And this is exactly the point that is being addressed by myself and Jac. We are not deriding the GR. We are challenging your understanding of it, and the implications to your beleif system if it is in fact objective. We are playing devil's advocate here. I thought that was pretty clear. Wayne, you are the one saying that the GR is "objective," while at the same time saying morality is only subjective. If it is objective, then what is the source of that objectivity?I find it interesting that when I put forth the GR as the basis for my "moral compass" (in several other threads), it was universally derided as "my preference", "subjective", etc. NOW it is has apparently been adopted as God's "Objective Morality" AND "proof" that God exists.
Let's look at some simple definitions of objective.
-Uninfluenced by emotions or personal prejudices.
-of, relating to, or being anobject, phenomenon, or condition in the realm of sensible experience independent of individual thought and perceptible by all observers.
That's fine. But this does not jive with it being objective. If this is the case, then it is an idea, a preference. Who is to say that the GR is anymore right or wrong than say, kill or be killed. You have shown that you revere the GR. You have shown how it is applied. You have claimed it is objective. But you have failed to demonstrate how it is objective in and of itself.And I think it is a product of human intellect.
But you haven't. I understand what you are saying. But have you really demonstrated it is WRONG? If morality is subjective then is anything really "wrong." You have demonstrated that murder is in violation of your personal and societal preferences derided from human intellect. You interpret this as "wrong." Jac has used the ice cream example to demonstrate a simple truth. I don't care to rehash that. You either accpet it or reject it. I'll try to give some other examples. What I find is that you want to believe there really is a "right" and "wrong." Thus an objective truth. But, you don't want to accept the implications of objective morality as evidence of God. Also, you don't seem real keen on accepting the implications of there only being subjective morality.I've demonstrated how I know it is wrong, it's your turn.
When we look at 2+2=5, we can know it is wrong. Why? Because there is objective truth that we can rely on, that exists apart from the ideas of man. I appreciate the fact that you know murder is wrong. But what you fail to recognize is you are proving my position, not your own. You are saying there is an objective truth that you can base that on, but at the same time denying objective morality exist. That is impossible to argue against because it isn't reasonable. You say you want to see how it works, but you are actually demonstrating it yourself by applying the GR. You just refuse to acknowledge the correct source of the GR.
If two animals violently compete for mating rights have they done anything wrong? Even if one of them dies, NO. But if this occurs between humans it is deemed wrong. If human morals are only the by-product of these same animal instincts, evolved, then how can we declare anything to be objectively "wrong." Take lying lying for example. Someone lies to you. You say, they are wrong. Why? Because they violated your personal belief system. However, their own personal belief system says it is OK to lie. They don't agree with your preference. They haven't broken any law, and the lie benefitted their position. You say, "do unto others......" They say, "that is your view, not mine." If morality is not objective, and if you contend that they are wrong, then you are forcing your morality on them.
Based on the world today, we can see that people are all too willing to lie, and that many do not agree with your GR. In fact the US and world economy is in collapse because people don't agree with the GR.
Also regarding genetics and environment, we can't say that rape is objectively wrong. Why? Well I could easily argue that man's desire to propogate the species is equally as valuable as someone's desire to protect their personal space. Now that statement crawls all over my mind, and I am sure it does yours as well. Without objective morality, we are forced to swallow this bitter pill.