Re-read your original statement. No typo in what I said: "I believe I have very little ignorance of non-theists."Morny wrote:You seem to have a typo here. Or is "Actually, yes, ..." directly answering my question, i.e., you do have a low view of non-theists?Kurieuo wrote:Actually, yes, I believe I have very little ignorance of non-theists.Morny wrote:Do you really have such a low ignorant view of non-theists we're discussing?Kurieuo wrote:Reason? Reason has nothing to do with the Golden Rule.
Here's a "golden rule" that I see as reasonable, and which most people tend to follow in their everydays lives. And it's one that makes logical sense:
Look after yourself first, and then anyone else thereafter as much as it profits you.
After it's your life. You won't be around after it. So live it your way. ("your" intended as third person, not you specifically)
Care to offer a logical alternative?
Hehe... counterproductive to what -- someone's own gain?Morny wrote:You obviously missed my assumption. I said, "... non-theists, who roughly agree on reasonable well-known variations of the Golden Rule, ...". As I said before, such people will not reason to the ethical rules you described, and even you considered. People, who don't want the value that derives from the Golden Rule, can justify just about any selfish thing.Kurieuo wrote:Err, how does reason have everything to do with the Golden Rule?Morny wrote:Reason has everything to do with the Golden Rule. A random group of non-theists, who roughly agree on reasonable well-known variations of the Golden Rule, can easily agree on a set of concrete ethical rules, some of which will look surprisingly like the last 7 Commandments. Those ethical rules will look nothing like what you sarcastically describe above.
I was not using sarcasm at all. I am dead serious. I've see it. I've even been there and considered it.
I'm born into this world. This is my life. I do not experience the life of someone else, just my life. I want the best for my life. Therefore, I come first in life and everyone else where I see they fit into creating the best world for myself.
Now that is a logical argument. You might reject it, but it is one based on logical reasoning. So to reject it, you need to logically refute one of the premises rather than just rejecting the conclusion outright as you have done.
I'd also be interested in hearing an alternative logical argument that supports the Golden Rule? The only reason I can see, is not logical, but rather emotional. And if emotions evolved to keep humanity more social, why we ought to discard them for ourselves when they don't really suit us.
Even the reasoning ability of chimps and dolphins in scientific group behavior studies not only follow variations of the Golden Rule, but also derive them on their own. "I'll share these treats with you, if you do the same for me if you ever have treats. And if you don't share with me later, I won't share with you when I again have the chance."
Must we really rely on supernatural insight to reason that lying, cheating, etc., are counterproductive? Evidently chimps and dolphins don't think so.
Thanks for providing some logic to the Golden Rule. Sadly, your example really ends up supporting a maxim to always look after ourselves.
Giving something to get something back is still ultimately self serving and supports the maxim I proposed: "Look after yourself first, and then anyone else thereafter as much as it profits you." If the chimp is going to give to receive, then it is obviously profiting him. And so, if the chimp refrains from giving after not receiving then it is because he realises the giving is no longer profiting him. No?
Provide the logic for a chimp just giving away everything, not getting anything back, and repeating to go the extra mile to continue giving everything away.