You are making more absolute statements. You are saying we can be absolutely sure that we can not be absolutely sure. Stop with the childish games already. Apparently it is OK for you to be absolutely sure, but not us.
It is ok for you to be absolutely sure. I'm not trying to convert you to my point of view or tell you that you are wrong. I'm trying to explain why I think morality is subjective. I'm not saying that you shouldn't believe in OM. I do find it odd that someone who believes that for God nothing is impossible also believes that they can be absolutely certain about things in the future. If God wishes that tomorrow you take two apples and then take another two apples and end up with five apples, why not? Or if God decides someone shouldn't die a physical death at some point in the future, why not?
On a very basic level it is the assumption that things will continue to be as they always have been. To know with absolute certainty that the nature of reality as one perceives it today will continue tomorrow. I suppose I'm not saying that you can't be absolutely sure, I just don't get why one would be absolutely sure. Pretty certain I can understand but absolutely I can't.
By mentioning the billions of case studies you are minimizing statistical uncertainty, not affirming absolutes.
B.W:
Pros I asked this to another:
Is there an absolute inevitability of Death for us all?
It does not matter what you believe about death — is it an absolute inevitable certaincy
There are absolutes…
I don't think I can say much more than what I said to jlay above:
I disagree. It is a relative certainty, based upon billions and billions of confirmations. I admit it is hugely likely and one of the safest bets you could ever make, even safer than taxes, but it still comes down to a bet. We don't know with absolute certainty what the future will bring, that would require being God. We can be really, really, really sure about something happening in the future as it has always happened in the past, but not absolutely certain.
To me it seems reasonable to presume that my physical body will die and rot or be burned. I'll leave the absolute certainty of the future to those who are omniscient, I'm content in my assumption and hopefully won't be too miffed if it turns out I'm wrong.
With the addition as above that I suppose one can be absolutely certain, I just don't see why.
It does not matter if a person does not care or cares about the coins —what is relative to them does not decrease the value worth of ancient coins. They have value. To have value then only proves that value exists. Coins do not matter — value does.
They only have the value that people attach to them. If no one values them, no one would buy them and they would lose their value. I don't see much value in ancient coins, if I found one I would sell it to someone who did see value in it and would buy something that I valued, like a nice antique yixing teapot. If I'm buying the teapot from China and selling the coin to a European then the relative value of money also comes into play. The inherent value of the pound is meaningless to me, its relative value to other currencies is not.
Again, what one values or not value does not disprove that that a standard of absolute value exist. How do you know what Value is, if Value does not already exist?
As with morals I believe values are subjective and relative.
I get the feeling that most here won't put much value on Zen koans but
this one seems relevant.
Something Godlike can be absolutely certain?? But do you believe in God? How do you know what is Godlike if Godlike is merely relative to opinion, yet you clearly state, 'something Godlike can be absolutely certain'
It's not so much a matter of believing or not believing in God for me but more a matter of trying to understand what God is - or at least trying to get an understanding of the many different ideas of god(s) that humanity has come up with.
If something Godlike can be absolutely certain, then how about God? If that one is really God then He has absolute standards and values. Our own relativity therefore falls short of such glory as we learn through discovery…
Well yes. If a God exists with absolute standards and values then our own relativity will fall short of this. It's a big if for me.
How do we distinguish what is inherently wrong from what what most people agree is wrong? When such crime as stealing, rape, swindling, etc, is done onto you, you discover that such thing called Wrong Exists.
I've not been raped but I've been mugged, robbed, attacked, swindled, lied to, beaten etc. I never discovered that something called WRONG exists.
How do you build swing set? There is a right way and a wrong way to build it. Our own relativity therefore falls short of such standards because it cannot see that there is a right way or a wrong way...
There are many ways to build a swing. We made one when I was young by tying a rope to a treebranch so we could swing over a road and touch the tops of buses with our feet. The kids thought is was great, the adults and the local council though it was wrong. Opinions, nothing more.
Sounds like you have just contradicted yourself. You and your spouse do desire to be absolutely faithful to each other.
I don't think I have. I said I would like us to be realitvely faithful to each other.
Next, you stated: “If God takes sadistic rapists to paradise and dumps people we see as good in hell then what? It's faith and hope, not knowledge that God is good and just.”
What do you base your idea of fairness on if fairness is only relative? How could you say this is wrong for God to do? Again: What do you base your idea of fairness on if fairness is only relative?
I determine fairness relatively, it's based on far from cleancut experiences I've had. I'm not saying that God is inherently wrong if God rewards rapists by sending them to heaven. It seems from your view that what is good is determined by God. If God sends rapists and murderers to heaven and sends 'good' Christians to hell then you're wrong in saying that rape and murder is inherently wrong. If God sends you to hell for not raping and murdering enough you'd have to admit you were wrong as God is the source of right and wrong.
Just because we can create right and wrong does not disprove that absolutes do not exist. It would mean that we are in the process of discovering them and during discovery we uncover that our own relativity falls short of such standards...
I agree it doesn't prove that absolutes don't exist but I don't think it follows that we are necessarily discovering them.
Yet, you are absolutely sure of subjective relativity so then would this not mean, in your own words, “I think people who are absolutely sure trust too much in themselves..” would apply to you as well?
I'm not absolutely sure. It's what I think at the moment. Of course I apply it to myself, I don't absolutely trust myself. If you're absolutely sure of certain convictions you have good for you, I'm an advocate of admission of ignorance.
Pros, Are you certain of eternity without doubt?
Nope, I struggle to even conceive of eternity.