ZNP-TBA
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Is I win a sound argument?
These days just getting offended "wins" one an argument. I wouldn't be surprised
Is I win a sound argument?
Lolz. Religion has morality in it but it only touches on the morality of humans. We would have had the morality most religions try to advocate with or without their existence.
Watch the below video.
Also, I think most religions (especially certain abrahamic religions) blocks one's empathy and tries to feed you ideas such as 'succumbing to the will of god or being humble to the will of god' as good and right, whereas when you think about it those have nothing much to do with morality.
Humans are capable of morality without religions, infact humans are capable of more.
In our brains we have a part that deals with empathy. Religion (certain religions esp) tries to replace that with their understanding of a 2000 year old sense of right and wrong.
Right but this suggests that the (moral) values existed in the first place before religion. Thus, it doesn't really add up to say that religion is the source of morality. Religion is constructed to accommodate those already existing moral values. Moral atheists simply do not require a religion to facilitate or accommodate those values.
You said that human beings are capable of morality and I should strongly agree with that, the human primitiveness is capable of knowing the right and wrong, good and evil, and the main reason you should accept or refuse any religion is because of that sensing, atheists also refuse many religious rules and morals because they indicate that they're opposing to the human primitiveness and I can understand their concern and respect it,
and this might seem a cliché and a bit romantic but human beings are originally good whether they're religious or not, (this what I believe to be something created by God)
But here's the most important part:
humans are also taught by experience.. Thus if you read the history of any nation, you find that the society should have gone through so much tragedy and the history have to repeat itself over and over thousands of years of human history -and still do- before they realize that "Well it was wrong and we should change it"
so if you only depend on a human brain you'll find many of issues you frowns these days might be totally acceptable like 60 years to come, just as much as many issues 100 years ago were morally unacceptable are now just normal and unfortunately harmful for the society as well as for individuals, what are the limitations? Those should be clear it's highly important..
Though I won't deny that there are morals now that are way better than they were a 100 years ago, but many of them are actually validated by the religion so long before people tried -at least- to embrace them ..
Depending only on human brain is an absolute denial of the human nature which is good as well as dark and devastating, you say human brain is capable of morals without the religion to confront and be blinded to the fact
as long as you're not caught doing the wrong action or as long as you're not accountable for these actions then you're good to go.
So apparently talking about depending only on human brain to build up the moral system is too idealistic and romantic and -of course - unrealistic..
Now let's talk about how it works with the example of Abrahamic religions, the followers of these religions mainly find the religion to be confirming to their good human primitiveness
, it actually refines and protects the good that they already have in their hearts
and succumbing to the will of God
The whole point of the religion is to make life easier and keep the humanity from adverse consequences,
Last but not least: if you don't believe that religion is meant to make the life easier for people, then you're determined to take the high way of exploring things by yourself, and testing theories of life, not that it's wrong, but it's just that you most probably would end up with a conclusion that is compatible to the religion it self..
Simple, the very concept of morality in religion would never make sense if the notion of morality didn't preclude it. It's sort of like a cake. Morality or system of ethical behavior is one of the ingredients required in most religions which would be the cake. The cake didn't create the constituent ingredients rather vice versa.
Pre-existing golden age? Dafaq? Kind of a non-sequitur but okay. And?
My personal view of this fairy tale is exactly that, a fairy tale. It's analogous to the 'stork theory' of child birth. Surely we can do better when trying to understand the complexities of human morality?
Please don't take this as an insult but it seems to me you have a very poor capacity for debate. I just scrolled over some of your arguments in various threads and it seems rather conclusive that you're a struggling sophist at best. I'm not just saying that or trying to insult you. I would be happy to quote various arguments you've made and point out which fallacies have been committed (repeatedly) so you know I'm not just hurling a baseless accusation. Just say the word and I'll compile a list.
What do you mean by "human primitiveness" exactly?
Not sure how this relates to the topic at hand. I don't accept the idea that history has to repeat itself in order for people to learn though this has been the case ( I agree there) but there is no reason it has to be this way. We can learn apriori through logical reasoning whether something will be morally desirable or not before counting the countless and nameless dead bodies of failed social experiments. I don't see the human experience of learning and growing as deterministic.
If anything this shows that the human perception of morality is ever changing (I would say usually for the better) and this creates a conundrum for the religious who claim objective morality from divinity. Even holy and sacred religious texts changed their moral code due to time and circumstances based on the human condition in the time period in which it was covering. The Bible, for example, allowed for slavery, rape, murder, etc. but modern Christians (post enlightenment) frown on such archaic 'morality' ( indeed even when it was codified in religious law) and have fundamentally changed (and keep changing) their religion to conform to modern widely accepted human standards of morality.
I would say the religion changed to conform to modern widely accepted human standards of morality. In the past religion has been the justification for moral claims we would consider clearly immoral today (slavery for example).
The human brain is part of nature, it is the source of 'human nature.' Are you claiming religion is something separate from human minds? Indeed, did not religion(s) themselves originate as a product of the human mind? I fail to see how religion has a source outside the human mind.
Then real honor must not exist? There must be a supernatural sky God watching you at all times and you must answer to said sky God or else you will always commit the wrong action? Is this the conclusion you're arriving at?
What else would attempt to create an objective system of morality and ethics? Space aliens? Maybe. So far, we only know of humans being the only species that care about complex moral questions and the thing that distinguishes us from the rest of the animal kingdom is our relatively large brains. It would stand to reason our sense of morality is a byproduct of our evolved brains. I don't see why some people get so offended by that.
What of free will then? If one is required to submit to another's (God's) will (Islam, for example, literally means submission) then how is free will not actually a sin too?
I agree but that doesn't make religious claims true or the deity people in a religion worship actually real.
I think religion does make life easier for many people but so what? I think it makes it easier for some people to deal with death. I think it makes it easier for some people to fit into their communities.
I care about what's true and not necessarily what makes life easier for people. I personally believe that truth is preferable to falsehood no matter how uncomfortable the truth might make us even it makes us question everything we believed to be true before.
Thank you for responding though!
Human nature, human birth, the core of a human being .. [emoji28]
Well that's how it is, that's how it's always been and will always be
There are issues that we as human might think are morally acceptable could show later that they're harmful, but you wouldn't realize until when there are people who actually harmed,
but following the laws of religion that you might not understand the significance of them would be a shortcut of avoiding what statistics would show you later on..
Besides, moral is not logical, thus it cannot be taught by reasoning..
Also your morals could be totally different than someone else's morals, and this gap would be wider when he has other selfish agendas that he doesn't see why he shouldn't follow as long as there's a possibility that he will never be caught..
Basically religions do not change thier morality, there are rules that updates according to the time and place.. that's all.
No religion allowed for killing or rape unless you're misinterpreted or took some textiles out of their context which most probably a war context, you don't expect that people would not fight right?
we don't ever expect that some day there won't be conflicts anymore, that's delusional, It's painful but it's the reality, and to deal with this reality religion contains laws of war..
As for slavery, the religion didn't found slavery, it was there from the beginning of civilizations, and human morals were totally ok with that because the social norms created by human were allowing that kind of practice, and again most of people are submissive to the norms as well as many other factors.. religion only managed to grant the slaves their rights as a human by forbidding any inhumane practices against them, cut the sources of slavery, then called for gradually ending it..
Unless you prove to me that if you have a company with employees that you don't to have to use any mean of control or look closely at their work what so ever to make sure they're doing their job properly and faithfully, because they're well educated about the "importance of morality" and -in fact- still have a high efficiency and honesty as much as if you were actually watching them, I would go with space aliens!
As long as the employees would be aware that aliens are watching them closely and would reward them during life and/or after life for doing good, and punish them during life and/or after life if they were dishonest even if no higher authority was able to rewards or punish them while they're alive..
There are many social experiments in that field that proved that human beings are capable of doing horrible things if they don't feel accountable for their actions, and that's what happens during wars and conflicts and prisons etc.
Most religious people get offended by this kind of discussion because aside from that fact that the human nature generally tend to believe in a religion or a God (most of the time without questioning, which I think is ok as long as they don't have devastating or extreme ideologies and use religion to reason them) that they're also emotionally and spiritually tied to the religion, it gives them a peaceful zone in this cruel life.. so they would feel attacked on their precious things.
As for me I'm always questioning and exploring, I don't believe in something unless I question it, so I don't get offended as long as the discussion is respectable and the person is willing to listen..
No, I don't really think so. How can one gain favor with god by being an atheist? lolYou are living a free will, you're free to choose whatever path you want, whatever religion, whatever non-religion, but as long as you're agreed to follow the religion you should submit to the laws or morals of God, or else you don't call yourself religious anymore.
And since God made us capable of sin, he also granted forgiveness to whoever wanted to be forgiven, he could have created us angels or people without sins but he didn't..
Sounds a bit vague. Can you be more specific? Not sure what you mean by human nature, birth, and core and how that relates to 'primitiveness.' I only ask because I don't want to assume what you mean.
How do you know?
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Why do people have to be harmed to realize something is bad? Why can't reason and common sense prevent the harm in the first place? We know that if a person drank motor oil they would most likely die. We don't need to have a few people drink motor oil to realize that. We already know through reasoning and common sense what the outcome would most likely be
What statistics?
What? Isn't this the reason we create rules? Rules are supposed to be reasonable within the context of the matter so they are comprehensible thus there are usually justifications for any rule.
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Would you be able to explain to your child why murdering is wrong without evoking some supernatural reason?
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Why would the other person be assumed to have 'selfish agendas?'(whatever that means). It's true, people may have different values but to interact positively with each other they automatically adopt some common values they may not even be fully conscious of. This is where the concepts of common law arise from. And isn't it interesting that most people still don't automatically do something considered immoral even if there is little chance they will get caught?
Isn't that a contradiction? Religions both change their perception of morality and do not? Didn't Jesus directly contradict the old law of eye for an eye?
So rape and murder are okay in war? What about war crimes?
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Do not the Abrahamic religions believe that one day there will not be wars and conflicts once Satan is eternally vanquished? Doesn't the Christian tradition teach that God will remake the world into another paradise after the rapture? How can you, as a believer, not believe the world will be without conflict some day when your religion(probably) promotes a day in which evil will disappear.
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Nobody knows exactly where slavery began so I won't blame its inception on religion necessarily. However, religion was often used as a justification for slavery. The Greek polytheists believed slaves were not favored by their gods and something less than Greek. Christian slaveholders believed sub-Saharan Africans were of the flock of Cain and not completely human. Muslims believed others were inferior based on their religious teachings, etc. I'm not saying religion was the direct cause of slavery but for many centuries it was used to justify it.
A company's success isn't only determined by its management structure. There are tons of factors that go into a successful company and labor is just one of them. A company's success is ultimately determined by its customers and thus the managerial structure of a company is always subject to what kind of demand the company must meet, its not just the whims of the managers/owners. Yes, managers are there to optimize efficiency but that doesn't make them immune from receiving corrective action. As far as the overall company structure, managers are part of the machine just as much as the managed. There isn't some greater manager the machine operates for rather it operates to meet customer demand, OUR demand.![]()
That sounds like a concentration camp. The Nazis rewarded the Jews by maybe not killing them if they were productive in the camps. If they were not, certain death.
That's not the argument here. Of course humans are capable of doing horrific things just like they're capable of doing fantastic things. The question really is this: Is belief in a supernatural invisible entity in the sky that sees everything required for people not to do horrific things? If this were the case then atheists would be pretty much committing horrific acts all the time and religious people would automatically start committing horrific acts the moment their faith lapsed.
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Perception, my dear. If you perceive the world as a cruel and intolerable place and the only way you can make peace with it is through religion then more power to you. If you see the world as capable of being positive and a great place and perceive real joy in life then you don't need to drug yourself with perceptions offered by supernatural explanations. I don't know if its in human nature to be religious. I wouldn't call babies and small children religious by nature (in fact, I think it can be argued that they are rather irreligious until religious values are forced upon them by their parents/communities)
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I also look for evidence first, but as for the evidence of existence of God, as a matter of fact you'll never believe in him even if he appeared to you and tell you "hey I'm your God" you'd then ask for evidence to prove to you that he's the God because being a super natural figure doesn't mean you're God, which is apparently humiliating because an almighty being like God doesn't need to prove to you that he exists, because simply he doesn't need you to believe in him, he can create endless creatures that believe him other than you, and even if he prove to you that he is the God, you'd not necessarily believe him, and there's -in fact- no meaning for a belief when you can sense him by sight..I look for evidence in the answers first.
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Being offended is typically a way to wiggle out of a weak position if the opposing argument being made is succinct and well reasoned (even if it comes of as offensive).
No, I don't really think so. How can one gain favor with god by being an atheist? lol
In other words god promises eternal punishment to all who have not submitted to his will (his rules and regulations/laws , etc.)
Sure a religious person may claim " But you have the choice to submit to God or not," but all that means is that if you choose to not submit your free will to God's path then you will be punished in damnation forever (doesn't matter how much "good" you think you are doing). This is analogous to saying a Jew in a concentration camp had the "choice" to disobey the Nazi guards but if he did then he would surely be tortured and even killed. In other words god gave no choice because he stacked the deck so heavily(eternal damnation of the soul) for anyone who did not submit their free will to follow him.
The Abrahamic religion I grew up with teaches Original Sin. This means I was in Sin the moment I was conceived (don't see how this is really a choice). God gives me the 'choice' to follow him through following rules and regulations set forth by religions that claim to follow him so that I may be given forgiveness for a "sin" I never committed ( that "Sin" being my birth since I am allegedly the offspring of a mythical couple in a magical garden tricked by a talking snake to eat some funky fruit just 6.000 years ago).
Out of curiosity, what's your first language?English is not my first language, that's all that my dictionary suggested [emoji23]
I'll try one more time, like when the baby is born, he's of an innocent nature, that's how the human being originally is, I hope this makes it clearer
Reason have to do with facts, what facts can you offer to support morality?
Moral is good but not logical, it's not mathematics or chemistry, the only reasoning it depends on is your personal reasoning..
The motor oil example can be reasoned with medical and chemical facts about the possible damages it might cause to his own body, but if he drank it; the common sense would be that he is committing suicide because he's feeling depressed or pain, his morals wouldn't let him to kill himself when his mind isn't under effect of depression.
Again we are submissive to factors and circumstances that can sometimes change our good nature,
that's why we need something that keep us strong and put us on the right direction whenever we deviate, a value system that we refer to whenever we feel like doing something stupid..
Statistics that shows a harm the permission of some laws prohibited by religion cause for the society..
Ok why murdering is wrong?