For The Christian Faith https://vimeo.com/144544774 The Earliest Evidence for the Text of the New Testament - Dirk Jongkind https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f-Vll9oS53Y Is Jesus History? John Dickson discusses at Georgia Institute of Technology https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZgeYgkd9v8
bornagain77
February 14, 2020
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EG, you are a reasonably educated and cultured person, so you know what is and is not appropriate in a context that in film terms needs to be PG rated. That you resent such a reasonable requirement instead of implicitly recognising and respecting it speaks volumes. But then, this is an age where shocking, habituating, entangling perversity is a few clicks away on the Internet. (Though, per a brewing scandal linked above, that may well collapse over matters of child exploitation and recorded sexual assault of same. The last remaining barrier, in place for reasons that carry all sorts of implications.) Next, the underlying tone and response to evidence, record and heroic sacrifice above goes far beyond mere questioning of the veracity or credibility. On the latter, you have an obvious problem with selective hyperskepticism and refusal to address adequate warrant. On the former, consider as just one case how you reacted to a context in which the minimal facts of a consensus of scholarship [across the spectrum of views] are on the table, as well as the principles behind such facts , also historical evidence and undeniable trends. Namely, you invented a hypothetical narrative that has no provenance and put in it the suggestion of utterly gross immorality on the part of a man who could -- and did -- publicly challenge those who hated him enough to try to entrap him in death penalty crimes, that they were not able to factually accuse him of wrongdoing. A man, whose closest acquaintances were willing to peacefully die in the face of judicial murder for what they regarded about his spotless character (in a culture trained from birth to be sensitive to personal wrong-doing). Likewise, he was one able to rescue women, including those who had notoriously been scarlet; I here particularly point to Mary of Magdala (who is likely to also be Mary of Bethany). The rhetoric of a shocking smear to taint another by planting a notion of accusation is well known, and revealing. It is obvious that you are unwilling to acknowledge and respect the presence and manifest character of one of the all time great uplifting teachers of humanity; that reflects a fundamental incivility and want of understanding of the underpinnings of sound community. No wonder that we find ourselves in an age of manipulation by slander. I have already pointed to the connexion between truth, responsible reason and moral government, something you have consistently dodged: that we are subject to first duties of reason that pervade our intellectual endeavours and ground that we are under a law of our nature. That law is built in and binding, setting the context for individual life, family, community, sound government and the upholding of the civil peace of justice. Such moral government raises the issue of the IS-OUGHT gap, thus the need for an adequate reality root. That source of the world needs to be independent in being [thus necessary and eternal], powerful and knowledgeable enough to frame and build worlds, AND to have the inherent goodness and utter wisdom to ground moral government. The alternative, is that moral government is delusional. There is no real duty, we just have a socially advantageous delusion. As can be documented as a clear view out there. But given that our sense of duty to truth pervades our rational life, such a delusion would take down with it our whole intellectual credibility. You and your circle have been present many times when we have put on the table as a real world case study that it is manifestly and self-evidently evil to ambush, kidnap, bind, sexually indecently assault and murder a child for one's sick pleasure. That is a case of effectively certain and incorrigible moral knowledge. The attempted denial is patently absurd, leading to that certainty of self-evidence. This speaks straight to first duties of a rational being -- start with, truth, prudence, right reason, fairness and justice -- and leads to the challenge to bridge is and ought [only possible in the root of reality] thus the bill of requisites for a world root being. None of this is specifically Judaeo-Christian, nor does it presume generic theism, it is a worldviews analysis exercise towards understanding the integrity, wider coherence and credibility of rationality. Something which we desperately need. Indeed, it echoes not only Plato but also Cicero (a pagan, Roman Stoic, lawyer and top level statesman, writing c 50 BC):
—Marcus [in de Legibus, introductory remarks,. C1 BC, being Cicero himself]: . . . the subject of our present discussion . . . comprehends the universal principles of equity and law. In such a discussion therefore on the great moral law of nature, the practice of the civil law can occupy but an insignificant and subordinate station. For according to our idea, we shall have to explain the true nature of moral justice, which is congenial and correspondent [36]with the true nature of man.
[--> Note, how justice and our built in nature as a morally governed class of creatures are highlighted; thus framing the natural law frame: recognising built-in law that we do not create nor can we repeal, which then frames a sound understanding of justice. Without such an anchor, law inevitably reduces to the sort of ruthless, nihilistic might- and- manipulation- make- "right,"- "truth,"- "knowledge,"- "law"- and- "justice"- etc power struggle and chaos Plato warned against in The Laws Bk X.]
We shall have to examine those principles of legislation by which all political states should be governed. And last of all, shall we have to speak of those laws and customs which are framed for the use and convenience of particular peoples, which regulate the civic and municipal affairs of the citizens, and which are known by the title of civil laws. Quintus [his real-life brother]. —You take a noble view of the subject, my brother, and go to the fountain–head of moral truth, in order to throw light on the whole science of jurisprudence: while those who confine their legal studies to the civil law too often grow less familiar with the arts of justice than with those of litigation. Marcus. —Your observation, my Quintus, is not quite correct. It is not so much the science of law that produces litigation, as the ignorance of it, (potius ignoratio juris litigiosa est quam scientia) . . . . With respect to the true principle of justice, many learned men have maintained that it springs from Law. I hardly know if their opinion be not correct, at least, according to their own definition; for “Law (say they) is the highest reason, implanted in nature, which prescribes those things which ought to be done, and forbids the contrary.” This, they think, is apparent from the converse of the proposition; because this same reason, when it [37]is confirmed and established in men’s minds, is the law of all their actions. They therefore conceive that the voice of conscience is a law, that moral prudence is a law, whose operation is to urge us to good actions, and restrain us from evil ones. They think, too, that the Greek name for law (NOMOS), which is derived from NEMO, to distribute, implies the very nature of the thing, that is, to give every man his due. [--> this implies a definition of justice as the due balance of rights, freedoms and responsibilities] For my part, I imagine that the moral essence of law is better expressed by its Latin name, (lex), which conveys the idea of selection or discrimination. According to the Greeks, therefore, the name of law implies an equitable distribution of goods: according to the Romans, an equitable discrimination between good and evil. The true definition of law should, however, include both these characteristics. And this being granted as an almost self–evident proposition, the origin of justice is to be sought in the divine law of eternal and immutable morality. This indeed is the true energy of nature, the very soul and essence of wisdom, the test of virtue and vice.
This is the sort of general consensus thinking on the built in law of our morally governed nature that Paul of Tarsus wrote to Rome about 100 years later. And if there is no such built in law, if it is all a grand delusion, that taints our whole intellectual life. The positivism, relativism, selective hyperskepticism and scientism of our day are ill advised, self referentially absurd and nihilistic to the point of being misanthropy. We would be well advised to reconsider and turn back. Now, we face a bill of requisites for the world source, the root of reality. That bill of requisites is familiar sounding. And indeed, on those requisites tracing to our being morally governed creatures in a world fine tuned for such to exist, we can see the candidate to beat. Indeed, the only serious candidate after centuries of debate: the inherently good and utterly wise creator God; a necessary and maximally great being. One, worthy of our loyalty and of the responsible, reasonable service of doing the good that accords with our manifest morally governed nature. If you doubt this balance, this is phil, simply provide another candidate reality root ______ and show its seriousness on comparative difficulties ________ . (As this challenge has been put on the table many times without serious answer the balance on merits is obvious.) So, we have reason to hold to generic ethical theism, indeed we can see that the likes of Plato or Cicero were groping their way in that direction. In that context, we can note how the Hebraic tradition from outset, thousands of years before an analysis of necessary and maximally great being was seriously taken up, captured its essence in the self-revelation of God: I AM THAT I AM. That's impressive. Likewise, in that tradition we saw predictive prophecy, demonstrably centuries ahead, specifically -- Isa 53 -- involving resurrection of messiah. That is what was fulfilled, with 500 witnesses c 30 AD. Those witnesses were the unbreakable core of the founding era of the Christian movement as Morison noted. They were unanswerable, not even by ruthless demonic force that did not shrink back from judicial murder. And that is what is reflected in the C1 eyewitness lifetime record that grounds the minimal facts consensus. As to the attempt to reduce to one source and to dismiss as hearsay, the pattern of unintended coincidences and superficial differences that fuse into a coherent pattern on closer examination shows the direct contrary. Independent, multiple sources, recorded in a window of time before the Judaean war of the 60's and 70's wiped out the places so casually and aptly referred to. What emerges, then, is a pattern of selective hyperskepticism, motivated by a culture that is no longer post Christian but is in some quarters militantly hostile, anti-Christian. In the pursuit of such, there is a shipwreck being made of the law of our morally governed nature; which is fraught with implications of undermining sound government and the defence of the civil peace of justice. Such is anti-civilisational and misanthropic; suicidally ruinous should it succeed. We would be well advised to reconsider. KFkairosfocus
February 14, 2020
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KF
EG, your hostility to the Christian faith is ever more explicit;
Questioning the historic veracity of some biblical accounts is far from being hostile to Christianity. That you can’t see this speaks more about you than it does about me.Ed George
February 13, 2020
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KF
EG, there you go again. So, in a family friendly blog, we are to have no limits on injection of inappropriate language and topics, on pain of being accused of imposing values.
Inappropriate language? Your OP highlighted my supposed attack on Christianity. Which, in short, has been frequently centred on the Christian history with homosexuals. Something I have mentioned many times. But when I bring up the fact that homosexuals have sex with each other, you get all verklempt. And claim that your censorship is to protect the children who frequent this site. I have news for you. I would be shocked if anyone who comes to this site doesn’t remember when the Beatles came to North America.Ed George
February 13, 2020
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EG, your hostility to the Christian faith is ever more explicit; you seem to imagine that an historically utterly baseless and patently false accusation is to be compared to lifetime record coming from a circle of central eyewitnesses who peacefully surrendered life rather than deny what they knew, transmitted to us faithfully at fearsome cost. That speaks volumes on the trend of guilt by accusation which now increasingly dominates the international media and even parliamentary proceedings; which is a direct threat to the civil peace of justice. I suppose those who are wrecking sound governance and government are so ignorant of history that they do not understand that these are acts of civil war by agit prop and lawfare. Further to such, your studied ignorance/sidestepping of principles of sound evidence is hardly less manifest. I suggest, for those willing to listen before it is too late, that record that is fair on the face and coming from good custody chain is simply not in the same class as what you wish to put in its place as though that was what you are dealing with. That you imagine that you can freely make that comparison demonstrates your want of sense of duty to truth, right reason, prudence [so, warrant], fairness and justice etc. That goes far beyond manifest anti-Christian bigotry. By that patent lack, you remove yourself from the community of responsible discussion and show yourself to have no credibility. I suggest, you would be well advised to reconsider and walk back from such intemperate remarks as you have already put on record in this thread. That is your only hope to begin to restore a modicum of credibility. KFkairosfocus
February 13, 2020
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EG, there you go again. So, in a family friendly blog, we are to have no limits on injection of inappropriate language and topics, on pain of being accused of imposing values. The uncivil conduct you are showing is its own refutation. I will give no further warning if you further inject such language.kairosfocus
February 13, 2020
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EG, you try to reduce lifetime record of eyewitness testimony by the core 500 members of an historic community, with 20+ specifically identified, fair on its face and from good chain of custody to hearsay. Likewise, you neatly sidestep the other record and the sheer weight of impact as Morison so aptly summarises. This, in the further context of disregarding the weight of the cumulative judgement of generations of scholarship summarised in the minimal facts list. All of this is in the further context of refusing to address the first duties of reason you obviously expect us to adhere to even as you further refuse to address such striking evidence that we are inescapably morally governed creatures. Which, points to the nature of the root of reality, thus the kind of world we live in. All of that adds up and not in your favour. In that context, we have no reason to be confident that a responsible discussion of the nature of our being morally governed sexually complementary creatures whose children require extensive nurture to thrive will have any impact on you. We already see where the natural law framework that defines marriage as built into our nature is sidestepped by you as you proceed to imply that you can freely distort marriage under false colour of law. This immediately points to how justice, fairness, prudence, right reason and truth are also open to similar short shrift. Such, frankly, is nihilistic misanthtopy. And if you want to ask, but if I impose my agenda willy nilly under colour of law and willfully disregard core built in law that is foundational to sound community and government, then how does that harm you, the reply is, you would tear up the fabric of society through the very nihilism Plato warned against with the collapse of Athens indelibly stamped in his mind. KF PS: Again, Plato's warning, for the convenience of others, as for sure you will have no inclination to pay it heed:
Ath [in The Laws, Bk X 2,360 ya]. . . .[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that fire and water, and earth and air [i.e the classical "material" elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art . . . [such that] all that is in the heaven, as well as animals and all plants, and all the seasons come from these elements, not by the action of mind, as they say, or of any God, or from art, but as I was saying, by nature and chance only [ --> that is, evolutionary materialism is ancient and would trace all things to blind chance and mechanical necessity] . . . . [Thus, they hold] that the principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that mankind are always disputing about them and altering them; and that the alterations which are made by art and by law have no basis in nature, but are of authority for the moment and at the time at which they are made.-
[ --> Relativism, too, is not new; complete with its radical amorality rooted in a worldview that has no foundational IS that can ground OUGHT, leading to an effectively arbitrary foundation only for morality, ethics and law: accident of personal preference, the ebbs and flows of power politics, accidents of history and and the shifting sands of manipulated community opinion driven by "winds and waves of doctrine and the cunning craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming . . . " cf a video on Plato's parable of the cave; from the perspective of pondering who set up the manipulative shadow-shows, why.]
These, my friends, are the sayings of wise men, poets and prose writers, which find a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that the highest right is might,
[ --> Evolutionary materialism -- having no IS that can properly ground OUGHT -- leads to the promotion of amorality on which the only basis for "OUGHT" is seen to be might (and manipulation: might in "spin") . . . ]
and in this way the young fall into impieties, under the idea that the Gods are not such as the law bids them imagine; and hence arise factions [ --> Evolutionary materialism-motivated amorality "naturally" leads to continual contentions and power struggles influenced by that amorality at the hands of ruthless power hungry nihilistic agendas], these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is,to live in real dominion over others [ --> such amoral and/or nihilistic factions, if they gain power, "naturally" tend towards ruthless abuse and arbitrariness . . . they have not learned the habits nor accepted the principles of mutual respect, justice, fairness and keeping the civil peace of justice, so they will want to deceive, manipulate and crush -- as the consistent history of radical revolutions over the past 250 years so plainly shows again and again], and not in legal subjection to them [--> nihilistic will to power not the spirit of justice and lawfulness].
Nihilistic, will to power misanthropy is general enmity to humanity.kairosfocus
February 13, 2020
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