Originally posted by Elok
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Okay, "a non-arbitrary set goal and purpose to work towards." If God exists, I have a very good and sensible reason for behaving morally (albeit in the Orthodox tradition it's more complicated than just "behaving morally," we'll leave that out since it complicates things and I imagine it's of little interest to you). "I should be good" in the same sense that "I should not play in traffic." My interests have a firm anchor to other people's beyond the conditional, limited, and contingent: not merely this group of people, at this time, to this extent. Which is all I really have in a naturalistic world; I have no compelling reason not to sell contaminated food to children in Ghana, if I can get away with it and the money is good. To assert otherwise is simply that: an assertion, admittedly empty, with nothing but itself as an authority. I shouldn't because I shouldn't because I shouldn't because . . . ? Morality itself becomes a sort of cardboard deity, devoid of personhood, agency or substance. I'd much rather have the real kind.
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Any foundation for a belief is subjective.
For me, I believe that the world will be a better place for me and my loved ones (especially children and later generations) if I behave morally (in regards to my morals). It also will define my legacy ... that being important to me because of ego. Those are things that are important to me.
What's to say they are more/less meaningful to me than God is to you? They are both subjective, you can't prove either assumption. Both could turn out to be incorrect. But in believing they are true they become factors that guide us through our lives.
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No. Let's say the WBC version of reality is the correct one, and "morality" consists of spending several hours a day scowling at gay pornography and thinking how very much it does not give you an erection. Under this supposition, you have a reason to be "moral" in that, if you do not, you will spend an eternity in unimaginable torment, while if you do you will merely get to spend eternity hanging out with WBC-God while he mutters and fumes about how much He hates Fags. Which is sort of better. This is a very solid incentive, assuming we live in that extremely fubared version of reality.
Other religious traditions have different ends and means, but all (or at least all the old ones, not e.g. Wicca) have a distinct grounding for morality; it's more than just a set of rules, it's a whole way of making sense of and giving purpose to the universe. Without a God, or karma, or some such, you have all the rules with none of the reason. Which then gets presented as a virtue, because we've internalized selflessness as a virtue to the point where we can rush to defend it even when questioning the basis of virtue itself. Which, to me at least, makes no sense.
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Originally posted by Aeson View PostExternal observer is still an observer.Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
"We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld
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Originally posted by Elok View PostThis is a very solid incentive, assuming we live in that extremely fubared version of reality.Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
"We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld
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Originally posted by Elok View PostNo. Let's say the WBC version of reality is the correct one, and "morality" consists of spending several hours a day scowling at gay pornography and thinking how very much it does not give you an erection. Under this supposition, you have a reason to be "moral" in that, if you do not, you will spend an eternity in unimaginable torment, while if you do you will merely get to spend eternity hanging out with WBC-God while he mutters and fumes about how much He hates Fags. Which is sort of better. This is a very solid incentive, assuming we live in that extremely fubared version of reality.
Other religious traditions have different ends and means, but all (or at least all the old ones, not e.g. Wicca) have a distinct grounding for morality; it's more than just a set of rules, it's a whole way of making sense of and giving purpose to the universe. Without a God, or karma, or some such, you have all the rules with none of the reason. Which then gets presented as a virtue, because we've internalized selflessness as a virtue to the point where we can rush to defend it even when questioning the basis of virtue itself. Which, to me at least, makes no sense.
That is aside from the point though, which was that you were saying believing in God is better in regards to giving purpose to a person's life. I've been a theist and an agnostic, and for me my life has been much better, much more purposeful, as an agnostic.
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Of course I have no way of knowing for sure which is correct, and there's no accounting for anyone's individual feelings. All I'm saying is that a theistic morality has a hard center and cohesiveness which secular ethics necessarily lacks.
Lori: how can a chosen behavior have the same kind of truth value as a physical law, and what does morality mean in such a context?
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Originally posted by Elok View PostAll I'm saying is that a theistic morality has a hard center and cohesiveness which secular ethics necessarily lacks.<p style="font-size:1024px">HTML is disabled in signatures</p>
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Originally posted by Elok View PostAll I'm saying is that a theistic morality has a hard center and cohesiveness which secular ethics necessarily lacks.
Whatever is at the center of an individual's morality can be as hard or as soft, and precise or as vague, as their belief in it dictates.
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All that is completely immaterial to the point I'm trying to make. It's child's play to construct a scenario wherein what we call immoral behavior is clearly the most advantageous path for an individual and/or his/her group. That is, assuming the empirically observable world is all there is. Put simply, crime sometimes pays, and therefore it is sometimes "correct" to be a criminal, unless there is some external consideration (heaven, nirvana, reincarnation) which is always a factor. Most religious traditions possess such a consideration. By definition, a secular system cannot. You can argue that this is a feature, not a bug, but we would reject that reasoning if it were applied in any other context, and I reject it here. In the absence of the supernatural, morality is meaningless. It's a car without an engine.
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By "external consideration" are you simply referring to supernatural reward/punishment, or is there more to it than that? In other words, would you completely ignore God if he told you that you were going to cease to exist upon death regardless of how good/evil you were during life, or is the reward/punishment only part of the reason that you obey God?<p style="font-size:1024px">HTML is disabled in signatures</p>
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Originally posted by Elok View PostPut simply, crime sometimes pays, and therefore it is sometimes "correct" to be a criminal, unless there is some external consideration (heaven, nirvana, reincarnation) which is always a factor. Most religious traditions possess such a consideration. By definition, a secular system cannot.
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