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12-02-2008, 09:34 PM | #121 (permalink) | |
Mate, Spawn & Die
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You ask a lot of "why" questions in the paragraph above, but honestly I see them as non-sequiturs. To ask one of my own: Why does there have to be a big ultimate justification for these things? Isn't it the general welfare enough? You ask about where this train of thought leads, well let me ask you the same question: Where does your train of thought lead? What is the purpose of morality that you believe to be capriciously created by a higher power? If "rape and kill" is just as moral as "feed the hungry" as long as God says so, what's the point? For that matter what, overall, is the purpose of God? And how does believing in the existence of some all-powerful being lead you any closer to a personal morality? |
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12-02-2008, 09:50 PM | #122 (permalink) |
;)
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I have already answered these questions. The train leads to nihilism. God is the result of attempting to overcome nihilism. But the conception of God that nihilism leads to is not the same as that found in the Bible, which tends to anthropomorphise God. God must be something above man which man can strive towards but never achieve, otherwise all of man's striving is just a closed circle, the snake eating its own tail. This idea of God also implies that man's purpose is to overcome his own nature, which is the goal of morality. I'm not trying to prove that this concept of God is real, that would be completely absurd. I'm just arguing it is necessary for morality. This concept of God is not one that's going to talk to you and tell you what to do, in fact, it is the complete opposite: this God sits entirely outside experience. Experience does not give us God, in fact, experience gives us futility. Thus we are compelled to either move beyond experience or to embrace futility and thus reject morality.
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12-03-2008, 01:04 PM | #123 (permalink) | |||
Mate, Spawn & Die
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Sorry, but this is a false dichotomy. You have given no reasons for this either/or statement. What's to prevent someone from embracing experience and morality at the same time? |
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12-03-2008, 01:38 PM | #124 (permalink) | ||
;)
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Again, because we realize the futility of our own nature, and in assuming a being with a higher nature we see our purpose as overcoming ourselves and striving toward divinity. But I have already said that this "higher nature" is incomprehensible to us, so how the hell are we supposed to strive toward it? That is the ultimate mystery of life. Either there is no point to life or there is a point but no way to be certain what it is. But that's also the beauty of life. If there was a point and everybody knew what it was life would have no impetus to realize that point. |
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12-03-2008, 03:03 PM | #126 (permalink) | |||||
Mate, Spawn & Die
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BTW, I just want to thank you for the stimulating intellectual discussion. It's not what I generally expect to find on a music board, but it's great to find someone who is able to express an interesting viewpoint so articulately. |
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12-05-2008, 12:28 AM | #127 (permalink) | ||
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Also, if there is no instilled morality in people, why do people tend to, for the most part, avoid killing even in situations where it would be beneficial for them to do so or have nothing stopping them other than their own personal convictions? Why do people feel empathy towards others when they don't receive any benefits form it other than feeling good about it? I did not have any moral ideas instilled in me by my parents at a young age, and I have no religious convictions, but I feel empathy towards others even when it does not benefit me in any way to do so, society does not reward me for it, and even when the person has done something harmful towards me? I personally feel that we are genetically inclined towards empathy and "morality" as it benefits us to feel empathy everyone if we don't harm each other. I'm sorry if any of this has already been stated, I attempted to read every post but I may have accidentally skipped a few. Sorry if my post is confusing in any way, I'm really tired at the moment.
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12-05-2008, 02:54 PM | #128 (permalink) | |
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12-05-2008, 06:41 PM | #129 (permalink) |
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What is a perfect society? What does it mean for our species to advance? For either of those concepts to make sense you already need a definition of morality, and so you can't get that morality from the idea of a perfect society. The point for God is the exact same though! What is a perfect being? Morality leads you to the idea of a perfect being, rather than the other way around. In your case, since you've rejected the idea of a perfect being, it instead leads to a perfect entity, society. So you're again stuck in a closed loop, morality is justified because it brings us closer to a perfect society, but what a perfect society is is defined by morality. But I've just shown that God puts us in the same closed loop, so what gives? To get out, you have to assume a God who sits outside the circle. But how do you get morality from this God? That's the wrong question to be asking, because you don't get morality from God, you get God from morality. If there is no God, there is nothing "higher" than the individual human being. Even society, which is just an abstraction, is something which can only exist in the individual human mind, and has no way of being higher than him. As an abstraction, God plays the same role as society, but the difference is that God is taken to actually exist, in a form "higher" than that of the human being.
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12-05-2008, 06:53 PM | #130 (permalink) |
;)
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thank you all for indulging me, and this has to be the longest online debate i've ever been a part of that has involved absolutely no trash talking (despite our differing views on morality, we must all be pretty good people )
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