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    [Message Deleted]

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    John Carson
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    The Grand Negus wrote:

    You've got it backward, John. "And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness...", Genesis 1:26. The Maker made us makers like Him.

    I'm aware of the Biblical version. The reversal is a commonplace among sceptics. I don't know who first said it, but I believe that it has been around for centuries. I am surprised that you haven't encountered it. Apparently, it dates back to Xenophanes, 6th century BC. -- modified at 11:56 Tuesday 17th April, 2007

    John Carson

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    • L Lost User

      Red Stateler wrote:

      So your beliefs are based on a complete guess?

      I didn't write "guess", I wrote "bet". The difference being that when it comes to gambling, I'm EXTREMELY conservative. I don't bet unless I'm sure of the outcome. I've lived enough and spoken with enough clergy and read enough to know as fact that the clergy (as fellow humans) do not always agree on which parts of their religious doctrine are the important ones and which can be bent or ignored.

      Red Stateler wrote:

      Why don't you conduct that poll and see what happens?

      See above.

      Red Stateler wrote:

      How so? Or is that just another guess?

      Ditto.

      "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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      Red Stateler
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      Mike Mullikin wrote:

      I didn't write "guess", I wrote "bet". The difference being that when it comes to gambling, I'm EXTREMELY conservative. I don't bet unless I'm sure of the outcome. I've lived enough and spoken with enough clergy and read enough to know as fact that the clergy (as fellow humans) do not always agree on which parts of their religious doctrine are the important ones and which can be bent or ignored.

      I didn't say they always completely agree. Organized religion, like government, forces agreement out of disparate interpretations. So the Catholic Church, Southern Baptists, Presbyterians, etc... will have official doctrine which are those positions determined, through theological discussion. That organization (and they are organized through frequent conferences and meetings) removes the relativistic interpretation inherent in atheism.

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      • R Red Stateler

        Mike Mullikin wrote:

        I didn't write "guess", I wrote "bet". The difference being that when it comes to gambling, I'm EXTREMELY conservative. I don't bet unless I'm sure of the outcome. I've lived enough and spoken with enough clergy and read enough to know as fact that the clergy (as fellow humans) do not always agree on which parts of their religious doctrine are the important ones and which can be bent or ignored.

        I didn't say they always completely agree. Organized religion, like government, forces agreement out of disparate interpretations. So the Catholic Church, Southern Baptists, Presbyterians, etc... will have official doctrine which are those positions determined, through theological discussion. That organization (and they are organized through frequent conferences and meetings) removes the relativistic interpretation inherent in atheism.

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        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        Red Stateler wrote:

        So the Catholic Church, Southern Baptists, Presbyterians, etc... will have official doctrine which are those positions determined, through theological discussion.

        Maybe, but the clergy themselves (the folks behind the pulpit and the ones actually doing one on one counseling with their congregations) tend to apply their own spin on things so the doctrine is in fact interpreted. I know plenty of Catholics who accept abortion, pre-marital sex and homosexuality despite the doctrine pushed down from Rome or even their local diocese.

        "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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        • R Russell Morris

          Red Stateler wrote:

          Therein lies the importance that religion be organized...So that relativistic interpretation, which can creep into biblical interpretation, be minimized.

          Relativistic interpretation is the one and only thing that has allowed Jewish and Christian societies (among others, I'm sure - I've no real knowledge of the non-Western religions, but I suspect the Western ones were the most constrictive) to progress beyond the middle-ages. It wasn't "built-in" on purpose, but the holy texts had very little direct commandments from God, and a whole lot of otherwise normal people revealing His will through interpretation and revelation. There's lots of breathing room in revelation and interpretation that lets society continue to grow. Contrast this with typical Islamic doctrine. No revelation. No interpretation. No mixing with new knowledge. No room for experience and growth. It's 100% unaltered, untranslated Word of God Himself. It's exactly what it was 900 years ago. It'll continue to be exactly what it is now 900 years from now. It cannot be altered, updated, or reinterpreted - it must be accepted completely, or rejected completely. Attempting to keep "relativistic interpretation" out of a religion is a death-knell for the minds of those that follow that religion. It's an assertion that everything has been figured out. And nothing good ever comes from that.

          -- Russell Morris Morbo: "WINDMILLS DO NOT WORK THAT WAY!"

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          Red Stateler
          wrote on last edited by
          #24

          The difference isn't how relativistically they can be interpreted, but the message itself. Just contrast Christ's teachings with Mohammad's.

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            [Message Deleted]

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            Brady Kelly
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            There is no (a)

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            • L Lost User

              Red Stateler wrote:

              So the Catholic Church, Southern Baptists, Presbyterians, etc... will have official doctrine which are those positions determined, through theological discussion.

              Maybe, but the clergy themselves (the folks behind the pulpit and the ones actually doing one on one counseling with their congregations) tend to apply their own spin on things so the doctrine is in fact interpreted. I know plenty of Catholics who accept abortion, pre-marital sex and homosexuality despite the doctrine pushed down from Rome or even their local diocese.

              "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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              Red Stateler
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              Mike Mullikin wrote:

              I know plenty of Catholics who accept abortion, pre-marital sex and homosexuality despite the doctrine pushed down from Rome or even their local diocese.

              But how many priests push preach theological acceptance of those things? There are some, and they tend to lose their position if they continue preaching those things that counter the moral authority. Whether or not the individual recognizes the moral authority is irrelevant to your claim. Their rejection of it actually puts them into the same realm as atheistic morality (i.e. relativism).

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              • R Red Stateler

                John Carson wrote:

                You just have a hard time comprehending it

                Duuuuuuuuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.... Can I have a rabbit, George? Can I? Can I? Duuuuuuuuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh....

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                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                ...of course Lennie's a God-damned nuisance most of the time, but you get used to goin around with a guy an you can't get rid of him. :beer:

                - F "You are really weird." - Kyle, age 16

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                • R Red Stateler

                  Mike Mullikin wrote:

                  I know plenty of Catholics who accept abortion, pre-marital sex and homosexuality despite the doctrine pushed down from Rome or even their local diocese.

                  But how many priests push preach theological acceptance of those things? There are some, and they tend to lose their position if they continue preaching those things that counter the moral authority. Whether or not the individual recognizes the moral authority is irrelevant to your claim. Their rejection of it actually puts them into the same realm as atheistic morality (i.e. relativism).

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                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  Red Stateler wrote:

                  There are some, and they tend to lose their position if they continue preaching those things that counter the moral authority.

                  You've led a sheltered life. :rolleyes:

                  Red Stateler wrote:

                  Whether or not the individual recognizes the moral authority is irrelevant to your claim.

                  But it is the most important aspect of religion... no?

                  "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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                  • L Lost User

                    Red Stateler wrote:

                    There are some, and they tend to lose their position if they continue preaching those things that counter the moral authority.

                    You've led a sheltered life. :rolleyes:

                    Red Stateler wrote:

                    Whether or not the individual recognizes the moral authority is irrelevant to your claim.

                    But it is the most important aspect of religion... no?

                    "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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                    Red Stateler
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #29

                    Mike Mullikin wrote:

                    You've led a sheltered life.

                    Have I? There are plenty of examples of priests who have preached things counter to the Catholic Church's position that have been defrocked. They're usually slow to do it and give many warnings, but it happens.

                    Mike Mullikin wrote:

                    But it is the most important aspect of religion... no?

                    Yes, and also freedom of religion. The central point is that, contrary to your initial claim and in contrast to irreligion, organized religion is both organized and non-relativistic.

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                    • R Red Stateler

                      Mike Mullikin wrote:

                      You've led a sheltered life.

                      Have I? There are plenty of examples of priests who have preached things counter to the Catholic Church's position that have been defrocked. They're usually slow to do it and give many warnings, but it happens.

                      Mike Mullikin wrote:

                      But it is the most important aspect of religion... no?

                      Yes, and also freedom of religion. The central point is that, contrary to your initial claim and in contrast to irreligion, organized religion is both organized and non-relativistic.

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                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #30

                      Red Stateler wrote:

                      organized religion is both organized and non-relativistic.

                      We're gonna have to agree to disagree.

                      "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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                      • L Lost User

                        Red Stateler wrote:

                        organized religion is both organized and non-relativistic.

                        We're gonna have to agree to disagree.

                        "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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                        Red Stateler
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #31

                        Mike Mullikin wrote:

                        We're gonna have to agree to disagree.

                        I was going to say, "Let's armwrestle for it".

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                        • J John Carson

                          Red Stateler wrote:

                          Hmmmmm...I see you changed your views from agnostic back to atheist.

                          My position has never changed. You just have a hard time comprehending it. To paraphrase another person's quote: you and I are both atheists: I just am an atheist about one more god than you are.

                          John Carson

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                          Bassam Abdul Baki
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #32

                          John Carson wrote:

                          you and I are both atheists: I just am an atheist about one more god than you are.

                          You and him are the same. He claims that not believing in God is a belief. I disagree with both of you. :rolleyes:


                          "The trouble with the profit system has always been that it was highly unprofitable to most people." - E. B. White Web - Blog - RSS - Math - LinkedIn - BM

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                            [Message Deleted]

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                            Rama Krishna Vavilala
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #33

                            Consider this: (a) As per some Hindu beliefs eating Onions and Garlic is considered immoral. (b) In Some other Hindu beliefs eating Meat to be immoral. (c) In Still some other Hindu beliefs eating Cow's meat is the most immoral thing. Each of them cite God's words as their authority. The same is true with Christians. If you ask those Hindus in (a), (b) or (c) they will consider most Christians immoral because they eat meat. Now religions devoid of God such as Buddhism and Jainism just have the concept of morals they don't believe that morality gets defined by some God. Yet they believe in non-violence to any creature, no intoxication, no gambling etc. which are all moral principles. If there is one God from which Moral authority comes from it should be same for all the religions which believe in God. Failing that the concept of God itself is relativistic. Since we comprehend God using our senses and our senses are themselves are bound by relativity it is not possible to get an absolute interpretation of what is God.

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                            • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                              Consider this: (a) As per some Hindu beliefs eating Onions and Garlic is considered immoral. (b) In Some other Hindu beliefs eating Meat to be immoral. (c) In Still some other Hindu beliefs eating Cow's meat is the most immoral thing. Each of them cite God's words as their authority. The same is true with Christians. If you ask those Hindus in (a), (b) or (c) they will consider most Christians immoral because they eat meat. Now religions devoid of God such as Buddhism and Jainism just have the concept of morals they don't believe that morality gets defined by some God. Yet they believe in non-violence to any creature, no intoxication, no gambling etc. which are all moral principles. If there is one God from which Moral authority comes from it should be same for all the religions which believe in God. Failing that the concept of God itself is relativistic. Since we comprehend God using our senses and our senses are themselves are bound by relativity it is not possible to get an absolute interpretation of what is God.

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                              Red Stateler
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #34

                              Somewhat unironically, Hinduism is probably the world's only relativistic religion.

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                              • L leckey 0

                                Mike Mullikin wrote:

                                Christians, Jews, Muslims and Hindus have been slaughtering each other

                                Uh, just to point out that the Jews (not sure about Hindus) have had WAY less cases than Christians and Muslims. As my grandmother used to say to the question about what any Jewish holiday was about... "They tried to kill us. We survived. Let's eat!"

                                Mike Mullikin wrote:

                                religious freaks

                                Some of us are religious...but we're not all freaks. Some, yes, most definately need medication.

                                __________________ Bob is my homeboy.

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                                Ed Gadziemski
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #35

                                leckey wrote:

                                As my grandmother used to say to the question about what any Jewish holiday was about... "They tried to kill us. We survived. Let's eat!"

                                The Jews cut a swath of death and destruction out of Egypt and into Canaan, slaughtering men, women and children in their path. That is, if the bible is to be believed. For example: "Thus saith the LORD of hosts, I remember that which Amalek did to Israel, how he laid wait for him in the way, when he came up from Egypt. Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass." (I Samuel 15:2-3) "And he brought forth the people that were therein, and put them under saws, and under harrows of iron, and under the axes of iron, and made them pass through the brickkiln: and thus did he unto all the cities of the children of Ammon. So David and all the people returned unto Jerusalem." (II Samuel 12:31) "Behold, these caused the children of Israel, through the counsel of Balaam, to commit trespass against the LORD in the matter of Peor, and there was a plague among the congregation of the LORD. Now therefore kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman that hath known man by lying with him. But all the women children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves." (Numbers 31:16-18) "And we utterly destroyed them, as we did unto Sihon king of Hesbon, utterly destroying the men, women, and children, of every city. But all the cattle, and the spoil of the cities we took for a prey to ourselves." (Deuteronomy 3:6-7) "And they utterly destroyed all that was in the city, both man and woman, young and old, and ox, and sheep, and ass, with the edge of the sword." (Joshua 6:21) etc.

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                                • R Red Stateler

                                  Mike Mullikin wrote:

                                  Despite what you might admit, EVERYONE is their own moral authority. Even the most religious among us evaluate each circumstance and apply "God's morality" as they see fit.

                                  Not quite. Clergy have traditionally been the moral authority. They are, as a group, educated in the details of biblical interpretation. There tends to be widespread moral agreement amove the disparate Christian churches (they tend to disagree on methods of worship more than anything else). Therein lies the importance that religion be organized...So that relativistic interpretation, which can creep into biblical interpretation, be minimized.

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                                  Tim Craig
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #36

                                  Red Stateler wrote:

                                  So that relativistic interpretation, which can creep into biblical interpretation, be minimized.

                                  So it wasn't relativistic when the church hierarchy decided that just moving pedophile priests the moral thing to do rather than actually addressing the problem? Something like let he who hasn't lusted over the altar boy cast the first stone? :laugh:

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                                  • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                                    Consider this: (a) As per some Hindu beliefs eating Onions and Garlic is considered immoral. (b) In Some other Hindu beliefs eating Meat to be immoral. (c) In Still some other Hindu beliefs eating Cow's meat is the most immoral thing. Each of them cite God's words as their authority. The same is true with Christians. If you ask those Hindus in (a), (b) or (c) they will consider most Christians immoral because they eat meat. Now religions devoid of God such as Buddhism and Jainism just have the concept of morals they don't believe that morality gets defined by some God. Yet they believe in non-violence to any creature, no intoxication, no gambling etc. which are all moral principles. If there is one God from which Moral authority comes from it should be same for all the religions which believe in God. Failing that the concept of God itself is relativistic. Since we comprehend God using our senses and our senses are themselves are bound by relativity it is not possible to get an absolute interpretation of what is God.

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                                    Edmundisme
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #37

                                    Morality should not be confused with following rules and regulations. If someone were to ask you what morality is, you would not hand them a book on civil law. Although they intersect at times (e.g. we believe stealing is immoral and we have laws against it) they are, as ideas, entirely independent of each other. Consider speed limits. The law states you cannot exceed a particular speed on a particular stretch of highway. I don’t imagine many would argue that driving 70 mph is itself immoral. However, because we have a law against it, many would argue that it is at least wrong and some would argue that it is immoral – not because any speed could itself be wrong, but because breaking a law is wrong. Now consider the idea of kindness. Everyone believes being kind is good and being unkind is bad. However, there is no civil law governing the moral law of kindness. So we see that written rules and morality are not the same. This is true of religious rules as well as civil laws. Jews did not stop eating certain meats because eating meat was itself immoral. They stopped eating certain meats because God told them to stop. So the morality is not found in the eating or not eating of certain meats, but in obeying or disobeying God. In this particular example, Christ later abolished this restriction, making the eating of any kind of meat OK. This further proves that the eating of meat was never the issue. Rather, it was obedience. So the apparent differences of morality from one religion to the next are not as great as they may seem on the surface. Jews say certain foods must not be eaten because God told them not to eat them. Christians believe all food is OK because God said it is. The moral issue is obedience to God. The differences are in our understandings of what He said.

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                                    • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                                      Consider this: (a) As per some Hindu beliefs eating Onions and Garlic is considered immoral. (b) In Some other Hindu beliefs eating Meat to be immoral. (c) In Still some other Hindu beliefs eating Cow's meat is the most immoral thing. Each of them cite God's words as their authority. The same is true with Christians. If you ask those Hindus in (a), (b) or (c) they will consider most Christians immoral because they eat meat. Now religions devoid of God such as Buddhism and Jainism just have the concept of morals they don't believe that morality gets defined by some God. Yet they believe in non-violence to any creature, no intoxication, no gambling etc. which are all moral principles. If there is one God from which Moral authority comes from it should be same for all the religions which believe in God. Failing that the concept of God itself is relativistic. Since we comprehend God using our senses and our senses are themselves are bound by relativity it is not possible to get an absolute interpretation of what is God.

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                                      A A 0
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #38

                                      Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

                                      If there is one God from which Moral authority comes from it should be same for all the religions which believe in God.

                                      a) Not all religions came from a divine source, and hence from the outset are off. b) Not all religions have maintained their purity (they have been polluted later till the message no longer resembles the original message) c) Different peoples who received divine revelation might have had different Sharia’s(look at ‘Edmundisme’ example of Jews vs. Christians on eating meat)

                                      Who is the creator? Atheists are Polytheists Finding Allah (Video) Surah Al-An'aam (Ayah 74-110)

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                                      • L Lost User

                                        Despite what you might admit, EVERYONE is their own moral authority. Even the most religious among us evaluate each circumstance and apply "God's morality" as they see fit. Hell, all the various religions and sects can't even agree on basic principles of morality. Every major religion in history has justified or rationalized killing at some point or another. Christians, Jews, Muslims and Hindus have been slaughtering each other for centuries and don't appear to be slowing down. They steal, they cheat, they lie... no better than us godless heathens. GWB claims to be a Christian man, yet he sent soldiers to kill and be killed. Isn't there a direct commandment being ignored? :rolleyes: You religious freaks crack me up!

                                        "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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                                        Edmundisme
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #39

                                        Mike Mullikin wrote:

                                        EVERYONE is their own moral authority

                                        But where does our sense of morality come from? And how do you explain why we often do things we know we should not do? Doesn't our own guilt response to cowardice, lying, cheating, etc. testify to a higher standard that exists somewhere outside of ourselves? We are all holding ourselves and others to a standard of behavior. If everyone had their own basic standards, we would not expect that others would hold to our own. But not only do we expect it, We demand it! We call people to task when they are rude to us or unfair. But if we all have our own sense of morality, why should we expect that they'll agree that rudeness is wrong in the first place? We're appealing to a standard we expect them to know about. And why is it that more often than not, when someone calls us on our "bad" behavior, we almost never deny that the standard to which they are referring does not exist? If someone catches us lying, we don't say "lying isn't wrong." No, we say something like, "I only lied because such and such." We make excuses. We always make excuses. We try to point out that we had a good reason for breaking a moral law or that a particular moral law does not apply in our current situation, but we never deny that the moral law exists! In spite of what we might say or argue, our actions confirm that not only do we have a standard of behavior, but that we expect everyone else to have the same standard. This talk of morality being a personal trait does not hold up. We don't criticize people for preferring purple over blue, but we criticize them for preferring cowardice over courage. We understand that somethings are personal and others are universal.

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                                        • E Edmundisme

                                          Mike Mullikin wrote:

                                          EVERYONE is their own moral authority

                                          But where does our sense of morality come from? And how do you explain why we often do things we know we should not do? Doesn't our own guilt response to cowardice, lying, cheating, etc. testify to a higher standard that exists somewhere outside of ourselves? We are all holding ourselves and others to a standard of behavior. If everyone had their own basic standards, we would not expect that others would hold to our own. But not only do we expect it, We demand it! We call people to task when they are rude to us or unfair. But if we all have our own sense of morality, why should we expect that they'll agree that rudeness is wrong in the first place? We're appealing to a standard we expect them to know about. And why is it that more often than not, when someone calls us on our "bad" behavior, we almost never deny that the standard to which they are referring does not exist? If someone catches us lying, we don't say "lying isn't wrong." No, we say something like, "I only lied because such and such." We make excuses. We always make excuses. We try to point out that we had a good reason for breaking a moral law or that a particular moral law does not apply in our current situation, but we never deny that the moral law exists! In spite of what we might say or argue, our actions confirm that not only do we have a standard of behavior, but that we expect everyone else to have the same standard. This talk of morality being a personal trait does not hold up. We don't criticize people for preferring purple over blue, but we criticize them for preferring cowardice over courage. We understand that somethings are personal and others are universal.

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                                          Lost User
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #40

                                          Edmundisme wrote:

                                          But where does our sense of morality come from?

                                          From our civilized society. Don't over complicate things.

                                          "If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt." - Dean Martin

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