Originally posted by Ben Kenobi
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For instance, murder has effects that can be empirically tested. We can judge those effects and determine whether we find murder moral or not. While morality itself isn't empirical, it can be based on observations which are.
Job on the other hand tries to teach morals about things like trusting God. These are issues where the authority of the source becomes much more important. If the text claims that we should trust in God no matter what, but at the same time says or implies things which are obviously wrong, it makes it harder to do the "trust" part because the source is obviously not authoritative. Doesn't mean the trust part is wrong, just that the source isn't doing it justice if it is right.
Kinda like very high level science. We just have to trust the people trained in those fields because the subject matter is too difficult/time consuing for the average person to have a real understanding of it. Just like if the per claiming to be an astro-physicist is displaying problems dealing with simple mathmatics. Makes you question whether they really are to be trusted in their claimed field of expertise.
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