non-affiliated wrote:Atheists and theists alike would agree that "thou shalt not murder" is morally good but isn't this preached in most of the major religions throughout the world? Christianity is certainly not unique in its moral stance.
I wasn't talking about uniqueness, but basis. Either morality is objective, or it is subjective. If it's objective, then you can base laws on it. If it's subjective, you can't, and everyone has to decide for himself what is right. Or, more accurately, there
is no right and wrong. 'There is no good and evil...there is only power, and those too weak to seek it!'
non-affiliated wrote:For a society to exist there must be moral standards. To exist in a society an atheist must accept some of those standards. How strongly an atheist believes in what society believes to be moral is up to the individual. If I choose to disregard all of modern societies ideas of morality then I would not be able to function within it.
So moral ideas are just conventions? They are no more than
mores, or 'habits'?
non-affiliated wrote:Also, as more of a direct answer, it depends on the moral issue in question. Legislation against homosexual marriage I do believe to be close to a crime.
I don't. Before marriage was desacralized and 'made a mockery of' as you say, 'homosexual marriage' was simply a contradiction in terms, and it should become one again.
non-affiliated wrote:Who decides that it is wrong? Society had once shunned premarital sex but it is becoming widely accepted especially since the institution of marriage has been made a mockery of in the last 30 or so years.
See what I mean? Apparently, the majority decides what is good and what is evil. Premarital sex used to be seen as wrong, but now it's seen as right -- and if you think right/wrong depends on social conventions, then it is neither. Slavery used to be seen as right, but now it's seen as wrong -- but only
one of those views can be correct, and that view should be articulated in law. They can't
both be correct. And they can't both be wrong, or you might as well abolish morality in its entirety.
What if, in a hundred years, our society declares that the prohibition on incest belonged to a bygone age? Would that be right? Would that be right for that time?
non-affiliated wrote:See the issue of slavery. It is obviously wrong but where was Christian morality then? Considering that Christianity was the primary religion of the time in the major western countries how did slavery exist for such a long time?
Greed, and seeing the blacks as lesser beings. At one point, the question arose if blacks did even have a soul. I'm not saying that Christians have always acted morally, but that they have a basis for morality which they can appeal to. On what ground do you reject slavery?
non-affiliated wrote:In regards to pedophilia: at what age can an individual have consentual sex? This age differs in many countries and societies. If I consider pedophilia to be sexual relations between two people with an age difference of greater than 3 years is this any less acceptable than to say consentual sex is deemed legitimate at 16 years of age?
A lot less acceptable, since in that case sexual relations between a man of 44 and a woman of 40 would be considered pedophilia.
Age doesn't matter; only marriage does. But there is a political party in our country, commonly referred to as the 'pedo party', which wants to lower that totally arbitrary age to 12, and it is strongly suspected their motives are none too acceptable. Now at one point in time, society may see this as a 'normal expression of sexuality' (just like homosexuality now), but that won't change its wrongness one bit.
non-affiliated wrote:Atheists that desire to forbid religious education are foolish just as Christians who desire to forbid evolutionary teachings are foolish.
Oh yeah, but they're vocal sometimes. Did you know Richard Dawkins is one of them?
non-affiliated wrote:Intellectual growth can only be achieved by considering a great number of ideas that are presented on any given argument then determining what ideas hold the most weight according to individual beliefs. For instance, I personally do not fully accept the idea of evolution and I do not completely discount the idea of intelligent design. I have not studied either theory nearly enough to establish a stance one way or the other. I tend to lean one way moreso than another but I am always eager and willing to hear any well thought out argument. That is also the reason why I am posting on this forum. I enjoy intelligent thought about many issues.
So do I!
non-affiliated wrote:Turgonian wrote:Is lying allowed if it gets you out of a difficult situation and doesn't harm anyone else?
Yes, definitely. If there were imposed a new law that stated every person must accept blue as their favorite color or else they face the death penalty would you tell authorities that blue was your favorite color although it was really green? A very stupid example I know but I can come up with many others that are concievable.
When it's a life/death matter over something stupid like that, very well. But I can also come up with an example that's more conceivable. At school, a teacher asks a pupil whether he has done his homework. He will get detention if he hasn't. If he says he has, he can get out of the situation without harming the teacher, his fellow pupils or anyone else. So what should he say?
non-affiliated wrote:I determine my own ideas about morality with help from a variety of sources. These ideas that I develop I believe to be acceptable for me to function in society at a level that I choose.
Morality sacrificed on the altar of functionality...
There were many people who functioned in Nazi Germany, by the way.
non-affiliated wrote:A Christian will see many of my ideas of morality as "wrong" while an atheist may then see my ideas of morality as "right". Whether outside observers (ie. anyone who decides to pass judgement about my morality) view my ideas as right or wrong is based on their own opinions and of little consequence to me.
You just said observers determined whether your ideas were right or wrong. In other words, you
only determine what is right or wrong for yourself, and you want others to do the same and not push morality. But as to what is
really right or wrong, you have no choice but to remain agnostic at best. The only thing you can do is give your opinion and hope someone likes it...
Would you agree with the statement 'You can't legislate morality'?
non-affiliated wrote:I forsee the objection to the first few lines of this last paragraph and I would emphasize the fact that there are issues that I stand for more strongly than others. If murdering your first born became a societal norm I would face persecution rather than accept it.
That's good.
Once again: I'm not at all suggesting you are immoral or do not care for morality; my point is that your only basis for morality is yourself, which would mean that everyone has to determine his own morality, which would mean that no moral stance is more or less acceptable than any other. You can't call something absolutely right or wrong; you can only say you agree or disagree with it.
It is therefore impossible for a state to be morally right or wrong; the only thing that matters is whether individuals, with their own ideas about morality, can function there.