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, I think he loves torturing you.Mung
November 13, 2012
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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. KFkairosfocus
November 13, 2012
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Stephen:
I didn’t malign your character.
Here is what you said:
You recognize that no other options are available except those that I listed, and you further recognize that it proves my point. So, rather than be forthright and provide an honest answer to the question, you continually introduce your own love community as a counter example, even after I explain why it is irrelevant. Call it an insult if you like, but those are the facts.
You presume (as in make it up out of thin air) that I "recognize" your argument as valid, which I do not. You also presume that I accept your explanation that my counterexample is irrelevant, which I most assuredly do not. On the basis of what you have made up about me, you then accuse me of not being "forthright" and of being dishonest. Now you deny that this constitutes maligning my character. You are either totally incapable of recognizing what you have done, or you are flat out lying. Stephen, your need to be right causes you to destroy your own credibility.Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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Bruce
But in any case, that whole issue is in a sense irrelevant, as I have also demonstrated that moral relativism is an unavoidable fact of life here on planet earth (see 18, 36, 47, 53, 74, and 121). Neither you nor Stephen have been able to counter that argument.
I suspect that the explanation for this delusion can found in your teacher's own words:
There is no such thing as right and wrong
So, nothing you do is wrong, including making false statements.
There is only what works and what doesn't work,
So, you do what you think will work, which is to evade my questions and fill cyberspace with meaningless words in great quantity.
...depending on what it is that you seek to be, do, or have.
This is the age-old story of the ends justifying the means all dressed up in spiritualist psychobabble. You seek to create the impression that you won a debate that you clearly lost--and lost badly, so you simply make a fanciful claim to the contrary, and you keep making it, and making it. Perhaps you hope, once again, that the subjective and self-serving images that you hold in your mind can exist as their own fabricated substitute for reality. Perhaps, for you, they can. If that gives you any consolation, I am happy for you. So spike the football, give yourself a few high fives, and hug yourself--if you want it to be real, it's real for you. That's the beauty of relativism--and the death of rational thought.StephenB
November 13, 2012
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Bruce
This paragraph is nothing more than an attempt to rescue your failed attempt to prove a point by maligning my character.
I didn't malign your character. I simply pointed out that you falsely claimed to have answered a question that you didn't answer. In addition, I explained why you felt the need for the evasion. If you think that making false statements is indicative of a good character, that is your business, not mine.StephenB
November 13, 2012
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KF:
You have still failed to adequately address the fundamental case in point, and you have not given any reason to believe that in absence of reliance on natural law, the law of our nature as morally governed creatures, we will avoid some form or other of might makes ‘right.’
I'm sorry, but the burden of proof lies with you. Neither you nor Stephen have been able to supply a valid demonstration of your contention that moral relativism leads inevitably to "might makes right". I don't have to "address" it, even though I have, most succinctly in 180. But in any case, that whole issue is in a sense irrelevant, as I have also demonstrated that moral relativism is an unavoidable fact of life here on planet earth (see 18, 36, 47, 53, 74, and 121). Neither you nor Stephen have been able to counter that argument. The problem here is that what you regard as valid demonstration, I reject, and vice versa. We're pretty much at an impasse, don't you think?Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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KF: re our entire conversation on the subject of morality: To anyone who believes that morality is real, whether they be relativists or absolutists, what I have been presenting in these comments is nothing less than a paradigm shift. I realize now that trying to explain a paradigm shift to one who is unwilling to make the shift simply appears him or her as nonsense that flies in the face of reason and indeed the "obvious". I see this as the reason that "What we have here is a failure to communicate." in the immortal words of Cool Hand Luke. It was also a paradigm shift for me, but I am very glad that I made that shift, because my life is richer and more rewarding by far than it was when I lived in the former paradigm. Peace.Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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BD: I have simply cited peaks of wisdom in the moral thought of our civilisation. If you are an educated person, and you are, you know that the Golden Rule is precisely that. I have simply cited the actual sources, and remarked that love in the context of that GR is not contentless. You have still failed to adequately address the fundamental case in point, and you have not given any reason to believe that in absence of reliance on natural law, the law of our nature as morally governed creatures, we will avoid some form or other of might makes 'right.' Which makes the point quite starkly plain for had you a genuine answer you would have gladly given it. I see no good reason to toss over the likes of a Paul or a Plato, or a Moshe or a Jesus, to take up the fluffy warm feelings that cannot stand the test of a real community facing real irreconcilable differences. KFkairosfocus
November 13, 2012
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KF: re 181 You evidently hold Biblical scripture to be an inerrant source of truth. I do not. My "scripture" derives from many sources, but the one that has the most ring of truth for me are the books in the series, Conversations with God, by Neale Donald Walsch. Here are some quotes directly from God: P. 38 of Conversations with God, Book I:
There are no "shoulds" or "shouldn'ts" in God's world. Do what you want to do. Do what reflects you, what re-presents you as a grander version of your Self... But judge not, and neither condemn, for you know not why a thing occurs, nor to what end And remember you this: that which you condemn will condemn you, and that which you judge, you will one day become.
P. 39 of the same volume:
I have never set down a "right" or "wrong", a "do" or a "don't". To do so would be to strip you completely of your greatest gift---the opportunity to do as you please, and experience the results of that; the chance to create yourself anew in the image and likeness of Who You Really Are; the space to produce a reality of a higher and higher you based on your grandest idea of what it is of which you are capable.
P. 130 of the same volume:
Yes, let all those who have ears to hear, listen. For I tell you this: at the critical juncture in all human relationships, there is only one question: What would love do now? No other question is relevant, no other question is meaningful, no other question has any importance to your soul. [Emphasis in the original.]
P. 349 of The New Revelations:
There is no such thing as Right and Wrong. There is only What Works and What Does Not Work, depending upon what it is that you seek to be, do, or have.
P. 386 of Tomorrow's God:
Tomorrow's God will be unconditionally loving, nonjudgmental, noncondemning, and nonpunishing.
Note: He is using the phrase "Tomorrow's God" as shorthand for a fuller understanding of God that will come to us in time. Now I know that you won't accept my source as valid revelation. But each of us must determine for him or herself what does constitute revelation from among all the claimants that exist in the world (and there are many). Frankly, I find it odd that anyone would accept the Bible as such, given that it is rife with internal contradiction.Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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Stephen: Oh, and by the way, your contention that in the "real world" a large diverse society can use "natural moral law" to adjudicate differences is self delusion. This is because each sect of every religion has its own version of absolute morality. There is your version, the Catholic version, the liberal Christian version, the Mormon version, the fundamentalist Islamic version, the liberal Islamic version, the various Buddhist versions, the Taoist version, the different Hindu versions, and on and on. In many cases, these can be resolved by the different sects simply being allowed to follow their own moral requirements within their own communities, but there are many instances in which they conflict in the larger society. For example, on the issues of gay rights, gay marriage, whether sex between consenting adults shall be legal and whether the participants must be of opposite sexes, whether contraception shall be available for sale, abortion rights and under what circumstances, whether the Sharia shall be the law of the land, capital punishment and for what crimes, women's rights, gender roles in general, how important is individual freedom vis a vis government functions, shall polygamy be legal, what degree of undress shall be tolerated in public by each sex, where is the line between self defense and murder, whether the use of lethal force to defend one's property is acceptable and under what circumstances, to what extent and in what forms cruelty shall be illegal, in what circumstances shall profanity and the taking of God's name in vain be illegal... These are just a few examples. I could come up with many more. The point is that each sect of each religion will have its own version of "objective morality" which gives different answers to these questions. So the use of objective morality (even if your version, Stephen, is the correct one) is doomed to failure. The issues will be resolved the way they are in the US---by democratic process moderated by judicial oversight---or they will be resolved by fiat in a dictatorship.Bruce David
November 13, 2012
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BD: Duly, you try to divert, yet again. First, not everyone lives consistently by love. And, that is assuming you are accepting an understanding of love that is reasonable and right. Where, you have ducked and dodged, implying that you have a subjectivist-intuitionist non-cognitive version. "Love" is an empty mushy feeling word for you, if you pardon my bluntness. It simply leaves open the door for the pedophile who "loves" little boys or girls, to do such great harm. I contrast the Apostle Paul on good citizenship, neighbourliness and love, in Rom 13:8 - 10:
Rom 13:8 Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for he who loves his fellowman has fulfilled the law. 9 The commandments, “Do not commit adultery,” “Do not murder,” “Do not steal,” “Do not covet,”[a] and whatever other commandment there may be, are summed up in this one rule: “Love your neighbor as yourself.”[b] 10 Love does no harm to its neighbor. Therefore love is the fulfillment of the law. [NIV '84]
Notice, how Paul specifies the moral content of the law of love? Similarly, when in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus summed up, here is how he put the matter:
Matt 7:12 So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. [NIV '84]
Both were speaking in the context of Moshe's remarks in Lev 19:15 - 18, which I will cite in light of v 11 on:
Lev 19:11 “‘Do not steal. “‘Do not lie. “‘Do not deceive one another. 12 “‘Do not swear falsely by my name and so profane the name of your God. I am the Lord. 13 “‘Do not defraud your neighbor or rob him. “‘Do not hold back the wages of a hired man overnight. 14 “‘Do not curse the deaf or put a stumbling block in front of the blind, but fear your God. I am the Lord. 15 “‘Do not pervert justice; do not show partiality to the poor or favoritism to the great, but judge your neighbor fairly. 16 “‘Do not go about spreading slander among your people. “‘Do not do anything that endangers your neighbor’s life. I am the Lord. 17 “‘Do not hate your brother in your heart. Rebuke your neighbor frankly so you will not share in his guilt. 18 “‘Do not seek revenge or bear a grudge against one of your people, but love your neighbor as yourself. I am the Lord.
In short, you are subverting the concept of what neighbour-love is and requires. And, you are using it as a distraction. So let us go back tot he example that you consistently try to evade, an example of the reality of moral government based on what we ought to do and what we ought not to do, which of course should be motivated by respect for others as made in the image of God, leading to cherishing -- loving -- them:
We OUGHT not TO TORTURE, RAPE OR MURDER INNOCENT CHILDREN, but instead we OUGHT to nurture and protect them
Now, let us see if you can say yes, this is so, or will imply by evasion that you reject ought. Including, this specific ought. Which should serve as a grim warning to at least others, even if you have so convinced yourself that you are simply not open to correction. (And remember, this is in the context where there is an ongoing issue at BBC.) Secondly, it is not the relativists who live off a fading memory of the past Judaeo-Christian consensus who are pivotal, at least so long as they do live off those principles -- though, notoriously, such are vulnerable to rhetorical manipulation through twisted rights talk and false accusations of scapegoat groups. The problem is that evolutionary materialism driven relativisation of our views on truth and values (even that term is suspect) -- a better one is morality, and it is exactly one of your no-no words -- opens the gateway to the nihilistic, ruthless factions who act on the might makes 'right' premise. So, by your attempted disarming of the law- of- our- morally- governed- nature principles of justice and protection of the right that underpin the civil peace of justice, you open the gateway to the chaos, oppression and tyranny that flow from nihilism. That has been pointed out long since by Plato, in The Laws, Bk X:
Ath. . . . [[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that . . . 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.
The road to tyranny in a nutshell. We can hardly say that we have not been warned. Oh yes, I see this in your onward comment to SB, in an attempt to rebut his point about the alternative between the moral law, and the tyranny of the powerful or the large, manipulated mob:
Your attempt to demonstrate that a society based on moral relativism will devolve to tyranny also fails. Here are two counter examples: a) My proposed society composed of people who reject morality and embrace Love as the guiding principle of their lives . . .
1 --> You have chosen an ARTIFICIAL society, which can only exist in a small club of the like minded, SB was addressing the real world where we have to deal with the real range of beliefs, attitudes, expectations, and tactics. 2 --> This immediately means that you are erecting and trying to knock over a strawman caricature, in the teeth of SB's explicit correction, i.e you are deliberately misrepresenting him the better to gain a rhetorical advantage. 3 --> I would love to see you explain hos this is consistent with your understanding of "love." 4 --> Likewise, I have already highlighted enough on the moral content of love to show that your usage of "love" is empty and incoherent. True neighbour-love deeply embeds morality. 5 --> Where also, SB is right, there are heaps of all too chilling facts that document the empirical reality of his three alternatives. You can discuss some of them, such as the French Revolutions of 1789 and 1870, the Russian one of 1917 on, the German one from the 1930s, the Cambodian one of the 1970's, the Chinese one from the 1940's, or even in our backyard the Cuban one from the 1950's. And so forth. 6 --> So, your rebuttal falls apart. KF PS: Onlookers, and all of these are on a grand side track from the pivotal issue for the OP. For, in answer to Dawkins' dismissive statement to Playboy published in September, I pointed to the game changing impact of the minimal facts evidence of the C1 regarding the passion of Jesus, as may be observed in the embedded video and the linked discussion. Observe the appendix to the OP on the various ways popular skeptical theories on that passion fail to match the credible facts, by sharp contrast with the historic Christian view, tracing to C1, by 35 - 38 AD in prime source documents, and actually to 30 or 33 AD based on the collective force of the documents. namely, the well-founded historical credibility of the account of the gospel that "God so loved that he gave . . . "kairosfocus
November 13, 2012
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Stephen: re 177 Now who is extending the conversation? You wish to prove that moral relativism always reduces itself to "might makes right". It can't be done, for these reasons: 1) The vast majority of people who are moral relativists do not live their lives in that paradigm. You have only to look around to see that this is true. 2) Your attempt to demonstrate that a society based on moral relativism will devolve to tyranny also fails. Here are two counter examples: a) My proposed society composed of people who reject morality and embrace Love as the guiding principle of their lives. These are the only prerequisites for inclusion in such a society. Beyond that, there could be many different viewpoints on many different questions. In particular, some could hold that a human being is created at conception, while others could hold that a human being comes into existence later in the process. I claim that such differences could be resolved by creative dialog in an environment characterized by love and respect for each other's point of view, similarly to the way creative solutions emerge from the consensus process. I also claim that a society in which Love is the guiding principle would never devolve to tyranny. Love is simply not tyrannical. b) There is no logical reason that a society could not be created by moral relativists in the form of a representative democracy with a constitution and separation of powers, similar to that of the US or of the parliamentary democracies of Europe. Now if you wish to characterize a representative democracy as "tyranny of the majority", go ahead, but it hardly qualifies as "might makes right".
You recognize that no other options are available except those that I listed, and you further recognize that it proves my point. So, rather than be forthright and provide an honest answer to the question, you continually introduce your own love community as a counter example, even after I explain why it is irrelevant. Call it an insult if you like, but those are the facts.
"Facts", Stephen, "facts"? This paragraph is nothing more than an attempt to rescue your failed attempt to prove a point by maligning my character. Tsk, tsk. Are you sure that inventing motivations for me out of thin air that accuse me of dishonesty is in keeping with natural law and objective morality?Bruce David
November 12, 2012
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KF:
...in THIS world, we very much find ourselves bound by principles such as that it is something that OUGHT not to be done, to torture, rape or murder an innocent child, and indeed that we OUGHT to protect, nurture and help such. In short, once we have every good reason to understand that we can choose and that some choices harm others and ourselves while others cherish and nurture others, this world is patently one in which morality exists.
Anyone who lives his or her life from Love would never torture, rape, or murder an innocent child, and indeed would protect, nurture, and help such. There are several differences between someone who lives his life from morality and one who lives his life from Love, however: 1) The one who lives her life from Love has a guide to help her through the difficult choices for which morality, objective or otherwise, really doesn't supply an answer, such as the one I presented in 169. 2) The one who lives his life from Love will not judge or condemn another. Rather, he will have love and compassion for those who commit acts that do not emanate from Love. This is in no way condoning those acts. However, that love and compassion has a much better chance of generating in the perpetrator an understanding of the fact that what he or she has done he has violated his or her essential nature, and thus a much better chance of producing real change in that person than judgment and condemnation ever will. 3) A life lived from Love is far more satisfying, peaceful, loving, and joyful than one lived in judgment and condemnation. I know this from personal experience---I have done both.Bruce David
November 12, 2012
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SB: Sadly, you seem to be exactly correct. To survive, real communities -- not narrow groups of the like-minded -- have to have means of resolving morally loaded issues. And if the natural moral law tied to our common nature is not accepted and respected, there only remains the imposition of force based on interests or balances of power and alliances by the powerful, or the power of majority (a rough index of probable power in a fight). When it comes to abortion on demand, we are talking of the value of life. This, in a context where there is historical precedent that points from abortion to infanticide to "voluntary" then forced euthanasia, then outright naked genocide. The driving force of this being, the erosion of the perceived value of life through rhetoric of dehumanisation and/or marginalisation. Life, unworthy of being lived by being inferior or burdensome to itself and/or others. Those are the matches our civilisation is playing with, with it seems like the blood of coming on half a generation crying up from the ground against us. On the more specific case I raised above, that WE OUGHT NOT TO TORTURE, RAPE AND/OR MURDER INNOCENT CHILDREN, it is interesting to see how objectors try to evade the specific case, substituting things like, how awful this is, or distracting attention by pointing elsewhere or trying to indict the Judaeo-Christian moral tradition for the sins of Christendom, etc. All of this comes down to, a clear illustration of having no cogent answer on the merits. It is quite clear that OUGHT is a real, binding obligation rooted in our duty to respect others who are as we are, and hold inherent value that must be respected. The problem with this, for the fashionable secularism, skepticism, atheism, evolutionary materialism etc of our day, is that his then puts squarely on the table, the challenge that answers to Hume's IS-OUGHT gap. Namely, the only point where OUGHT can be grounded is in the foundation of our worldviews, i.e. we need an IS that grounds ought right from the root, suffusing up from there. There is one serious candidate on the table for this, the inherently good creator God who makes a cosmos in which morally governed creatures are ruled by a built-in sense of the value of those that are as themselves, rightly guided conscience. I found it interesting how there was an attempt to brush aside the understanding that we cannot argue to turtles all the way down or in a circle, leading to an ultimate turtle. The raft illustration -- meant to be a coherence based case, founders on the underlying ocean that through the law of floatation is the foundation of a viable raft. The spaceship illustration only succeeds in pointing out that there has to be a space that supports the possibility of a spaceship, including of course a planet such as ours. And as for the imagine a world in which morals are irrelevant, that is easy to do: a world of pre-programmed robots who make no real choices. A world in which love is meaningless, so the claimed objection on (undefined but "intuited") love founders in a second way. And of course the favourite Euthyphro dilemma argument founders on the inability to separate the inherently good Creator God and goodness; who is utterly distinct from the sort of gods Socrates had in mind who were not the true ground of reality so the issue of goodness separate from the will of such squabbling mythological deities was a relevant objection t their reality. (That is why I have always found it less than convincing to see such put forth as an objection to the one, true, living, inherently good Creator God.) Inference to best of competing explanations on comparative difficulties is really interesting when applied to ultimates. KFkairosfocus
November 12, 2012
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Bruce
I think it would be rather pointless to continue in this vein, don’t you?
If you think it is pointless, why do you continue? You have extended this discussion far beyond its natural life by denying a historical fact, namely that when competing moral philosophies seek to get translated into civil law, either the natural moral law or tyrannical power will settle the issue. In keeping with that point, moral relativism always leads to tyranny. As a moral relativist. you don't like that fact so you deny it. So far, you have avoided the essential question about relativism and tyranny by saying that this could not happen in a community of love as you "experience" it. But there is nothing remarkable about that fact because your community was designed for like-minded people, which means that there are no competing moral philosophies. Here is the question again (for the tenth time?) In the real world where people live, conflicts arise. You and I are in such a community right now (The United States) and my three person example is just a microcosm of that community. The issue of abortion must be settled. Due to our respective non-negotiable positions on abortion, a consensus decision in the three-person community is not an option. How, then, do we decide which person’s preference will be translated into law: [a] The natural moral law [b] Tyranny of the majority (You and the other person decide by fiat and against my will) [c] Tyranny by one person (The most powerful person among the three of us decides by fiat against the other two) Since I know that you will never answer the question, I will explain why you continue to evade the point: You recognize that no other options are available except those that I listed, and you further recognize that it proves my point. So, rather than be forthright and provide an honest answer to the question, you continually introduce your own love community as a counter example, even after I explain why it is irrelevant. Call it an insult if you like, but those are the facts.StephenB
November 12, 2012
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PS: My recent comments here and here respectively address the moral issues of abortion and governance in the community that I think will be increasingly relevant in the current situation in our civilisation.kairosfocus
November 12, 2012
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BD: Whether or no I can imagine that morality may/does not exist -- in a robot world where there is no responsible choice, it would not exist (there, I can imagine a logically possible world in which such would not exist . . . ) -- is immaterial to the issue that in THIS world, we very much find ourselves bound by principles such as that it is something that OUGHT not to be done, to torture, rape or murder an innocent child, and indeed that we OUGHT to protect, nurture and help such. In short, once we have every good reason to understand that we can choose and that some choices harm others and ourselves while others cherish and nurture others, this world is patently one in which morality exists. KFkairosfocus
November 12, 2012
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Stephen:
That is another evasion. The question was about abortion and the fact that our respective positions are both non-negotiable and irreconcilable inside your proposed community of love.
You are transporting yourself into a community in which you by definition would not be present. An understanding that morality doesn't actually exist (except in men's minds) and a willingness to live in the question, "What would Love do now?" are the prerequisites for being in the community. The people in such a community would not have non-negotiable and irreconcilable positions, as I have already explained. My position on abortion is not non-negotiable, by the way.
I know that the pedophile’s claim of love for his victim is illegitimate because it is based on his misguided and perverse notion of love. Since you have no rational knowledge of the relationship between love and truth, you would have no way of knowing how perverse his claims really are—or how empty your claims really are.
My way of knowing is that Love recognizes Itself in another, and Love also knows when Love is not the motivation for another's actions, as I have already stated. You reject this statement. I can't help that. I know what I know. For the rest of 173, you are merely restating your positions, which are based on the assumption that valid knowledge must be based on a rationalistic model. My responses would just be restatements of mine, which reflect my certainty that true Knowledge cannot be reached by reason alone. It's interesting Stephen, that the more frustrated you are at being unable to find a way to prove my point of view wrong, the more insulting you become. I think it would be rather pointless to continue in this vein, don't you?Bruce David
November 11, 2012
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Bruce
I am committed to the proposition that absolute, objective morality does not exist. In the community in which I proposed that the process we are discussing would occur, everyone would share that view. Hence, no problem.
That is another evasion. The question was about abortion and the fact that our respective positions are both non-negotiable and irreconcilable inside your proposed community of love.
I have answered your question.
That isn’t true. You have either ignored my question or reframed it into something unrecognizable. That is why you merely allude to it in general and never refer to it word for word as a quote.
You have been unsuccessfully trying to prove me wrong about that ever since.
I have proven you wrong many times. Unfortunately, you do not recognize the refutations because you don’t accept rational arguments as refutations. No one who would explicitly deny that reason can lead to truth, as you do, would ever acknowledge the truth in a reasoned argument.
So now you change the terms of the debate by arbitrarily including in the community people who are not like me in that they don’t share my views about morality and Love. I have already agreed that that would not work.
Oh, please, stop that nonsense. I said that moral relativism always leads to tyranny, which it does. Clearly, I was referring to the real world where real disputes and substantive ideological conflicts take place. Consensus decision making will not solve those kinds of fundamental conflicts. That technique only works in social clubs and sympathetic groups, like yours, where fundamental values are already agreed upon. In the real world, where conflicts of vision occur, there are only two types of resolution: The natural moral law, or tyrannical power. There is simply no doubt about this fact, either logically or historically. I have proven this point several times with a very simple example that you refuse to address. It was you who introduced irrelevant new subjects by offering your own self-made community as a counter example, an example which is, and always been, irrelevant, since there are no ideological differences in your group that could possibly lead to a meaningful conflict. Now that we can agree that your community experience is irrelevant, please do not bring it up again.
I’m a mathematician. Of course I believe in rationality.
What does that dubious claim have to do with the fact that your description of God’s love has not been rationally defined? A true believer in rationality would not hesitate to define his terms.
I don’t define Love. I have never attempted to define it.
That is correct. You have not rationally defined your terms. Indeed, disciplined and well-thought out definitions are an essential part of the rationality that you explicitly reject, but that fundamental deficiency doesn’t prevent you from throwing undefined terms around (God’s love) post after post as if they could mean something or be used as an argument for anything.
The quotes you cite are not definitions. They are statements of some things that are true of Love. And it doesn’t surprise me at all that they tell you nothing.
Your quotes do not tell me anything because they do not say anything. That raises the question as to why you would provide meaningless comments as an answer to my meaningful questions.
Anyone who reads the pedophile’s claim would have to decide for him or herself whether the claim had any merit, just as anyone who reads my comments must make the same assessment.
Well, here I have you at a distinct disadvantage. I know that the pedophile’s claim of love for his victim is illegitimate because it is based on his misguided and perverse notion of love. Since you have no rational knowledge of the relationship between love and truth, you would have no way of knowing how perverse his claims really are—or how empty your claims really are.StephenB
November 11, 2012
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Stephen:
Bruce “It would depend on how rigidly they held on to those views.” We already know how rigidly you and I hold our respective views. You are committed to the non-negotiable proposition that abortion is not immoral and I am committed to the opposite view, which is non-negotiable.
I am committed to the proposition that absolute, objective morality does not exist. In the community in which I proposed that the process we are discussing would occur, everyone would share that view. Hence, no problem.
Your evasions have already used up a hundred times more space than would be needed.
I keep answering your question. You evidently don't like my answer because you keep asking the same question. That's why we keep using up space. I have answered your question. You don't accept my answer as valid. Each person reading this thread will have to decide for themselves who is right about it.
The problem is in forming a community around those who hold substantially different views that cannot be resolved by simply talking them out.
I stated, way back in 106, that "People such as myself could easily decide to create a society based on love as the guiding principle." You have been unsuccessfully trying to prove me wrong about that ever since. So now you change the terms of the debate by arbitrarily including in the community people who are not like me in that they don't share my views about morality and Love. I have already agreed that that would not work.
The problem is not that we do not understand it. The problem is that YOU don’t understand it. Your notion of God’s love is just a feeling with no substance. Because it doesn’t rise to the level of a rational concept, it cannot be articulated in rational terms. You try to justify that lack by saying that you don’t believe in rationality at all and, therefore, bear no responsibility for providing a rational defense. Sorry, but public discourse doesn’t work that way.
I'm a mathematician. Of course I believe in rationality. However, I don't believe that rationality or reason by itself can arrive at any kind of truth other than mathematical or logical truth, which is essentially of the form "B follows from A". But to establish the truth of the fundamental "A" (or A's) requires knowing from some other source than reason. And where do you get the rule that "public discourse" has to work the way you want it to? That's like materialist scientists arbitrarily declaring that science must consider only material causes. My comments express to the best of my ability how I see the world. If I tried to fit them into your constraints, they would cease to express my vision of reality altogether.
To say, for example, that your definition of love is “God’s love” or that “it operates through each one of us who open enough to make the space for it” is to tell me nothing.
I don't define Love. I have never attempted to define it. It's not something that can be defined. You either know what it is by having direct experience of it or you don't. The quotes you cite are not definitions. They are statements of some things that are true of Love. And it doesn't surprise me at all that they tell you nothing.
A pedophile or mass murderer could make the same claim by saying that God’s love is real for him and is operating through him–and that we are just too close-minded to understand his position. Your argument is no better than that, which means that it is no argument at all.
Anyone who reads the pedophile's claim would have to decide for him or herself whether the claim had any merit, just as anyone who reads my comments must make the same assessment. They are not really arguments at all (with the exception of my argument that objective morality does not exist). Rather, they constitute a statement, to the best of my ability, of some of my views of the true nature of reality---of God and us and our relationship. People who read them will judge their validity based on their own experience and whether, to them, they have the ring of truth.Bruce David
November 11, 2012
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Bruce:
"The process I described cannot be done in the comments section of this post. That should be obvious."
It is obvious that you cannot do it at all. It wouldn't matter how much space you were given. If you asked me a question, and it was important enough to you that you repeated it over and over again, I will not weasel out of it by claiming that I don't have enough space to provide an answer. Your evasions have already used up a hundred times more space than would be needed.
I described the process I believe would happen in a community of people who believe as I do.
So what? As I pointed out earlier, there is no problem in coming to a consensus when members of a group do not hold any conflicting, non-negotiable positions, as is the case with a group like yours. I have been a member of similar groups. The problem is in forming a community around those who hold substantially different views that cannot be resolved by simply talking them out.
Second, neither you nor Stephen has a clue what I mean by Love.
The problem is not that we do not understand it. The problem is that YOU don't understand it. Your notion of God's love is just a feeling with no substance. Because it doesn't rise to the level of a rational concept, it cannot be articulated in rational terms. You try to justify that lack by saying that you don't believe in rationality at all and, therefore, bear no responsibility for providing a rational defense. Sorry, but public discourse doesn't work that way. To say, for example, that your definition of love is "God's love" or that "it operates through each one of us who open enough to make the space for it" is to tell me nothing. A pedophile or mass murderer could make the same claim by saying that God's love is real for him and is operating through him--and that we are just too close-minded to understand his position. Your argument is no better than that, which means that it is no argument at all.StephenB
November 11, 2012
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Bruce "It would depend on how rigidly they held on to those views." We already know how rigidly you and I hold our respective views. You are committed to the non-negotiable proposition that abortion is not immoral and I am committed to the opposite view, which is non-negotiable. So we cannot both be a part of a loving community the way you define it. I am sure that you have been able to figure this out which is why you refuse to answer my question.StephenB
November 11, 2012
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KF:
And, Stephen is perfectly right to underscore that love has in it perceptions and judgements, valuings etc that are chock full of intelligent acts and content subject to issues of truth and falsity, right and wrong. But you evidently want to do that as you please without having to ask whether your claims are right and your valuings or choices are right, in a forum that will make a serious evaluation. Indeed, it seems you have tried to make over God in your image to fit your predilections.
First, I have shown that there is no absolute right and wrong. All you can say is that torturing and killing innocent children is obviously wrong, and similar statements with which most of us in this culture would agree. Now I contend that even those statements are relative to you and anyone else who accepts them. They do not have the force of absolute morality because they come from you, not from God. But even if I grant you that those judgments are objective, those are not the moral choices facing each of us in everyday life. There is no absolute standard to tell us what is the correct action given the choices with which we are actually faced. A woman I perceive as overweight asks me if she is fat. Is it "right" to lie to her about what I think? I submit that there is no absolute answer to this question. But living in the question, "What would Love do now?" can answer the question, if I am in tune with my own deepest knowing. I could give you a thousand examples like this. Morality is relative. Love works. Second, neither you nor Stephen has a clue what I mean by Love. It is God's Love, and it operates in and through each and every one of us if we make the space within ourselves for it to do so. If we can clear ourselves to be an open channel for this Love, it is unerring. But it has no rules. Just as each situation in which we find ourselves is unique, each answer to the question, "What would Love do now?" will also be unique.
The amorality that you have been reduced to speaks volumes.
By a strict definition, I suppose you could say I am amoral, but I can tell you with a great deal of confidence that people who know me in daily life, whatever their position on the objectivity of morality, would never describe me as an amoral person.Bruce David
November 11, 2012
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Stephen:
So, in your judgment, Muslims, Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, pro-lifers, and pro-choicers, all of whom hold non-negotiable religious views, could never be a part of such a community?
It would depend on how rigidly they held on to those views. If they had the perspective that their religion was "the only way", then no, they could not be part of such a community, nor indeed would they want to be. However, it is far from true that all religious people "hold non-negotiable views". If their position was that "ours is not the only way, ours is just another way", then they could very well be part of such a community.Bruce David
November 11, 2012
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KF:
This is reductio ad absurdum, and only underscores your evasiveness on a direct challenge such as, the torture, abuse, sexual assault, rape etc of an innocent child, is wrong, and is obviously wrong.
You see it as absurd because you are at this point in time incapable of imagining the possibility that morality doesn't actually exist. When you reach the point where you can step outside of that intellectual box and imagine a Universe ruled by Love instead of right and wrong, you will understand what I am trying to convey here.Bruce David
November 11, 2012
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Stephen:
Obviously, your process doesn’t work since you cannot apply it by answering my very simple question. The reason you will not answer any of my questions is because the process of doing so would refute your position, which I have shown to be untenable.
Stephen, that is a stupid comment. The process I described cannot be done in the comments section of this post. That should be obvious. I described the process I believe would happen in a community of people who believe as I do. You want an answer to a question that doesn't have an answer ("What would the outcome of such a process be?") so that you can prove that you are right. Well, it's a nice rhetorical trick, but it's flaws will be obvious to anyone who doesn't already agree with you.Bruce David
November 11, 2012
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"non-negotiable [religious] views" should read, "non negotiable views."StephenB
November 11, 2012
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Bruce: "In such a community [based on love], there will be no non-negotiable positions on anything." So, in your judgment, Muslims, Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, pro-lifers, and pro-choicers, all of whom hold non-negotiable religious views, could never be a part of such a community?StephenB
November 11, 2012
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I explained how the process would work in number 137, and it will work in a community of any size if all members 1) renounce judgment in the recognition that morality doesn’t exist, and 2) commit themselves to acting from Love. In such a community, there will be no non-negotiable positions on anything. Everyone who has a position on an issue that is in conflict with those of others in the community will always be open to the possibility 1) that those other positions, being held by people in good faith, may very well embody valid points worthy of consideration, and 2) that Love operating through the members of the community can reveal a creative resolution of the conflict.
Obviously, your process doesn't work since you cannot apply it by answering my very simple question. The reason you will not answer any of my questions is because the process of doing so would refute your position, which I have shown to be untenable.StephenB
November 11, 2012
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BD: Do you hear yourself saying:
renounce judgment in the recognition that morality doesn’t exist
This is reductio ad absurdum, and only underscores your evasiveness on a direct challenge such as, the torture, abuse, sexual assault, rape etc of an innocent child, is wrong, and is obviously wrong. And, this is a non-negotiable, there is and can be no compromise with that sort of vile predatory activity. You cannot admit this, and simply refuse to admit that your position plainly reduced to might and manipulation make 'right' in the community. And, Stephen is perfectly right to underscore that love has in it perceptions and judgements, valuings etc that are chock full of intelligent acts and content subject to issues of truth and falsity, right and wrong. But you evidently want to do that as you please without having to ask whether your claims are right and your valuings or choices are right, in a forum that will make a serious evaluation. Indeed, it seems you have tried to make over God in your image to fit your predilections. The amorality that you have been reduced to speaks volumes. Please, think again. KFkairosfocus
November 11, 2012
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