Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

A reply to Dr Dawkins’ September Playboy interview

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In an interview with Playboy, September just past, Dr Dawkins made some dismissive remarks  on the historicity of Jesus, in the context of having made similarly dismissive talking points about Intelligent Design.  As UD News noted:

PLAYBOY: What is your view of Jesus?

DAWKINS: The evidence he existed is surprisingly shaky. The earliest books in the New Testament to be written were the Epistles, not the Gospels. It’s almost as though Saint Paul and others who wrote the Epistles weren’t that interested in whether Jesus was real. Even if he’s fictional, whoever wrote his lines was ahead of his time in terms of moral philosophy.

PLAYBOY: You’ve read the Bible.

DAWKINS: I haven’t read it all, but my knowledge of the Bible is a lot better than most fundamentalist Christians’.

Since this matter is a part of the wider issues of atheism and its cultural agendas, which are often presented in the name of Science sez, I have now responded in some details, here.

On this wider cultural agenda of atheism issue, Lee Strobel’s video on The Case for Christ may also be of interest:

[vimeo 17960119]

One may wonder why such is relevant to an ID blog. Right from the very beginning, however, Darwin made it very clear that there was a wider socio-cultural, worldviews agenda connected to Darwin’s science. This may easily be discerned from his 1881 letter of reply to a man better known to history as Marx’s [de facto?] son-in-law, Aveling:

. . . though I am a strong advocate for free thought [–> NB: free-thought is an old synonym for skepticism, agnosticism or atheism] on all subjects, yet it appears to me (whether rightly or wrongly) that direct arguments against christianity & theism produce hardly any effect on the public; & freedom of thought is best promoted by the gradual illumination of men’s minds, which follows from the advance of science. It has, therefore, been always my object to avoid writing on religion, & I have confined myself to science. I may, however, have been unduly biassed by the pain which it would give some members of my family [–> NB: especially his wife, Emma], if I aided in any way direct attacks on religion.

The letter just cited makes it utterly clear that a key background motive for Darwin’s theorising on origins science was to put God out of a job, thus indirectly undermining the plausibility of believing in God.  In thinking and acting like this, he probably believed that he was championing enlightenment and science-led progress in their path to victory over backward, irrational but emotionally clung-to beliefs. And so his strategy was to lead in a science that was in his mind showing just how outdated and ill-founded the Judaeo-Christian theism that had dominated the West since Constantine in the 300’s was.

In short, there has always been an anti-Christian socio-cultural agenda closely tied to the rise of Darwinism. And, that has to be faced and is a legitimate part of the wider discussion, though of course — as my reply to Dawkins should make plain — it is tied more closely to principles of historical warrant than to science.

On the design issue Dawkins also raised during the interview, my 101 level response is here on.

A key point in that response is to take note of a basic problem, typified by prof Richard Lewontin (cf five cases in point here, including more details from Lewontin) who openly admitted to a priori evolutionary materialism in his NYRB review of Sagan’s The Demon-Haunted World:

. . . It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated . . . [[“Billions and billions of demons,” NYRB, Jan 1997.  Further excerpted and discussed here.]

Seminal ID thinker Prof Johnson”s reply in First Things that November is apt:

For scientific materialists the materialism comes first; the science comes thereafter. [[Emphasis original] We might more accurately term them “materialists employing science.” And if materialism is true, then some materialistic theory of evolution has to be true simply as a matter of logical deduction, regardless of the evidence. That theory will necessarily be at least roughly like neo-Darwinism, in that it will have to involve some combination of random changes and law-like processes capable of producing complicated organisms that (in Dawkins’ words) “give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose.”
. . . .   The debate about creation and evolution is not deadlocked . . . Biblical literalism is not the issue. The issue is whether materialism and rationality are the same thing. Darwinism is based on an a priori commitment to materialism, not on a philosophically neutral assessment of the evidence. Separate the philosophy from the science, and the proud tower collapses. [[Emphasis added.] [[The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism, First Things, 77 (Nov. 1997), pp. 22 – 25.]

So, while the scientific issues are central to UD’s purpose and are therefore given pride of place in our posts, wider concerns are also legitimately to be addressed, and we will not allow silly talking points about “Creationism in a cheap tuxedo” intimidate us from speaking to such issues.

For that matter, let us observe what that silly red-neck Bible-thumping Fundy — NOT, Plato had to say in solemn warning on the socio-cultural associations of evolutionary Materialism, in The Laws, Bk X, 2350 years ago:

Ath. . . . [[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, and that as to the bodies which come next in order-earth, and sun, and moon, and stars-they have been created by means of these absolutely inanimate existences. The elements are severally moved by chance and some inherent force according to certain affinities among them-of hot with cold, or of dry with moist, or of soft with hard, and according to all the other accidental admixtures of opposites which have been formed by necessity. After this fashion and in this manner the whole heaven has been created, and 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. [[In short, evolutionary materialism premised on chance plus necessity acting without intelligent guidance on primordial matter is hardly a new or a primarily “scientific” view! Notice also, the trichotomy of causal factors:  (a) chance/accident, (b) mechanical necessity of nature, (c) art or intelligent design and direction.] . . . .

[[Thus, they hold that t]he Gods exist not by nature, but by art, and by the laws of states, which are different in different places, according to the agreement of those who make them; and that the honourable is one thing by nature and another thing by law, and 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. (Cf. here for Locke’s views and sources on a very different base for grounding liberty as opposed to license and resulting anarchistic “every man does what is right in his own eyes” chaos leading to tyranny. )] 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 leads to the promotion of amorality], 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; cf. dramatisation here],  these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is, to live in real dominion over others [[such amoral factions, if they gain power, “naturally” tend towards ruthless tyranny], and not in legal subjection to them.

 Just in case you think that is an improper, unwarranted projection unto Science from objectors to Darwin, let me cite the well known remarks by prof William Provine at the 1998 Darwin Day keynote speech at the University of Tennessee (this being his native state):

Naturalistic evolution has clear consequences that Charles Darwin understood perfectly. 1) No gods worth having exist; 2) no life after death exists; 3) no ultimate foundation for ethics exists; 4) no ultimate meaning in life exists; and 5) human free will is nonexistent . . . . 
 
The first 4 implications are so obvious to modern naturalistic evolutionists that I will spend little time defending them. Human free will, however, is another matter. Even evolutionists have trouble swallowing that implication. I will argue that humans are locally determined systems that make choices. They have, however, no free will . . . . Without free will, justification for revenge disappears and rehabilitation is the main job of judicial systems and prisons. [[NB: As C. S Lewis warned, in the end, this means: reprogramming through new conditioning determined by the power groups controlling the society and its prisons.] We will all live in a better society when the myth of free will is dispelled . . . .
How can we have meaning in life? When we die we are really dead; nothing of us survives.
Natural selection is a process leading every species almost certainly to extinction . . . Nothing could be more uncaring than the entire process of organic evolution. Life has been on earth for about 3.6 billion years. In less that one billion more years our sun will turn into a red giant. All life on earth will be burnt to a crisp. Other cosmic processes absolutely guarantee the extinction of all life anywhere in the universe. When all life is extinguished, no memory whatsoever will be left that life ever existed. [Evolution: Free Will and Punishment and Meaning in Life, Second Annual Darwin Day Celebration Keynote Address, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, February 12, 1998 (abstract).]
Such remarks find a striking parallel in Dawkins’ words in a 1995 Scientific American article:

Nature is not cruel, only pitilessly indifferent. This lesson is one of the hardest for humans to learn. We cannot accept that things might be neither good nor evil, neither cruel nor kind, but simply callous: indifferent to all suffering, lacking all purpose.

We humans have purpose on the brain. We find it difficult to look at anything without wondering what it is “for,” what the motive for it or the purpose behind it might be. The desire to see purpose everywhere is natural in an animal that lives surrounded by machines, works of art, tools and other designed artifacts – an animal whose waking thoughts are dominated by its own goals and aims . . . .

Somewhere between windscreen wipers and tin openers on the one hand, and rocks and the universe on the other, lie living creatures. Living bodies and their organs are objects that, unlike rocks, seem to have purpose written all over them . . . . The true process that has endowed wings, eyes, beaks, nesting instincts and everything else about life with the strong illusion of purposeful design is now well understood.

It is Darwinian natural selection . . . . The true utility function of life, that which is being maximized in the natural world, is DNA survival. But DNA is not floating free; it is locked up in living bodies, and it has to make the most of the levers of power at its disposal. Genetic sequences that find themselves in cheetah bodies maximize their survival by causing those bodies to kill gazelles. Sequences that find themselves in gazelle bodies increase their chance of survival by promoting opposite ends. But the same utility function-the survival of DNA-explains the “purpose” of both the cheetah [–> i.e. predator]  and the gazelle [–> i.e. prey] . . . .

The total amount of suffering per year in the natural world is beyond all decent contemplation. During the minute that it takes me to compose this sentence, thousands of animals are being eaten alive, many others are running for their lives, whimpering with fear, others are being slowly devoured from within by rasping parasites, thousands of all kinds are dying of starvation, thirst and disease. It must be so. If there is ever a time of plenty, this very fact will automatically lead to an increase in population until the natural state of starvation and misery is restored.

In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won’t find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but pitiless indifference . . . . DNA neither cares nor knows. DNA just is. And we dance to its music. [[ “God’s Utility Function,” Sci. Am. Aug 1995, pp. 80 – 85.]

[[NB: This article raises the issue of the problem of evil, here emphasising the problem of natural evil; probably the strongest argument in the atheists’ arsenal, but one that only works by implicitly assuming that good and evil, thus moral obligation, are real; while ducking the implication that the only valid worldview in a world in which OUGHT is real, is one that has a foundational IS that adequately grounds ought. And materialism — scientific atheism today, has no such is. So, the objecting atheist actually has no grounds to stand on to make the argument; his argument, in the end is self-defeating, and so the proper response is to insist that such an atheist face that issue before proceeding further. (Cf here for a preliminary discussion of the problem of evil from a Christian perspective.)]

So, it is entirely appropriate for us to respond to that wider view of science, society, worldviews and cultural agendas. It therefore seems to me that there are some serious issues that we need to ponder as we reflect on where our civilisation is heading at this time. END

_____________

F/N, Nov 6th: Given the onward attempted objections to the list of minimal facts and the failure to substantially respond to my onward rebuttals at 34 below, it is worth adding as a footnote from the linked post in my personal blog, the following summary of the criteria of authenticity, and a table that addresses how well ten skeptical theories from C1 – 21 can handle a key cluster of credible facts.

First, the criteria of high quality facts — while in many cases from antiquity, high quality sources do not meet such facts, the following are strong indicators of a credible claim:

  1. Multiple sources – If two or more sources attest to the same fact, it is more likely authentic
  2. Enemy attestation – If the writers enemies corroborate a given fact, it is more likely authentic
  3. Principle of embarrassment – If the text embarrasses the writer, it is more likely authentic
  4. Eyewitness testimony – First hand accounts are to be preferred
  5. Early testimony – an early account is more likely accurate than a later one

Second, the table that compares alternative explanations of four key credible facts that meet such criteria:

“Theory”
Match to four major credible facts regarding Jesus of Nazareth & his Passion
Overall score/20
Died by crucifixion
(under Pontius Pilate) at
Jerusalem
c 30 AD
Was buried, tomb was found empty
Appeared to multiple disciples,
many of whom proclaimed
& suffered for their
faith
Appeared to key
objectors who then became church leaders: James & Paul
Bodily Resurrection
5
5
5
5
20
Visions/
hallucinations
5
2
2
1
10
Swoon/recovery
1
3
2
2
8
Wrong tomb
5
1
1
1
8
Stolen body/fraud
5
2
1
1
9
Quran 4:155 -6: “They did not slay him, neither crucified him.” 1 1 1 1 4
 “Jesus never existed” 1 1 1 1 4
 “Christianity as we know it was cooked up by Constantine and  others at Nicea, who censored/ distorted the original record” 1 1 1 1 4
“What we have today is ‘Paulianity,’ not the original teachings of Jesus and his disciples” 2 1 1 2 6
Christianity — including the resurrection —  is a gradually emerging legend based on a real figure
5
1
1
1
8
Complete legend/pagan copycat (Greek, Persian, Egyptian, etc)
1
1
1
1
4

(I have given my scores above, based on reasoning that should be fairly obvious. As an exercise you may want to come up with your own scores on a 5 – 1 scale: 5 = v. good/ 4 = good/ 3 = fair/ 2 = poor/ 1 = v. poor, with explanations. Try out blends of the common skeptical theories to see how they would fare.)

Laying a priori anti-supernaturalism aside as a patent case of worldview level question-begging closed mindedness, the above table shows that there are two serious candidates today, the resurrection as historically understood, or some version of a collective vision/hallucination that led to a sincere (but plainly mistaken) movement.

The latter of course runs into  the problem that such collective visions are not psychologically plausible as the cultural expectations of a resurrection would have been of a general one in the context of the obvious military triumph of Israel. Nor, does it explain the apparently missing body. Moreover, we know separately, that the culturally accepted alternative would have been individual prophetic visions of the exalted that on being shared would comfort the grieving that the departed rested with God. So, an ahead of time individual breakthrough resurrection — even, one that may be accompanied by some straws in the wind of what is to come in fulness at the end — is not part of the mental furniture of expectations in C1 Judaism.  Where, hallucinations and culturally induced visions are going to be rooted in such pre-existing mental “furniture.”

So, it is in order to call for a serious rethinking on the part of Dr Dawkins and co.

Comments
KF:
BD: Above, you pretended that there was no objective, meaningful and coherent definition of murder. I reminded you of it in light of longstanding jurisprudential thought and practice. You simply went around the loop of your subjectivist relativism one more time. Sadly, this exposes you as fundamentally frivolous. Please, wake up and do better next time. KF
I assume from your lack of response that you cannot effectively counter my demonstrations (in 18, 36, 47, 53, 74, and 121) that it is a fact of life, part of the human condition, that morality is unavoidably relative. (This doesn't surprise me, by the way. I'm pretty certain that there is no effective counter.) So you switch topics (acting as if the definition of murder was in any way central to the argument) and end up, as Stephen did, by simply impugning my character, asserting that I am "fundamentally frivolous". Frivolous is that last thing I am. Anyone who reads my posts in this thread with anything approaching an open mind, whether they agree with me or not, can see that I have thought very deeply about this subject. Try not to confuse disagreement with frivolity. It doesn't help your image.Bruce David
November 16, 2012
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BD: Above, you pretended that there was no objective, meaningful and coherent definition of murder. I reminded you of it in light of longstanding jurisprudential thought and practice. You simply went around the loop of your subjectivist relativism one more time. Sadly, this exposes you as fundamentally frivolous. Please, wake up and do better next time. KFkairosfocus
November 16, 2012
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KN: I was simply pointing out how closely related the rules are. Where, of course the secret of the GR is it evokes empathy by asking us to put ourselves in our neighbour's shoes. And I also tend to agree with those who view the negative rule as the SILVER rule, because of its lack of a pro-active stance. I should note as well that the GR, in the context being used, does not stand on its own; it is inseparably twinned with love to the inherently good creator God (who made us equally in his image and implanted in us a sense of right and wrong, and of fairness such that your thief would naturally demand justice were he wronged . . . ), and is actually explicitly set in the context of true judgement and justice in court. KFkairosfocus
November 16, 2012
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An assertion that moral codes are inevitably meaningless or incoherent. This is patently not so, as can be seen from say Kan’ts Categorical Imperative [here taken as a principle that is in practice a form of the golden rule], where in fact it is the incoherence and unworkability of the immoral that exposes it.
Technically, it's the Golden Rule which is a sub-type of the Categorical Imperative. The GR says either "do to others what you would like them to do to you" or "don't do to others what you would not like them to do to you". The grounding of the GR is, either way, basically egoistic -- how one would like oneself to be treated by others. The CI, on the other hand, says that we must respect others as ends in themselves and also ourselves as ends in ourselves, thus yielding duties of justice and duties of love respectively. These are missing from the Golden Rule. Here's how Kant himself puts the point:
Let it not be thought that the trite quod tibi non vis fieri est (what you do not want others to do to you) can serve as a norm or principle here. For it is, though with various limitations, only derived from the latter. It can be no universal law because it contains the ground neither of duties to oneself nor of duties of love to others (for many a man would gladly agree that others should not benefit him if only he might be excused from showing them beneficence), and finally it does not contain the ground of duties owed to others, for a criminal would argue on this ground against the judge punishing him, and so forth. (Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals 4:430, footnote.)
Kantian Naturalist
November 16, 2012
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It’s time, past time, to try something else. It’s time to try building a world based on Love.
Whatever that means. What's the message of love you and your group are in Iran declaring to the Jihadists?
The history of the world is the history of people slaughtering each other over their differences regarding “objective morality”.
Assuming it's true, which i dispute, so what? Replace differences regarding 'objective morality' over differences regarding 'love' and see if you get any other result.Mung
November 16, 2012
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KF: re 214 Your quibble over the definition of murder is just that---a quibble. My comment 121 is discussing whether it is possible to determine an objective standard that will enable us to decide under any circumstances whether taking the life of another human being is justified.
I trust that you will acknowledge that your points have been specifically answered in responsible details with relevant case in point. If not, the onlooker will be able to see for him or her self just what is going on.I trust that you will acknowledge that your points have been specifically answered in responsible details with relevant case in point. If not, the onlooker will be able to see for him or her self just what is going on.
You have not answered my point at all. You haven't even understood it. From 121:
I don’t expect you to answer these questions. Your answers in any case will only be your answers. The point is that different people will give you very different answers. Reason is incapable of answering them in a way that will compel all other reasonable people to agree. Each of us must supply our own answers; there is no objective truth in the matter. Hence moral relativism.
Re 215:
Then ask yourself what degree of responsibility would obtain for yourself and others who by preventing action to stop this madness when it could have relatively low cost, you were to wake up and go to work one fine Tuesday Morning, to hear on cable news that three or four cities have just gone up in smoke under mushroom clouds, not just three buildings as on Sept 11, 2001.
Do you really, truly, actually believe that declaring to people who believe Allah demands Jihad against the "Great Satan" that their actions violate your standard of objective morality will have any effect whatsoever other than possibly to harden their positions? They believe that their actions are justified by a concept of objective morality that they hold to just as strongly as you hold to yours. The history of the world is the history of people slaughtering each other over their differences regarding "objective morality". It's time, past time, to try something else. It's time to try building a world based on Love. P.S. This does not mean that we are not allowed to take action to protect ourselves in the mean time. We do that, however, based on a sober analysis of threat, not on moral censure. And as in any situation in which lethal force is involved, there will be difficult questions to answer, made more difficult by the fact that there is no objective moral standard by which to answer them.Bruce David
November 15, 2012
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PS: Having had to do some family errands, I have come back and have a further thought. Perhaps, you have not been taught that philosophy is by its very nature about difficult fundamental questions, which are recognised by the fact that such have no easy and sound answers. As a result, the prime method in phil is comparative difficulties across serious alternatives on factual adequacy, coherence and relative explanatory power and elegance [i.e simple as opposed to ad hoc patchwork or simplistic] leading to responsible conclusions. In such a context, that there are difficulties, that there are hard to decide points etc etc, does not mean that an answer is not responsible. Where, ethics is just such a case. And, where, as I should add, the ethics of war is a particularly important case that pivots on knowing enough history and geopolitics to form sound judgements. (Cf my remarks here, if you wish.) In that regard, I am particularly appalled at how ignorant today's generation is about the course of European history in the 1930's, leading up to WW II. Absent understanding that history on a well balanced grasp of material facts -- itself a major problem, as we deal with only too many utterly willing to spin, spin, snip and snipe -- in sufficient depth, it is easy to assume that postponing war as long as possible is always the better option. When one deals with determined aggressors, there is no avoiding war; it may only be postponed until the aggressor has enough power to impose a horrific cost to defeat him. Today, for example, the Straights of Hormuz are the number one global choke-point. Iran is in the grips of an unspeakably ruthless and evil -- you should think about how they make a hypocritical mockery of marriage to rape virgin women on the eve of their executions, because there is in Islamic theology a concept that virgin women go to paradise, as just one case in point . . . sending the families a sack of sweets in token of what they did the night before they hanged your sister or daughter of maybe only twelve years of age (probably on some trumped up charge . . . ), to multiply the psychological torture -- totalitarian regime in the grips of a religiously motivated world conquest ideology. Here, ask yourself if you know what the hadith on the black flag army from the direction of Khorasan is about, and where that is, and how it relates to repeated pronouncements of Mr Ahmadinejad and co. A regime, that has sought nuclear weapons since the mid 1980's and that in a context where satchel nukes are a reality. Multiply that by sponsorship of suicide terrorism and the training of a corps of such suicide terrorists. Mix in, on another hadith -- the infamous Gharqad tree hadith that is quoted in Clause 7 of the Hamas covenant, and then look at the genocidal threats made against Jews. Then ask yourself what degree of responsibility would obtain for yourself and others who by preventing action to stop this madness when it could have relatively low cost, you were to wake up and go to work one fine Tuesday Morning, to hear on cable news that three or four cities have just gone up in smoke under mushroom clouds, not just three buildings as on Sept 11, 2001. Then, think about the rhetoric that we have entertained for the past decade again. Then ask yourself why it is that so much of what I just described is not in the general news or discussion of views and alternatives. Think twice, three times, four times. kairosfocus
November 15, 2012
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BD: With all due respect, you are simply insistently repeating the same errors. Let me illustrate by clipping 121, where you present again your claimed proof that radical relativism is the truth about morality and that's that. I will, for the sake of argument, insert comments on bullet points (as, even though this will inevitably invite further side tracks, I am sure the onlookers will see how you have gone astray yet again and again):
There in fact is no objective moral code, precisely because it breaks down in the details. a --> An assertion that moral codes are inevitably meaningless or incoherent. This is patently not so, as can be seen from say Kan'ts Categorical Imperative [here taken as a principle that is in practice a form of the golden rule], where in fact it is the incoherence and unworkability of the immoral that exposes it. b --> Let me state it in this form, that we must act on a maxim that is capable of universalisation, or equivalently, we must treat others as ends in themselves not merely as means to our ends. c --> In the case of lying, for example, if lies were the general pattern of behaviour verbal communication and trust would so break down that society would disintegrate. (That is, immoral acts like lying show themselves up by how they parasite off the fact that we usually do not live like that. They thus abuse the fact that people usually do the opposite, e.g tell the truth/lying, etc.) d --> This BTW, is why "Cretans are liars" stated by a Cretan does not post ultimate dilemmas. Even Cretans have to tell the truth most of the time. Let’s take murder as an example. “Thou shalt not murder” is at best a general guideline. e --> You are about to twist the definition of murder, by confusing it with kill. To kill an innocent person with malice aforethought is murder. Not all killing is murder. f --> Here is the legal dictionary from The Free Dictionary, first definition as excerpted:
Under the Common Law, or law made by courts, murder was the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought. The term malice aforethought did not necessarily mean that the killer planned or premeditated on the killing, or that he or she felt malice toward the victim. Generally, malice aforethought referred to a level of intent or reck-lessness that separated murder from other killings and warranted stiffer punishment. The definition of murder has evolved over several centuries. Under most modern statutes in the United States, murder comes in four varieties: (1) intentional murder; (2) a killing that resulted from the intent to do serious bodily injury; (3) a killing that resulted from a depraved heart or extreme recklessness; and (4) murder committed by an Accomplice during the commission of, attempt of, or flight from certain felonies. Some jurisdictions still use the term malice aforethought to define intentional murder, but many have changed or elaborated on the term in order to describe more clearly a murderous state of mind. California has retained the malice aforethought definition of murder (Cal. Penal Code § 187 [West 1996]). It also maintains a statute that defines the term malice. Under section 188 of the California Penal Code, malice is divided into two types: express and implied. Express malice exists "when there is manifested a deliberate intention unlawfully to take away the life of a fellow creature." Malice may be implied by a judge or jury "when no considerable provocation appears, or when the circumstances attending the killing show an abandoned and malignant heart."
Is it murder to kill to stop a person from committing a robbery? At what level of crime: $1,000? $5.00? a pack of gum? Is it murder to kill someone to prevent them from harming another? What level and type of harm justifies lethal force? g --> In each of these cases, you are twisting words and situations, as it is presumable that you know that killing does not equal murder, and you may easily ascertain that in Elizabethan English, they used "slay" as we use "kill" now, Kill then being used to mean what we do by "murder." (So, the inappropriate citing of KJV will be of no help.) Is it murder to kill a suspected terrorist without due process of law? Is it murder if the process (say drone strikes) will inevitably cost the lives of innocent people? h --> You here pose the context of illegal combat or piracy. A pirate or the modern equivalent, is at war with humanity and is an illegal combatant who is on the battlefield. In defence of civilisation, it is necessary to fight such pirates, even when such forces the unintended killing of innocents within the means that are available and in light of the credible alternative. And that has to be faced precisely because as you know such pirates routinely resort to the use of human shields, willing or unwilling. Is it murder to kill someone in a war just because your government has decided that military action is warranted? i --> There is a presumption that a government has good reason for going to war. The ordinary person or soldier has no duty to ascertain the depth of that case, but in the case of specific and obvious war crimes, such a soldier has no duty to obey such illegal and murderous orders. Even, if his own life is held hostage under the system of military discipline at work. Even if you disagree with that assessment? j --> You the individual have a resort to conscience objection and protest, assuming a democratic polity that still respects rule of law. What exactly constitutes a “just war”? Can war ever be justified? k --> You know this or should know this, war in defence of the civil peace of justice, carried out by reasonable and available means and with reasonable hope of success in good time, is just. Just, because of the alternative: surrender to enslavement or mass murder etc. Or also, the problem that some wars cannot be averted or contained, they can only be postponed to the advantage of the aggressor. l --> As a classic example, a just, limited war in 1934 - 6 when Germany broke its treaty with France, would have stopped Germany before it had built up its juggernaut, and we now know would have triggered a coup that would almost certainly have brought Hitler down. Failure to go to a limited war at that time gave Hitler the ability to erect a defensive belt in the Rhinelands, which allowed him to go to war by putting nearly all his troops on the other side of Germany in 1939. And before that, by 1938, Hitler was able to intimidate the British and French to dismember the defenses of Czechoslovakia, leading to his conquest of the East. That failure to go to war when it would have been far less costly -- though more controversial -- led directly tot he destruction of a continent and the unnecessary loss of 40 million lives in and around Europe. Would be pacifists need to know of such grim historical cases and weigh their sense of superiority against the cost of the alternative. Is it murder for the state to execute someone for committing a crime? Which crimes? m --> This pivots on perverting language. That one who is a murderer or the like forfeits his own life, and is executed in payment of penalty, is not murder in turn. To cast it in that light is a reckless and hypocritical rhetorical twisting of words. These kinds of questions are what I meant by the “meaning” of natural law. What does it mean when you get into the nitty gritty of actually living life? n --> On the contrary, it simply further shows the pattern of incoherence in your own view. Yes, every philosophical view will face difficulties, and challenges. That is inevitable and requires responsible thinking and action, it does not excuse twisting terms and circumstances into a counsel that invites a worse situation. But then, rhetoric is that wicked art that pretends that the worse is the better case and seeks means to persuade the naive of such.
I trust that you will acknowledge that your points have been specifically answered in responsible details with relevant case in point. If not, the onlooker will be able to see for him or her self just what is going on. As to your pretence that your proposed circle of the like minded -- how long will they remain such -- is equivalent to the real world that people face, is telling on the issue of the alternatives in front of us. There is a clear and well established framework that traces to the recognition of our equality and inherent moral worth, that leads to a well established framework of rights, liberty and justice. One that gives room for reformation as opposed to imposition of the tyranny of the majority as manipulated, or the power of the elites forming oligarchies or autocratic tyrannies. We could go on and on and on, recirculating already answered arguemnts or irrelevancies from above, but all this shows is that unfortunately, you are unwilling to address the core incoherences in your system. let it stand, you are unable to even recognise and state that we OUGHT NOT to abduct, torture, rape and murder innocent children. All, patently because you (and others who similarly propose views with no answer to the IS ought gap and try to sustain such by specious argumentation) apparently dare not acknowledge the force of OUGHT, given what it so clearly points to, and which is for some reason utterly unwelcome to your view. namely, an IS in the foundation of reality and recognised by sound worldviews, that has the capability to ground OUGHT. The best and only serious candidate on the table being the inherently good, Creator God. Let that be the epitaph of your proposed alternative and others of like ilk. Please, please, please, think again. KFkairosfocus
November 15, 2012
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KF:
Love, directed to our neighbours who are equally made in God’s image is itself an underlying duty and entails other duties of care once we see the value of our fellow humans.
You claim it is a duty. Well, you are entitled to your opinion, which is all it is---your opinion. I say that love is not a duty, it is who we are. We love others because it is our nature to love, not because we have a duty to. You can't love because you're supposed to for pity's sake. You love because you do. Period. With respect to Locke's and Hooker's argument, it is essentially a reasoned argument in favor of the Golden Rule. The GR sounds good in the abstract, but it has serious problems when you get down to the nitty gritty of applying it in real life, as I have pointed out in other threads. Without spending too much time on it, the problem is that what I would have someone do unto me may very well not be what they would have me do unto them. Love is a much surer guide to the appropriate action in any particular circumstance.
Going beyond that, pardon but the refusal to accept that love has positive and describable — that is, definable and intelligible — moral content through a species of emotionally loaded subjectivism, simply inadvertently highlights the underlying subjectivism and radical relativism.
I don't "refuse to accept". I outright disagree. Your language assumes that the case is settled, and thus is a species of begging the question. Love is Love. It has no moral content whatsoever. Again, your statement to the contrary is simply your opinion.
It remains that the alternatives in a real community such as we have to live in day by day, where there are genuine conflicts and genuine crimes, are much as SB highlighted: 1: adherence to the natural, evident moral law that grounds rights, duties and the role of citizens and government in sustaining and defending the civil peace of justice 2: the tyranny of the 51% as manipulated by subtle elites 3: the tyranny of the minority of the powerful, mostly by a power elite, but also down to one in some cases of totalitarian political messianism.
That your first alternative could work in a large diverse society is completely out of touch with reality, as I argued in 182. Neither you nor Stephen have addressed this argument.
WHAT YOU ARE DOING IS INADVERTENTLY CONTINUING TO EXPOSE THE INHERENT BANKRUPTCY OF RADICAL RELATIVISM.
Well, again, you are entitled to your opinion. However, I have demonstrated in 18, 36, 47, 53, 74, and 121 that "radical relativism", as you call it, is not something you have any choice about. It is simply a fact of life here on earth. You have not addressed that argument, either.Bruce David
November 15, 2012
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BD: With all due respect, you continue to be evasive and unduly dismissive. Love, directed to our neighbours who are equally made in God's image is itself an underlying duty and entails other duties of care once we see the value of our fellow humans. I will note again from Locke's remarks when he set out to ground the moral foundation of modern liberty and justice under limited, emergently democratic accountable government. As you know by now, he did so in his second treatise on Civil Gov't Ch 2 sect 5 by citing the judicious Hooker, in a clip I will augment:
. . . if I cannot but wish to receive good, even as much at every man's hands, as any man can wish unto his own soul, how should I look to have any part of my desire herein satisfied, unless myself be careful to satisfy the like desire which is undoubtedly in other men . . . my desire, therefore, to be loved of my equals in Nature, as much as possible may be, imposeth upon me a natural duty of bearing to themward fully the like affection. From which relation of equality between ourselves and them that are as ourselves, what several rules and canons natural reason hath drawn for direction of life no man is ignorant . . . [[Hooker then continues, citing Aristotle in The Nicomachean Ethics, Bk 8:] as namely, That because we would take no harm, we must therefore do none; That since we would not be in any thing extremely dealt with, we must ourselves avoid all extremity in our dealings; That from all violence and wrong we are utterly to abstain, with such-like . . . ] [[Eccl. Polity,preface, Bk I, "ch." 8, p.80]
Going beyond that, pardon but the refusal to accept that love has positive and describable -- that is, definable and intelligible -- moral content through a species of emotionally loaded subjectivism, simply inadvertently highlights the underlying subjectivism and radical relativism. It remains that the alternatives in a real community such as we have to live in day by day, where there are genuine conflicts and genuine crimes, are much as SB highlighted:
1: adherence to the natural, evident moral law that grounds rights, duties and the role of citizens and government in sustaining and defending the civil peace of justice 2: the tyranny of the 51% as manipulated by subtle elites 3: the tyranny of the minority of the powerful, mostly by a power elite, but also down to one in some cases of totalitarian political messianism.
WHAT YOU ARE DOING IS INADVERTENTLY CONTINUING TO EXPOSE THE INHERENT BANKRUPTCY OF RADICAL RELATIVISM. And for that inadvertent service, I must thank you. KFkairosfocus
November 14, 2012
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F/N 2: Onlookers, observe how the central issue of Dr Dawkins' dismissiveness to the cumulative evidence on the historical reality of Jesus, and the significance of his passion, remain as the by and large unspoken of elephant in the middle of the room. (Cf the OP and the linked discussion here.) KFkairosfocus
November 14, 2012
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F/N: VJT's discussion on ethics in the context of abortion, here, is well worth the read. If I may be so bold, perhaps even my comment here may be of help. KFkairosfocus
November 14, 2012
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KF:
In short, you are trying to have your cake and eat it.
No. I am trying to convey in words my own personal experience of what living life from love is like, and the experience I have had of others who are doing the same, more successfully than I in many cases, and how transformative that is. I have also pointed out, irrefutably in my opinion, that no matter how much one would like it to be true that there is objective morality, the fact is that all morality is unavoidably relative. KF, you have not answered my arguments on that score. All you do is complain that the consequences would be terrible. Well, all morality is relative, and the consequences are continual fighting among various groups whose ideas of "objective" morality conflict with each other. People throughout history have killed each other over their respective concepts of absolute, objective morality. People who live their lives from Love do not have this problem.
Onlookers, observe, how at length BD has had to use “unloving” as a vague synonym for unjust and wrong to the point of being a crime against the person. This underscores just how incoherent and irrelevant to the on the ground reality of the community with the problem of abuse and crime, terrorism and war, etc — not to mention just plain moral struggle — the sort of relativism and subjectivism we are seeing in action is.
Just because love cannot be defined in words does not mean it isn't real, powerful, and a force for transformation of the planet. It is one of those phenomena that can only be understood by experiencing it, like color, for instance. Try defining the color green to someone who is color blind (or just blind) and can't see it. That doesn't mean the color green is a vague concept. Once you have love, though, "unloving" is easily defined---it is the quality of not being motivated by love. Your claim that "unloving" is a "vague synonym for unjust and wrong" is incorrect. "Unloving" is quite distinct from "wrong". "Wrong" carries with it censure, judgment, and condemnation towards anyone who perpetrates acts that are so characterized. It also exists within a paradigm of separation. "Unloving" simply means a lack of love. It carries no censure and it arises from a paradigm of Oneness. To say that "to torture, rape, abuse or murder an innocent child is an unloving thing to do" is another way of saying that anyone who is acting from Love would never engage in such acts. Live your life from Love and you will be a force for the transformation of the planet. Live your life from Love and you will be living life from your essential nature. Live your life from Love and you will be living a life that is the most satisfying and joyful possible. But don't live your life from Love because you "ought" to. That will defeat the whole purpose.Bruce David
November 14, 2012
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just for fun, Google “The Connection Between Contraception and Abortion” by Dr. Janet Smith, and let me know what you think.
I'm prepared to dislike it, but I will attempt to read it with an open mind.Kantian Naturalist
November 14, 2012
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Kantian Naturalist, just for fun, Google "The Connection Between Contraception and Abortion" by Dr. Janet Smith, and let me know what you think.StephenB
November 14, 2012
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Mung: There are many other doors, starting with a society that realises that life unworthy of life is unacceptable. The very fact of parallel markets for fertility manipulation tells us something. So does the existence of crisis pregnancy support efforts, as well as foster parenting and adoption etc. (Let's say that there was a reason why the table for my family of four sat six or more and why it was unusual for only four to be under the roof.) What would we be doing if Steve Jobs' birth mother had seen and taken abortion as the solution to her problem? George Washington Carver's mother, too -- a rape case IIRC. KFkairosfocus
November 14, 2012
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KN: With all due respect, it is not merely "social conditions" that are at work as influences. There are values, perceptions -- here, notably the calculated drumbeat dehumanisation of the unborn child -- attitudes, preferences and felt "needs." Also accessibility and promotion of willing "service" providers. This goes to the systematic undermining of medical and related ethics. Compare, the classic Hippocratic oath, and ask yourself why it was couched as it was. Let me cite the core part, which gives several yardstick examples:
I will follow that system of regimen which, according to my ability and judgment, I consider for the benefit of my patients, and abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous. I will give no deadly medicine to any one if asked, nor suggest any such counsel; and in like manner I will not give to a woman a pessary to produce abortion. With purity and with holiness I will pass my life and practice my Art. I will not cut persons laboring under the stone, but will leave this to be done by men who are practitioners of this work. Into whatever houses I enter, I will go into them for the benefit of the sick, and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption; and, further from the seduction of females or males, of freemen and slaves. Whatever, in connection with my professional practice or not, in connection with it, I see or hear, in the life of men, which ought not to be spoken of abroad, I will not divulge, as reckoning that all such should be kept secret.
Let's just say that a pregnant woman represents THREE patients: Mother, Father, and Child. Even basic marketing and economics will tell us that as such factors shift, demand schedules will move as will supply schedules. So, no, there is no fixed level of demand or supply schedule, even within a given society. And, at key relevant ages, contraceptives don't tend to work as well for all sorts of reasons. Similarly, by various ways and means "sex education" -- that X-edu terminology is itself revealing of a trendy push -- actually affects in adverse ways those schedules. I put it to you that in a culture that values and recognises life and sees that life is not to be deemed inconvenient and unworthy of being lived, we would have very different S and D schedules. And that's just in terms of the market. KF F/N: This also means that simply changing laws on the books at this stage will have little effect, we need widespread reform driven by growing movements once something entrenched like this -- or like slavery -- has to be addressed. (And the supply and demand for one of the most enduring of markets did dry up.)kairosfocus
November 14, 2012
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Or is there something behind Door Number Three?
Sterilization.Mung
November 14, 2012
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Kairosfocus, it seems not to have occurred to you that the way to reduce the number of abortions that happen is to work on the social conditions that make women desperate enough to seek out abortions. The rate of abortions is much lower in Western Europe, even though abortion is legal. I don't get much sense from you that you've thought about why this is so. Perhaps it's because there's better sex education, contraceptives are more freely accessible, there's a stronger social-safety net, less economic inequality, and so on. It is also worth pointing that (1) abortion rates are not affected by whether abortion is legal or illegal; (2) merely arguing that something is immoral does not, in general, dissuade people from doing it. Here's the bottom line: women get abortions when they do not want to be pregnant. So if one believes that all abortions are morally forbidden, then one is committed to believing that it is morally permissible to force a woman to give birth against her will. From where I sit, there are basically two ways to reduce the abortion rate: (1) promote sex education and contraceptive use, so that women will only get pregnant when they want to have children and will not seek out abortions. (2) ensure that pregnant women are monitored and controlled at all times so that, even if they wanted to abort a pregnancy, they would not be able to. In other words, treat pregnant women like pregnant animals. Or is there something behind Door Number Three?Kantian Naturalist
November 14, 2012
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F/N 2: A note and vid [hopefully!] on where the ongoing rise of evolutionary materialism rooted, "free-thought"-driven (cf. here on) secularism is clearly headed in our civilisation -- and that's just as Plato warned against 2350 years ago. KF.kairosfocus
November 14, 2012
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F/N: Onlookers, observe, how at length BD has had to use "unloving" as a vague synonym for unjust and wrong to the point of being a crime against the person. This underscores just how incoherent and irrelevant to the on the ground reality of the community with the problem of abuse and crime, terrorism and war, etc -- not to mention just plain moral struggle -- the sort of relativism and subjectivism we are seeing in action is.kairosfocus
November 14, 2012
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BD: Pardon directness: more evasions, in a context where you want to suggest both that "love" cannot be given content -- in particular, specific objective moral (OUGHTNESS/ justice/ rights . . . ) content -- and you wish to say that the case put on the table would be "unloving." In short, you are trying to have your cake and eat it. Your view is incoherent. Sorry, that case as repeatedly put on the table -- there are too many actual examples -- is utterly UNJUST, and is rooted in the willingness of some to do what OUGHT not to be done, to the point of that which is patently outrageous. And, it is the duty of the state's officers in protection of the civil peace of justice, to defend us from such predators. Including investigating, trying in open court on law rooted in principles of justice and punishing them. Absent that, we have a situation where the abusers will dominate and turn the community into a chaos. Moreover, absent the basis that we are morally governed by the law of our nature and our equality and value stemming from that nature as the premise for that needed justice, we are indeed only left to the tyranny of the majority or the powerful minority. Which observation has thousands of years of sad history of case after case behind it. KFkairosfocus
November 14, 2012
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Jon Garvey, That Russell statement comes from here. Also of note:
William Dembski: Let me play a little bit of the devil's advocate. Richard Dawkins in his book The Blind Watchmaker says that Darwin made it possible to become an intellectually fulfilled atheist. And I think there's a sense in which sociologically, I mean, there's been a drive from Darwinism to atheism but is there a necessary connection? Can you somehow bring them into consonance, Darwinian view and a Christian view? Ken Miller on the recent PBS evolution program describes himself as an orthodox Darwinian and an orthodox Christian. And I think it's possible to make that sort of rapprochement.
nullasalus
November 13, 2012
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Stephen:
It is my sincere wish that you will someday come to a saving knowledge of the truth.
Thank you, Stephen. I believe that I already have.Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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Bruce
I’m done with this conversation.
It is my sincere wish that you will someday come to a saving knowledge of the truth.StephenB
November 13, 2012
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KF re 194 Humankind has been operating out of "right and wrong" and "good and evil" for millennia. How have we been doing with that paradigm? I say it's time to try something new. I say that an abandonment of "right and wrong" and a surrender to Love will save us. I have seen it, KF. I know people who no longer believe in right and wrong and who operate from Love, and I have seen the transformation that they bring to all they contact. It works. I know it works because I have seen it in action, over and over again. It is the hope of humanity, and I can see that that way of being is growing in humankind, and I rejoice for it.Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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Stephen:
I didn’t say that you recognized my argument as valid. I don’t even think you know what validity means. I said that you recognized that it proves my point.
And you actually think that recognizing an argument as valid is different from recognizing that it proves your point? I quit. I can't have an intellectual conversation with someone who is unable to see the equivalence of those two characterizations of an argument.
Let’s look at your options, which you declare to be the only two available: [a] I don’t recognize what I did (attack your character) [b] I lied Are there any other options? How about [c] I assessed your behavior, not your character.
You most certainly did not asses my behavior. You made up a story that I recognized your argument as valid (or that it proved your point, whichever you prefer). That does not qualify as "assessing my behavior". That is assigning an intellectual position to me when you have absolutely no way of knowing whether it is true of me or not. You then used that made up story as evidence that I was not forthright and honest in my responses. You did not "assess my behavior"; you invented a back story to justify claiming that my behavior was dishonest. By claiming without justification that I was not forthright or honest in my responses, you have maligned my character. If you can't see that, then you really don't recognize what you did. If you can see that, then you lied about it when you subsequently denied it. You are not honest Stephen. You misrepresent my positions, and then deny it. You falsely accuse me of motivations and intellectual positions which you have made up out of whole cloth and then deny that you have done that as well. I'm done with this conversation.Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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BD: Re: I don’t believe in right and wrong in a moral sense. Period. I do understand this, and what it implies: amorality and might or manipulation makes 'right' nihilism; with grim, terrible consequences down the long reaches of history. My concern is, that you don't seem to understand this, for reasons that I will not delve on, and imagine that love can be emptied of the sort of moral content that the great teachers of our civilisation who softened hearts and led in positive transformation all bear witness to. If there are millions like you, our civilisation is in even deeper trouble than I think it is, and I think it is in pretty deep trouble. Please, please, please, think again. For the sake of 100 million ghosts of victims of regimes dominated by nihilist factions from the past 100 years, please think again. For the sake of 53 million unborn children in the US since 1973 and hundreds upon hundreds of millions more across the world, please think again. Fore the sake of your own soul and those who love, please think again. For true love is inseparable from the truth and from the pure and the right. God have mercy and shed his enlightening, heart stirring grace on you. KFkairosfocus
November 13, 2012
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KF:
BD: Evasions and twistabouts. Simply address this case: to torture, rape, abuse or murder an innocent child is wrong and ought not to be done; instead, we ought to nurture and protect such children. It has been put to you any number of times and has been consistently evaded, no prizes for guessing why.
You just don't get it. I don't believe in right and wrong in a moral sense. Period. For many reasons, most of which I have already laid out in this thread, and not the least of which is that God doesn't believe in right and wrong either. I have His word for it. How can I assent to the statement, "to torture, rape, abuse or murder an innocent child is wrong" when I don't believe in wrong. I can say that to torture, rape, abuse or murder an innocent child is an unloving thing to do. You'll have to be satisfied with that. Your question, for me, is of the "When did you stop beating your wife?" variety. It presumes a counter factual situation.Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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Bruce
You presume (as in make it up out of thin air) that I “recognize” your argument as valid, which I do not.
I didn't say that you recognized my argument as valid. I don't even think you know what validity means. I said that you recognized that it proves my point. You knew that you could not answer it, so you evaded it. That is not forthright behavior. To comment on someone's behavior, however, is not to comment on his character. To cross that threshold I would have had to say that you are not a forthright person. Do you understand the difference? Notice, again, as I point to your false statement above (I didn't say, as you claim, that you recognized my argument as valid), I was, again, referring to your behavior, which includes making false statements. Now one could argue, I suppose, that a person who continually makes false statements is a dishonest person, but being the harmless little fuzzball that I am, I refrain from such tactics.
You also presume that I accept your explanation that my counterexample is irrelevant, which I most assuredly do not.
I don't know whether you know it or not, but it is. That you cannot understand why it is irrelevant is a problem.
On the basis of what you have made up about me, you then accuse me of not being “forthright” and of being dishonest.
I didn't make up the point that you make false statements and evade arguments. This kind of behavior is neither forthright or honest.
Now you deny that this constitutes maligning my character.
That is correct. Assessing behavior is a different kind of thing than judging character.
You are either totally incapable of recognizing what you have done, or you are flat out lying.
This is an interesting exercise. Earlier, I provided you with an opportunity to respond to the same kind of either/or option, except that my offering was grounded in logic and described accurately a limited number of options, the very question you evaded. On the other hand, you have presented an either/or proposition that lacks that same rigor because other options are available. Let's look at your options, which you declare to be the only two available: [a] I don't recognize what I did (attack your character) [b] I lied Are there any other options? How about [c] I assessed your behavior, not your character. So, unlike my either/or propositions, which were complete enough that you dared not address them, your either/or proposition was illogical, incomplete, and presumptuous. Do you grasp the difference between my tightly constructed formulation that you evaded and your sloppily constructed formulation that I sliced through like butter? Perhaps you can retreat into your world of subjectivism and delude yourself once again that you won a great victory in this exchange. Frankly, I am starting to feel guilty for taking advantage of you.
Stephen, your need to be right causes you to destroy your own credibility.
Bruce, my credibility on this thread has never been in jeopardy. On the other hand, your credibility was shot the moment you tried to divorce love from truth.StephenB
November 13, 2012
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