JohnStOnge wrote:Bottom line, Dostoyevsky was wrong. He like almost all religious people held an extremely low regard for man. He assumes (like St. Child Molestonge) that without a dog-training god dishing out divine salvation and punishment, man is incapable of creating a foundation for moral obligation and everything is permissible. This has never happened.
Man can try to create such a "foundation." But it's not possible. It only lasts until someone has the power to ignore it. Or until someone thinkgs they can contradict it without consequences. Everything WAS permissible for Genghis Khan. Anything he wanted to do.
I can't believe people will even argue this point. It amazes me that atheists will go through all this stuff bragging about their "reason" while they're making their arguments for why there is "nothing else" then for some reason cling to the idea that there must be some instrinstic morality. It's ridiculous.
When you just look at the physical universe there is no "right" or "wrong." Things come into existence and things pass out of existence. What is just is. Doesn't matter if a species goes extinct. As far as living things go: They're just arrangements of atoms. They have no more significance than rocks do. They all will pass into obivion.
Look, I'm not saying that somehow proves the atheist view with respect to the existence of "something else" wrong. I'm just saying that's how it is if the atheist view is correct. Look....if the atheist view is correct nothing matters. If an asteroid hits Earth next year and all life is destroyed it's just something that happened. If you somehow get the power Genghis Khan had and you can kill anybody you want, force anybody you want to have sex with you, take anything you want that's fine as long as you maintain your power. You'll die and you'll be gone. Same with everybody else.
Doesn't matter.
I'd have a lot more respect for atheists if they'd just admit that instead of going through all these contortions of trying to argue that there's some objective intrinstic morality without the "something else." There just isn't.
Please John, you're so full of shit
You ever wonder why Humans grasp the concepts of morality while animals don't? We're more evolved. Is morality objective? It depends on your perspective. Right and wrong are relative to each individual, and as a species it's defined by what's beneficial to the species. In other words, if there was an alien race who decides their God wants them to wipe out the rest of all existing humanoid life as long as they exist as as species, to them it would be the moral thing to do. For our species, it would not be the moral thing to not defend ourselves because it betrays the species's interest. Would it be immoral to wipe the other species out, knowing that it wouldn't stop attempting to wipe out the human race until it was gone? Morally you could go either way with that one, and you could reasonably as well, however if you believe in objective morality, you believe in only one right answer in this situation. So which one is it?
Morality is the result of human evolution, just like trade, art, culture, technology, and other such things. It's evidence that we've evolved past our special brethren. Morality, objective in that it holds the interest of the species, is an instinct of right and wrong that programs each individual to do what's best for the species. Surely, there are those deficient in that area, however there's a list of different disorders of the mind and reasoning.
You want to know why what Ghengis Khan, Stalin, Hitler, etc did was wrong? It took lives, which defies nature. Furthermore, the instinct of morality that most people possess, tells us it was wrong. Why do we think it was wrong? Because we don't like the idea of ourselves as individuals being killed, we're going to condemn every action involved with killing. The same goes for rape, torture, and theft, etc. Because we don't like the idea of ourselves being hurt in such ways, it troubles our mind when we see these things occur on others. We understand that these acts aren't beneficial to the individual in which they happen to, thus it harms our pattern of evolution; additionally it scares the shit out of us if someone did those acts to ourselves. So we condemn that action as immoral and those who do those things are frowned upon and brought to justice. Morality exists in our consciousness, and it is objective to our species, but only as a means for survival.
Your whole "die and be gone" shtick is overused and dumb. Humans evolve, Animals evolve, everything evolves. You say there isn't a point if there's no God, I say if there is no God it is our destiny to evolve and
become God. To concede that there is no point to our existence and thus we should live for our own interest and stop learning, stop imagining, stop striving to improve ourselves, stop striving to improve others, is probably an immoral act on itself. If we continue to live and continue to better ourselves, we will continue to evolve. Evolutionary theory states that the animal best suited for its environment survives, who says that our environment is going to be restricted to this country, this continent, this planet, this solar system, or this galaxy for the rest of our existence? We're destined, with our improving technology, to reach beyond the stars and expand our environment and soon after adapt to that environment. If the entire universe is our environment, we would have to be God to be best suited to survive in the environment that is the universe. That's the point. Just by existing and interacting with other people, I impact the world and the evolutionary process, it's like the butterfly effect. Our life has meaning whether you like it or not, and it's our duty to try and speed up and participate that evolutionary process.
Your arguments are pretty weak sauce, I hadn't answered before because I didn't feel like putting up with your BS and stressing over a response.
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