Academia Nut wrote:I think you need to back up here for a second and re-evaluate your thinking for a moment, because you are making a fundamental error here, namely that secular people think differently from religious people. This sort of metathinking, to consider your own thought patterns and structures, is extremely difficult for most people to grasp, but also incredibly useful for debates since it allows you to actually think about what the other side is actually saying and thinking. The fact that you are projecting your own mental structures onto others is very clear here.
Can't say I appreciate the condescension here, friend, but I'll take it in stride. You may find that these same objections apply more to you than you realize.
There are no teachers or codes in secular morality and ethics
Oh, there are philosophers and the like, but part of the fundamental structure of secular morality is that it utterly rejects fiat declarations and seeks to construct systems that stem only from naturalistic phenomenon. This runs into the problem that nature does not give a flying fuck what anything actually does outside of a purely mechanistic perspective. The world is cruel and uncaring and utterly without morality on such a level it is actually alien to our normal perspective. However, instead of going down a nihilistic path, we must look at what our instincts are telling us and why we evolved those instincts in the first place. We must also make a judgment on what the actual goals of our system of morality are, which is essentially arbitrary, but the attempt is made to be somewhat less arbitrary than religious sets of morality.
So many unquestioned assumptions! Let's make a little laundry list: one, that the world is a causal-mechanistic nexus, which is a metaphysical claim (and I'm not big on metaphysics); two, that all moral/ethical codes must be non-secular (which seems absurd, so I hope I'm misunderstanding); three, that humanism rejects "fiat declarations" outright (even though most all humanists glob on to the same three or four basic [and typically Christian!] moral axioms).
And then there's the most basic objection at all: namely, why care about survival? The entire nihilistic problem is finding purpose in a purposeless world, and a blind obedience to inherited instinct doesn't do much to resolve things.
This same objection can be levied against your other moral verdicts: why care about other people? Why care about social efficacy? As you yourself said, non-religious morality holds no dogma; why not, instead, advocate a Social Darwinist system a la National Socialism, which emphasizes glorious human growth as opposed to crude survival? Or how about, having recognized the meaninglessness of life, try to bring about the end of human life a la nihilism? See, there are so many different possibilities out there, and you're trying to paint one in particular (one narrowly-defined flavor of humanism) as the only one. That's disingenuous.
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Darth Wong wrote:Well, that's what the advertising says. In reality, the Christian discards most of the teachings of the Bible as convenient.
Ha! You know what I meant. "Good Christian" then!
Optimal for what? Individual survival? That's the same morality that a bear has. Unless you're saying that every living thing on Earth has a morality code, this makes no sense.
That's exactly what I'm saying, actually. And it makes perfect sense. "Individual survival" is only one particular aim among an infinite array.
Yes, exactly. I am uprooting the entire tradition of western value theory, which I think is full of shit.
Well now, so feisty! I assume that if you're going to try and accomplish such an Olympian feat, you must have tremendous experience with antiquity, yes? Because otherwise, you'd be acting embarrassingly sophomoric and presumptuous. But I'm sure (hopeful) that's not what you really meant.
And no, the fact that it has a long tradition does not make it automatically credible or superior. Why should it automatically be taken seriously just because western people have been doing it for a long time? The whole point of the Enlightenment was to recognize that thousands of years of these wonderful "traditional" ways had not actually resulted in a moral society. The entire Enlightenment was about "uprooting" venerable traditions.
Time for a little trip down history lane. First was the period of antiquity which you so vehemently despise. Next was the Renaissance, which is traditionally conceived of as a return to the classic cultures of Rome and Greece, but is better understood as a mixed period of reverence for the old and a revolution towards the new; Machiavelli is a great example of this, as, despite his great love for Plato and Aristotle, expounded a method of sharp political realism that continues to be used today.
What's the point of all of this? That the break from antiquity is new, only a couple of hundred years old (and new philosophical modes, like Pragmatism and Phenomenology, have since returned). People have revered ancient society for the better part of Western history, including the birth of modernity during the Renaissance. The fact that a couple of bad eggs existed (Descartes and Bacon) doesn't ruin the whole bunch.
But if that's not convincing enough, then here's something you can't escape from: modern and Enlightenment thinkers are almost all unwittingly a part of the Platonic tradition. Descartes, for example, is forced to buy into the Aristotelian metaphysic when he conceives of mind as "substance." Hobbes does his own thing and is admittedly rather excellent, but Locke's contract theory buys into an intelligible moral structure to the universe akin to the Stoics.
The lesson here is that you'd be a fool to proactively ignore where you came from.
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Oh, and one more thing...
Destructionator XIII wrote:Bears don't make choices and value judgments like he was talking about.
I don't want to sound silly, but that's not far from what I was getting at. After all, if the world is just a casual nexus, then there's no room at all to speak of "free will." What separates bear from man, apart from claws and fur, is elevated cognitive function. That's it. If we make "value judgments," then so do all living things.
If that sounds ridiculous, I blame language more than the logic. The term I prefer over "value judgment" is "will to power," which gets rid of troublesome free will pejoratives.