methamaniac
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2014
- Messages
- 976
drugmentor said:post has made me pause to consider what your motives are in creating this thread. I hope you didn't make this thread in order to feel justified in harbouring some kind of bias. Forgive me if I have misinterpreted you, but it sounds like there is some anti-Islamic sentiment behind this comment.
I agree with you that moral relativism is false, but I want to put it out there that I have nothing against Muslims (or any religious or ethnic group) and if you do, I hope you do not take my arguments as being in support of that.
First and foremost, I made this thread to discuss moral relativism and that which relates to it-
That's the extent of my motive.
Where it goes with respect to that or one's personal opinions on morality......is all good with me.
Yes, you have misrepresented my views via innuendo. I was merely using said statements as an example in response to your post. I will give you the benefit of the doubt that it was unintentional as you seem very fair minded.
I'm not anti-Islamic, I am anti- a group of people cutting off my (or your) head for not adhering to their particular dogma, and anti- anyone who supports this ideology. And futhermore, anti- anyone who doesn't have the conviction to condemn this ideology.
Fair enough?
drugmentor said:If moral relativism is true, then anything goes, people can decide that it is good to discriminate against those whom they disagree with, and under the doctrine of moral relativism there would be no objective moral fact to say this was wrong
Bingo! If you want objective morality you have to believe something is a fact. If you deny this , you have no foundation to condemn the action of another.
willow said:Why should I trust anyone human who claims to know the mind of god?
You shouldn't. IMO you should trust God and what he reveals to you through his word and Holy Spirit.
I feel like this morality is inherently tainted by the medium it traverses; the fickle, emotional human.
^ This is exactly why cultural relativism doesn't work. And I would argue, its why trying to use personal preference to adjudicate what is ultimately true in respect to morality doesn't work either. Sometimes emotions get the better of us and clouds our judgement.
Willow said:It adds further reason to distrust the claims of those who say they know absolute morality
Like I was saying, I too would be skeptical of anyone who claims to know absolute morality absolutely. This is not to the same as trusting someone who holds (and can rationally explain) why an absolute truth is correct.
In trusting someone, it is important to really evaluate the words they profess and weigh them with your conscience. The reason I have full trust in Jesus/the word of God is because I have evaluated,measured, and subsequently applied them. I have found them to be inherently true time and time again.
willow said:I love playing with my 1 year old niece, who has no morality. She is yet to learn it, IMO
Your niece (and small children in general) have no awareness of right and wrong. This is what makes them innocent. This doesn't mean a child is incapable of commiting a right or wrong act.
willow said:Absolute morality from god, and built into the human machine, should not need to be learned or accumulated; it would already fully exist.
Morality (absolute) does fully exist. I don't see how a child (or adult) becoming aware of this disproves its existence. That's like saying anything you learn/become aware of can not exist because you were previously unaware of it. Children learn how to lie, does that mean lying doesn't really exist?
Or that lying isn't wrong?
Your conscience is a tool used to understand absolute morality. As different input is presented- higher states of awareness can be achieved.
IMO The more you study and trust the word of God, the more of his nature and truths are revealed to you.
Sometimes we surpress the conviction of our conscience in order to do what we know is wrong. I knew my drug use was wrong and was hurting my family, I just didn't pay attention(ignored) to the conviction my conscience was making me aware of. The result/effect was a lot of pain to me and my family.
WILLOW said:an indivual must learn right and wrong, it is not absolute but relative to the context that they have existed/grown within, relative to the data fed into their neurons at specific times.
As I said an individual becomes aware of right and wrong. The only thing relative in respect is they may become aware of what is ultimately right and wrong in different situations
There is a beauty in moral relativism. It means you have the ultimate power to live a life that you want, free of other people telling you that you're wrong.![]()
Sounds great on the surface. But do you really want to live that way? Do you not want someone to tell you how wrong you are for driving drunk?
What if your wife said she was relatively
faithful to you. Would you have a problem with that?
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