DLH
Theoretical Skeptic
SIMPLY
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
The difference is everything.SIMPLY
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
I've heard these claims all my life, but I've never seen them defended.The difference is everything.SIMPLY
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
If gods exist, then reality has purpose beyond human perception. Morality might have an objective foundation. Life, death, and the universe itself could be shaped by a will beyond our own. If there is a god who judges, rewards, or punishes, then every action has eternal weight.
If gods do not exist, then meaning, morality, and purpose are human constructs. The universe is indifferent. Life is what we make of it, and death is the end. Every achievement, every relationship, and every struggle is confined to the limits of human existence.
Either way, the truth matters. The existence or nonexistence of gods changes everything about how we see life, death, and purpose. It defines whether we answer to something greater or only to ourselves.
NHC
The difference is that in a world where gods allegedly exist, I (or anyone else) generally need to go through a priest to get to them. Whether it's a Shaman or a Bishop, you've got to give their representative on Earth money, or fealty, or a sacrifice to "gain favor with the gods."SIMPLY
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
I've heard these claims all my life, but I've never seen them defended.
Take this part:
> Morality might have an objective foundation.
How do you figure? My position is that if religious morality is objective, then so is atheist morality. And if atheist morality is subjective, then so is religious morality. If you can defend the claim that religious morality is more objective than atheist morality, I'm keenly interested.
If that's not a topic you want to engage on, I'll be happy to discuss most of your other claims too.
The difference is everything.
If gods exist, then reality has purpose beyond human perception.
Morality might have an objective foundation. Life, death, and the universe itself could be shaped by a will beyond our own. If there is a god who judges, rewards, or punishes, then every action has eternal weight.
If gods do not exist, then meaning, morality, and purpose are human constructs. The universe is indifferent. Life is what we make of it, and death is the end. Every achievement, every relationship, and every struggle is confined to the limits of human existence.
Either way, the truth matters. The existence or nonexistence of gods changes everything about how we see life, death, and purpose. It defines whether we answer to something greater or only to ourselves.
That explanation is subjective, depending upon the individual and the cultural concept of God. Biblically, Jehovah created mankind in a small area - paradise - with two instructions. Don't touch the tree or its fruit, and fill and subdue the earth.
I completely disagree.I've heard these claims all my life, but I've never seen them defended.
Take this part:
> Morality might have an objective foundation.
How do you figure? My position is that if religious morality is objective, then so is atheist morality. And if atheist morality is subjective, then so is religious morality. If you can defend the claim that religious morality is more objective than atheist morality, I'm keenly interested.
If that's not a topic you want to engage on, I'll be happy to discuss most of your other claims too.
Morality in general is subjective, otherwise it would be the same for everyone all throughout time. Morality is whatever group you belong to deciding what is right and what is wrong for that specific time and then not doing it. Morality is a dog and pony show. In other words, morality is religion.
I completely disagree.Morality in general is subjective, otherwise it would be the same for everyone all throughout time. Morality is whatever group you belong to deciding what is right and what is wrong for that specific time and then not doing it. Morality is a dog and pony show. In other words, morality is religion.
Morality is the informed and rational way to live a good life.
It's subjective because circumstances change and competent understanding changes.
Morality is not religion, quite the opposite.
Religion is the delusion that you know about God(s) or the supernatural. Religious ethics are the faith that your personal agenda is approved by god or the supernatural.
Do you see? They don't believe in hell; they use it to put themselves upon an ideological pedestal. A fake moral superiority. I think militant atheists do the exact same thing with science; it's only fake intellectual superiority.
I've heard these claims all my life, but I've never seen them defended.
Take this part:
> Morality might have an objective foundation.
How do you figure? My position is that if religious morality is objective, then so is atheist morality. And if atheist morality is subjective, then so is religious morality. If you can defend the claim that religious morality is more objective than atheist morality, I'm keenly interested.
If that's not a topic you want to engage on, I'll be happy to discuss most of your other claims too.
Morality in general is subjective,
otherwise it would be the same for everyone all throughout time.
Morality is whatever group you belong to deciding what is right and what is wrong for that specific time and then not doing it. Morality is a dog and pony show. ...
If you claim that Jehovah exists as a real being, then He is not just a concept or a human construct. You can’t have it both ways. Either He is an actual entity with objective existence, or He is just an idea people made up. If He is real, then His existence is not dependent on belief, just as the laws of physics don’t change based on whether someone acknowledges them. Saying that gods exist as “a simple concept” contradicts your own assertion that Jehovah is real.The difference is everything.
I disagree.
If gods exist, then reality has purpose beyond human perception.
If Jehovah God exists, he has explained the simple purpose of mankind which is to enjoy themselves. He created humanity out of love for them to enjoy themselves.
Gods do exist as a simple concept, a human construct.
Morality might have an objective foundation. Life, death, and the universe itself could be shaped by a will beyond our own. If there is a god who judges, rewards, or punishes, then every action has eternal weight.
That explanation is subjective, depending upon the individual and the cultural concept of God. Biblically, Jehovah created mankind in a small area - paradise - with two instructions. Don't touch the tree or its fruit, and fill and subdue the earth. God didn't have any moral concepts beyond that that I can see. The prohibition was symbolic of his sovereignty as creator, and the instruction was to provide them with work they would enjoy and enjoy the fruits of. Man (Adam) rejected it because he was afraid of living alone for eternity since Eve had been deceived.
Judging, reward and punishment are temporal, a necessity born from Adam's disobedience.
If gods do not exist, then meaning, morality, and purpose are human constructs. The universe is indifferent. Life is what we make of it, and death is the end. Every achievement, every relationship, and every struggle is confined to the limits of human existence.
And ultimate self-destruction. But that isn't dependent upon the existence of gods, gods are created in the eyes of the beholder and a result or a part of the aforementioned constructs.
Either way, the truth matters. The existence or nonexistence of gods changes everything about how we see life, death, and purpose. It defines whether we answer to something greater or only to ourselves.
Ultimately if the gods are created, but not necessarily if we are God breathed. The existence of gods we create from "our truth" and purpose. They are a whim. Answering to something greater than ourselves individually?
Lastly, if gods are just human constructs, then truth is entirely subjective.
NHC
If gods are human constructs, then truth has no external, unchanging foundation. Without a divine authority, what is considered “true” is ultimately shaped by human perception, which is fallible and inconsistent.
Lastly, if gods are just human constructs, then truth is entirely subjective.
NHC
How do you figure that? I don't believe you can support that claim.
If gods are human constructs, then truth has no external, unchanging foundation.
If gods are human constructs, then truth has no external, unchanging foundation.
Now you're getting it!
"I think that people who haven't investigated these matters down this particular literal and philosophical pathway have never grappled with. . . . if there's no God, So, if there's no higher value, let's say, if there's no transcendent value, then you can do whatever you want. . . . this is why I have such frustration with people like Sam Harris, this sort of radical atheist because they seem to think that once human beings have abandoned their grounding in the transcendent that the plausible way forward is with a kind of purest rationality that automatically attributes to other people equivalent value. The universe that people like Dawkins and Harris inhabit is so intensely conditioned by mythological presuppositions that they take for granted the ethic that emerges out of that as if it's just a given." (see video below)
This is why it's so important to recognize what the simple word God really means. That it isn't restricted to sky fairy. The people who are misled by Gods are no more or less deceived than those who invent their own, not that the former didn't recreate their own God for the same reason. But those don't exist, says the skeptic, without rising above it. They are all in the same ship of fools, rolling around in a sea of insanity.
Not necessarily so. First of all, Dawkins, Harris, et al., can have been (and, indeed, have been) affected by the culture into which they were born and lived. Of course, they would have cherry-picked, and that is proper. Secondly, theists can (and have) asserted that there is such a property as the sensus divinatis and its cousin, the fitra, both of which can be associated with God in Genesis breathing life into man. This alleged property makes so-called moral reasoning a wide-spread natural ability.If morality is entirely dependent on God, then those who do not believe in God should have no ability to reason morally. Yet, we see that they do.
This, too, is not necessarily so. By "objective", the theist can simply mean that moral being is not invented by and does not originate with humans. The intended point is that moral being seems to transcend mere human being. That aside, what we are referring to as the moral sense requires development - even in the case of theism-based morality, and moral manifestation can simply reflect the extent of development as well as differing contexts. Then, there is also the matter of whether the proper context for assessing the moral sense is a social view or the individual.If morality were truly objective in the way you claim, then you should be able to present a single moral law that has remained unchanged across all cultures and religions, independent of human interpretation.
Aside from whatever it is that DLH claims, it could well be an error - nah, it is in fact an error - to think that morality (including a theism-based morality) can be entailed by law(s) or that moral being is a determinate matter. Morality - particularly as made manifest by and in individuals, including a theism-based morality - can well be an indeterminate matter, a matter requiring ceaseless creativity and re-creation.If morality were truly objective in the way you claim, then you should be able to present a single moral law that has remained unchanged across all cultures and religions, independent of human interpretation.
As presented, "good" is undefined, uncharacterized. Consequently, the dichotomy might well present an insufficient consideration.Does God like what is good because it is good, or is it good because God likes it?
If, as Levinas says, "love without reward is valuable", it can just as well be said that moral being without reward is valuable. And, in that case, morality is always subjective regardless of whether it ever happens to be intersubjective as well.I think morality is neither objective nor subjective, but intersubjective ...