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Atheistic morality

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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 6:50 am

Not every devout and religious follower has an equal chance of reaching heaven. If you devoutly and religiously follow the Pope into war, then you are acting against the command of Jesus.

A devout and religious follower is rather hard to come by. I certainly am not one, nor is Player or UC.

Were all those people emulating Jesus, then probably the doctors would hit em p with morphine and go to the streets to find the less devout. Jesus came not for the good who didn't require saving, but for those who did. A devout doctor would not be intent on saving those already saved, but those who have yet to be saved.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 6:55 am

OK, so you have 2 guys on the ward in comas. Neither have been identified (they were both found without identification or any distinguishing marks, already unconscious after being victims of hit and run car accidents). How do you decide if they are more or less likely to make it to heaven than anyone else either inside or outside of the hospital?
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 7:01 am

You decide they are not. Getting into heaven is no easy task.

But then had they been killed in the car accident, they wouldn't have gotten into heaven either. In fact, it would be best to prepare prior to the event and to create a society in which people are able to make good decisions. The current society does what it can to suggest we emulate Katie Perry and Jay-z. These are the idols of our youth and our society screams from the rooftops that this is right.

The chance of anyone being saved when the Church itself is demanding people condemn themselves, science tells people to turn from God and the government is leading people on a path of self destruction is significantly decreased anyways.

It takes a rather, well many choice words have been used to describe me and again I am far from heaven, select kind of person that can keep their eyes on the prize and not be distracted by the wide variety of temptation that our society spews insistently.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 7:04 am

Please point out to me the basis in any theistic moral proclamations that you should assume that people you don't know anything about are not true followers of God/Jesus / are not likely to get into heaven / whatever.

See, I don't think any of what you are saying with this line of thought can be justified? Jesus tells you specifically that only God can judge people, yet you place the burden onto the doctor to decide who is most likely to be saved or not?
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 7:11 am

No I am placing the burden on the person to be saved, unless they cannot take the burden upon themselves, in which case the burden is gone and by default they are categorized as unsaved.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 7:38 am

But that doesn't address the point. If you have limited resources so that only 1 of the 2 can be moved to another hospital, how do you decide which to move?

Also, I will ask again, if only God can judge (as per Jesus' teachings) then who are you, me, the doctor or anyone else to pass value judgements on the likelihood of their redemption? Thats like saying "we should decide on which to move based on which one has been to the most different restaurants during their lifetime". It's not in any way accessible to us to know this. Saying "by default we should assume neither have ever been to a restaurant" isn't in any way helpful to resolving the dilemma...

(and all this is before we get to the point where you are asked to establish the reality of heaven, redemption, eternal life, etc)
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 7:53 am

If a person says, I'm happy not to be moved, then this means they are willing to sacrifice themselves for others. Their willingness to be sacrificed is not random, because they are devout. Therefore the decision is based on their devotion. If someone said, I'm not willing to be sacrificed, then they aren't devote and therefore require saving.

The first, who sacrificed themselves emulated Jesus and received their reward. The second, who refused to emulate Jesus were hence less likely to reach heaven. I therefore decide by asking them. If they are unable to be asked, then I will assume that they aren't ready for heaven.

Jesus says that a man will store his treasure in a safe place. A Christian's treasure is heaven. A true Christian will act on such beliefs and therefore it is not a true sacrifice they are making but merely a reflection of their faith. It is not, ow many restaurants they've been to, but how faithful they are.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 7:55 am

Both are in a coma.... how are they meant to say anything? FFS just ANSWER THE QUESTION!!!

Just for reference, here's the question:

If only God can judge (as per Jesus' teachings) then who are you, me, the doctor or anyone else to pass value judgements on the likelihood of their redemption?
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby Gillipig on Sun Aug 31, 2014 8:12 am

crispybits wrote:But that doesn't address the point. If you have limited resources so that only 1 of the 2 can be moved to another hospital, how do you decide which to move?

Also, I will ask again, if only God can judge (as per Jesus' teachings) then who are you, me, the doctor or anyone else to pass value judgements on the likelihood of their redemption? Thats like saying "we should decide on which to move based on which one has been to the most different restaurants during their lifetime". It's not in any way accessible to us to know this. Saying "by default we should assume neither have ever been to a restaurant" isn't in any way helpful to resolving the dilemma...

(and all this is before we get to the point where you are asked to establish the reality of heaven, redemption, eternal life, etc)

He doesn't have the answers you seek, just questions, that he likes to repeat over and over again regardless of what he's responding to. I've read these 11 pages just now and I find it amazing that you guys are still trying to reach out to him. Can't you recognize a lost case when you see it? He's in a totally different emotional state than you guys, he's made up his mind, he's not here to figure out what he thinks, he's here to propagate his beliefs as loudly and frequently as he can.

And btw, trying to find an absolute morality is pointless, it's a man made concept that varies between different times and places and individuals, my morality for example is different from yours, you can find out what an average human considers moral but it changes with time, making it impossible to determine what "humans consider moral and immoral". And there's nothing guaranteeing that our great grandchildren won't agree with Hitler's view on morality just as there was no guarantee that his generation wouldn't.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 8:16 am

Sorry, I thought you were saying should those in the coma be saved, rather than which one should be saved.

Flip a coin.

Edit: To clarify, not only can God judge us, but we are judged by the judgements we cast. God is in every one of us. When we are casting a judgement for God or against God, we are using the God within us and are judging ourselves.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 8:21 am

Gillipig,

As I have yet to see anyone convert to anyone else's way of thinking, I'll assume that each person here is has made up their mind. That you target me by this comment suggests your own personal preferences.

In judging me about something you are doing, you are in fact judging yourself.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby Dukasaur on Sun Aug 31, 2014 8:22 am

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ā€œā€ŽLife is a shipwreck, but we must not forget to sing in the lifeboats.ā€
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 8:29 am

Duk,

If JB was doing his best to prepare for the decision, then when the decision came flipping the coin wouldn't be as random.

We have prepared for nothing and we could not make an educated decision if we tried. As such, lacking preparation, the best that can be done is to cooperate so that something may still be achieved. Good decisions can be destroyed by lack of cooperation and bad decisions may be improve by cooperation.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby tzor on Sun Aug 31, 2014 8:50 am

crispybits wrote:I'd quite like to know how someone who takes their morals from some ancient religious text would deal with this one:

You are a doctor and the hospital you work in is suddenly overwhelmed by people seeking medical assistance. You fill all the beds and more people keep arriving, so you start using every available bit of usable space to treat as many people as you can. Then the floodwaters start rising and the ground floor of the hospital floods, meaning that you can no longer get any new deliveries of medical supplies. Then the power goes out meaning that you only have enough emergency power to run essential equipment. Then the army arrive, and tell you that the hospital needs to be evacuated because it is not safe for anyone to remain there.

You have limited staff, so you know you can only evacuate a small proportion of the patients. You will have to get them through a mostly flooded area, so moving anyone requiring any sort of machine to keep them healthy in the short term will require more resources to move. You are running dangerously short on all sorts of supplies.


I think you can make a general argument that no religion really deals with morals that go into the dilemma zone. One can make a case for a religion's attitude on how to treat others, but they generally don't concern themselves with moral triage situations. In essence there is no "correct" answer. There are practical answers, but even these may not always be the correct or proper answer. (Indeed there may be no proper answer short of armchair quarterbacking.) Another factor is the various levels of needs for all of the patients, but if the question is eventually who lives and who dies, well any attempt at a "solution" is going to involve decisions that goes against the general notion of the equal dignity of all persons, resulting in a lose/loose situation no mater what you do.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby BigBallinStalin on Sun Aug 31, 2014 9:31 am

tzor wrote:
crispybits wrote:I'd quite like to know how someone who takes their morals from some ancient religious text would deal with this one:

You are a doctor and the hospital you work in is suddenly overwhelmed by people seeking medical assistance. You fill all the beds and more people keep arriving, so you start using every available bit of usable space to treat as many people as you can. Then the floodwaters start rising and the ground floor of the hospital floods, meaning that you can no longer get any new deliveries of medical supplies. Then the power goes out meaning that you only have enough emergency power to run essential equipment. Then the army arrive, and tell you that the hospital needs to be evacuated because it is not safe for anyone to remain there.

You have limited staff, so you know you can only evacuate a small proportion of the patients. You will have to get them through a mostly flooded area, so moving anyone requiring any sort of machine to keep them healthy in the short term will require more resources to move. You are running dangerously short on all sorts of supplies.


I think you can make a general argument that no religion really deals with morals that go into the dilemma zone. One can make a case for a religion's attitude on how to treat others, but they generally don't concern themselves with moral triage situations. In essence there is no "correct" answer. There are practical answers, but even these may not always be the correct or proper answer. (Indeed there may be no proper answer short of armchair quarterbacking.) Another factor is the various levels of needs for all of the patients, but if the question is eventually who lives and who dies, well any attempt at a "solution" is going to involve decisions that goes against the general notion of the equal dignity of all persons, resulting in a lose/loose situation no mater what you do.


The general point that I've been getting from crispybits' example is that morality is independent of religion--regardless of how much a believer insists about knowing with enough certainty that the religious rules are true because god, Zeus, WhatNot. They'll fall back on other moral beliefs when pushed, but they have no problem doing this, and if so, this may imply that they not considering how untenable their religious-moral position has become.


Crispybits, a natural experiment is the Islamic way of administering justice--which bears some similarities to Common Law but differs in its much stronger adherence to a religious text. They've adapted to moral dilemmas like the one you presented while stamping it with the Holy Sense of Approval.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 9:36 am

Gillipig wrote:And btw, trying to find an absolute morality is pointless, it's a man made concept that varies between different times and places and individuals, my morality for example is different from yours, you can find out what an average human considers moral but it changes with time, making it impossible to determine what "humans consider moral and immoral". And there's nothing guaranteeing that our great grandchildren won't agree with Hitler's view on morality just as there was no guarantee that his generation wouldn't.


I think we have to be clear about the meaning of the terms we are using. I think there does exist such a "thing" as objective moral truths - but I think that these are dependent on concious beings existing. Under some definitions that would seem to imply it's subjective, but what I mean is not that morality exists independent of minds to conceptualise it, but that there exists a moral framework theoretically accessible to us and built on entirely objective phenomena. That might well end up being vaguely defined if you're talking in general terms (like "health" is vaguely defined in a general sense) but with the right process we can apply it to specific cases to get specific answers (like "he's got appencitis, we need to operate").

If you accept that emotional states are the products of brain states, then what remains only in the realms of subjectivity that is both something which theoretically could provide moral value distinctions and something that we are able to evaluate reliably (not necessarily objectively, but reliably)?

Also, what we observe about morality doesn't work like that. Slavery doesn't go in and out of fashion, neither does theft or rape or murder. Once a convincing case has been made for why something is moral or immoral then that thing generally stays moral or immoral until some new case is made challenging that judgement. In practice, moral progress mirrors the nature of scientific progress in this way. Mistakes and mis-steps are made along the way, but there is a clear directionality overall.

tzor wrote:I think you can make a general argument that no religion really deals with morals that go into the dilemma zone. One can make a case for a religion's attitude on how to treat others, but they generally don't concern themselves with moral triage situations. In essence there is no "correct" answer. There are practical answers, but even these may not always be the correct or proper answer. (Indeed there may be no proper answer short of armchair quarterbacking.) Another factor is the various levels of needs for all of the patients, but if the question is eventually who lives and who dies, well any attempt at a "solution" is going to involve decisions that goes against the general notion of the equal dignity of all persons, resulting in a lose/loose situation no mater what you do.


I think the problem is that most or all of the current religions (and yes I include those who say "I don't follow the church, I follow Jesus") are built not on providing us with a framework or process by which moral decisions can be made, but instead a series of pronouncements of what is moral and what is not. When the value judgements relevant to any given moral decision are extremely complex, a series of instructions for what values to hold can be less than helpful. Better is a process by which we can agree, as a society, which are the primary values and which are secondary and which are irrelevant and then apply those values to a problem in proper proportions.

Yes there is no correct answer to any given dilemma (or it wouldn't be a dilemma) but the point is that the superior moral system is one that gives us the tools by which to try and work out the best choice to make in a consistent manner, rather than the one which gives limited or contradictory commands. Shickingbrits said he'd dose all the christians that acted in such a way that made him confident they were already saved with a butt-load of morphine (effectively killing them in that context) and leave the hospital looking for sick people if he was the doctor in the dilemma. Yet he also, from his own testimony about his religious opinions, would find it binding that Jesus said "You shall not murder" (notice no conditional exemptions in those verses - Matthew 19). If a system says "you must sometimes do X and also never do X" then the system is broken.

That's the strength of the "veiled" approach. In every situation it approaches the moral choices as individual events and forces us to evaluate intentions, consequences, etc and balance these among myriad values criteria within the context of the situation. There are no dogmatic rules that X is always wrong or Y is always right, just a process by which we can work towards a better understanding of the objective moral truth of the situation within all the relevant contexts.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 9:44 am

BigBallinStalin wrote:Crispybits, a natural experiment is the Islamic way of administering justice--which bears some similarities to Common Law but differs in its much stronger adherence to a religious text. They've adapted to moral dilemmas like the one you presented while stamping it with the Holy Sense of Approval.


To be honest, I don't see that as any less intellectually bankrupt as the vast majority of claims about religion in the first place. It's still a bunch of men coming to a human value judgement (probably loosely based on any text within their holy book they decide can be interpretted to be relevant) and then ascribing that value judgement to God with no way to verify that anyone other than the men made the decision in the first place.

I could answer a moral dilemma with "I had a vision from God and He said that THIS is the best possible answer" but it wouldn't mean anything. I'd still need to come up with secular reasons why such and such is correct before any but the profoundly gullible would accept that.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 9:57 am

BigBallinStalin wrote:The general point that I've been getting from crispybits' example is that morality is independent of religion--regardless of how much a believer insists about knowing with enough certainty that the religious rules are true because god, Zeus, WhatNot. They'll fall back on other moral beliefs when pushed, but they have no problem doing this, and if so, this may imply that they not considering how untenable their religious-moral position has become..


The point is slightly different. It's not that religious people make moral choices based on things other than their religion therefore religion and morality are independent, but more that religion only provides values rather than a process, and has not grounded those values within the variable contexts that happen in real life but proclaimed them as universals. For some moral choices "should I be allowed to kill for fun?" then this simplified authoritarian approach is fine, but it falls over whenever it meets anything with any degree of nuance or complexity.

It's like saying "newtonian physics is the only way to make judgements about the nature of physical reality" but when pushed using special relativity and quantum theory to solve a problem. They aren't independent, but proclaiming Newton the be all and end all is dishonest when you also use Einstein and Feynman. Especially when you say that those who use Einstein and Feynman but reject Newton as an authority because of the flaws exposed by the other two have no basis on which to make judgements about physical reality.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 10:03 am

So show some flaws in Christianity. You have neither tried nor done so. Instead you apply a strawman.

i have tried to show some flaws in atheism and the direct problems they create.

I answered your question in its continually evolving forms, answer me this: is it moral to put fluoride in drinking water?
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby BigBallinStalin on Sun Aug 31, 2014 10:27 am

crispybits wrote:
BigBallinStalin wrote:Crispybits, a natural experiment is the Islamic way of administering justice--which bears some similarities to Common Law but differs in its much stronger adherence to a religious text. They've adapted to moral dilemmas like the one you presented while stamping it with the Holy Sense of Approval.


To be honest, I don't see that as any less intellectually bankrupt as the vast majority of claims about religion in the first place. It's still a bunch of men coming to a human value judgement (probably loosely based on any text within their holy book they decide can be interpretted to be relevant) and then ascribing that value judgement to God with no way to verify that anyone other than the men made the decision in the first place.

I could answer a moral dilemma with "I had a vision from God and He said that THIS is the best possible answer" but it wouldn't mean anything. I'd still need to come up with secular reasons why such and such is correct before any but the profoundly gullible would accept that.


Sure, but there's your process of moral development while 'remaining' within the teachings of the Quran. I'm sure we'd disagree with its validity, but just sayin' there's people out there who could resolve your answer while remaining enough within their religion. (Of course, others within this religion have discarded one legal doctrine and have adopted their own in order to justify killing civilians, so we see the arbitrariness unravel it).

this point is mostly in reference to yours here also:
The point is slightly different. It's not that religious people make moral choices based on things other than their religion therefore religion and morality are independent, but more that religion only provides values rather than a process, and has not grounded those values within the variable contexts that happen in real life but proclaimed them as universals. For some moral choices "should I be allowed to kill for fun?" then this simplified authoritarian approach is fine, but it falls over whenever it meets anything with any degree of nuance or complexity.


The underlined isn't true cuz shari'ah law exists. Islam has a process which serves as an extended development of the religion in order to encompass legal/moral cases that aren't clearly addressed in the Quran. This spontaneous order has withstood the test of time with a great degree of nuance and complexity. Human institutions can be robust and dynamic--regardless of their religious foundation.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 10:28 am

I just did. I just said it's a series of simple pronouncements which in real world situations can contradict and there is no reliable method by which to ascertain which values should be given more weight than others nor does it give us any process by which to work out if something is right or wrong for ourslves.

As for your "problems with atheism" - you really want to bring straw men into the discussion. The only value of atheism is "Do not accept the claim that a God exists without sufficient evidence". It is impossible to even attempt to build a moral system on this value alone.

I'd have to go read up on the real science published on the effects of small doses of flouride over long periods of time on the human body and get a good understanding of the risks and benefits. But without any of that how about:

In this case, going behind the veil is pretty much irrelevant because whatever position you are in society you're going to be exposed to this chemical. So we should look at the beneficial effects of this chemical in the doses described and the negative effects of the chemical in the doses described. We'd need to come up with value judgements about what is more important, the healthy teeth of a million people or the strange side-effects that hit a thousand people, if there is a practical alternative way of administering the good effects without the negative effects. What will cost more to fix, bad dental health caused by the lack of the chemical or the bad side effects caused by it? Can we provide the people negatively affected with filters for their homes so that they are not exposed except in much smaller doses?

Why not simplify it. I have a chemical that I can add to the water supply. It guarantees perfect health and immunity from disease for 90% of the population, but the remaining 10% will die immediately. Should I add the chemical?

In this case it becomes clearer what the value judgements are. And in this case I would say no it would not be moral because from behind the veil I don't think a 1 in 10 chance of being randomly killed by a chemical is a good thing even with those benefits if I did survive. If you said it guaranteed perfect health and immunity from disease for 99.99999% and killed 0.00001%, then that would be a more difficult decision, but at that level I might well say "yes, add the chemical", because to me a 1 in ten million chance of dying is a risk I think is worth taking when the potential reward is a disease free and perfectly healthy body for an entire lifetime. Where you put the slider to get me to change from "yes" to "no" I have no idea.

See, even apparently simple dilemmas aren't simple. "God says X is right" is not a sufficient answer to the overwhelming majority of moral decisions...
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 10:36 am

How about we don't simplify it. Fluoride has no proven dental uses. It has proven dangers. It is proven to weaken the immune, block the thyroid receptors and attack the organs, while simultaneously lowering the IQ and altering the state of the person ingesting it.

So let's not change it to "It guarantees perfect health and immunity from disease for 90% of the population, but the remaining 10% will die immediately."

You said that you are looking for real world dilemmas and invent one that requires a natural disaster, lack of aid, two amazingly comatose victims and a flooding hospital. Here is one that exists. So please refer to it as it is not as you'd like it to be.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby crispybits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 10:40 am

OK fine - IF the effects of flouride are as you describe them, then yes it's immoral to add it to the water system. What's your point with the question? (remember we're discussing moral systems here not whether some government or another, who I have very little or no influence over, has chosen to perform an immoral act)

The only reason for the simplification is that I do not have access to all the relevant information. It's not about making moral questions universally simple to answer, but about making it possible for me, with the knowledge I possess, to even come up with a coherent answer to a semantically similar question without devoting a lot of time to studying something I have little or no interest in.
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby shickingbrits on Sun Aug 31, 2014 10:48 am

I posted a link, a photo, a snippet. There's is plentiful info available.

The reason I'm asking is: since we collectively decide such things as fluoridating water, what is behind the collective decision that leads to such an immoral choice?
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Re: Atheistic morality

Postby AndyDufresne on Sun Aug 31, 2014 11:14 am

shickingbrits wrote:How about we don't simplify it. Fluoride has no proven dental uses. It has proven dangers. It is proven to weaken the immune, block the thyroid receptors and attack the organs, while simultaneously lowering the IQ and altering the state of the person ingesting it.

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