Morality Can Only Be Objective If God Exists
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 4 votes and with 4 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 4
- Time for argument
- Three days
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- One month
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
I want to begin by thanking MagicAintReal for agreeing to debate this topic with me. In this debate I will be defending the following proposition:
1. If objective moral facts exist, then God exists
2. Objective moral facts exist [not in dispute]
3. Therefore God exists
Definitions
Morality: principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong or good and bad behavior.
Objective: moral facts are true independent of human opinion, evolution, religious tradition, or culture.
God: the creator and ruler of the universe and source of all moral authority; the supreme being.
For the purposes of this debate, the term "God" will be defined broadly as to include the general attributes (ie: omnipotence, omniscience) commonly associated with Judeo-Christian monotheism. That is to say, this debate is not about a specific religious tradition. I am not defending the Bible or the Qur'an.
Structure
1 - Opening arguments
2-3 Rebuttals
4. Conclusion
Rules
1. No forfeits
2. Citations must be provided in the text of the debate
3. No new arguments in the final speeches
4. Observe good sportsmanship and maintain a civil and decorous atmosphere
5. No trolling
6. No "kritiks" of the topic (challenging assumptions in the resolution)
7. For all undefined resolutional terms, individuals should use commonplace understandings that fit within the logical context of the resolution and this debate
8. The BOP is evenly shared
9. Rebuttals of new points raised in an adversary's immediately preceding speech may be permissible at the judges' discretion even in the final round (debaters may debate their appropriateness)
10. Violation of any of these rules, or of any of the description's set-up, merits a loss
As per my opponent's request Ethang5, Raltar, and Death23 cannot vote on the debate
"A duty is something that is owed... But something can be owed only to some person or persons. There can be no such thing as a duty in isolation.... the concept of moral obligation [is] unintelligible apart from the idea of God. The words remain but their meaning is gone."
The experience of intentionally willing an action, they suggested, is often nothing more than a post hoc causal inference that our thoughts caused some behavior. The feeling itself, however, plays no causal role in producing that behavior. This could sometimes lead us to think we made a choice when we actually didn’t or think we made a different choice than we actually did.
If your brain is hardwired and constrained by the physical laws, then it cannot act outside of those laws or outside the limits of the hardwiring. It is, in essence, caged in by the limits of physical properties and cannot break free of them.
We would not know goodness without God's endowing us with a moral constitution. We have rights, dignity, freedom, and responsibility because God has designed us this way. In this, we reflect God's moral goodness as His image-bearers.
- Objective facts are infinite in nature;
- They are commands which can only be made by a law-giver;
- They necessitate free will
Understanding the NAP
The Mises Institute defines the NAP as "an ethical stance which asserts that "aggression" is inherently illegitimate. "Aggression" is defined as the "initiation" of physical force against persons or property, the threat of such, or fraud upon persons or their property. In contrast to pacifism, the non-aggression principle does not preclude violent self-defense. The principle is a deontological (or rule-based) ethical stance." (1)
This is basically what con is talking about in his theory of homeostasis. Con's principle of framework contains moral paradoxes, many of which are undesirable.
Moral Paradoxes
1. Raping a comatose person
Is it morally wrong to rape a comatose person if no physical or emotional harm is suffered and the person is unaware of what occurred? Under your framework, the answer will be no. It does not harm the person nor does it harm the homeostasis between the two people.
2. Is driving immoral?
Driving is a huge source of air pollutions worldwide and this pollution and ultimately is leading to catastrophic global warming (2). Under the homeostasis theory, driving (and other activities like smoking) are a major source of harm and a major source of decreased homeostasis between humans and non-human beings. FURTHERMORE all forms of pollution from industrialization and farming become immoral. Thus we are committing hundreds of immoral acts each day when we drive to work, use public transportation, purchase goods made from industrialization, and
3. Who's harm is it anyway?
Imagine Jack wants to rape Jill. Jill would be harmed by being raped and Jack is being harmed (in some way or in his own mind) by not raping Jill. Who's homeostasis is more important?
Con's Framework Applies to All Life
The principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong ways in which one acts or conducts oneself towards others can be reduced to principles concerning the distinction between beneficial and detrimental actions with respects to humans' and to some extent other animals' homeostasis.Any action that one could consider to be moral can be weighed by whether or not that action leads to the homeostasis of those towards whom we are acting.
Con's framework inherently leads to moral paradoxes which are undesirable. His framework also necessarily applies to all forms of life from the simple celled organism to the most complex organisms. His framework to judge objective moral facts is absurd and should be rejected.
1. https://wiki.mises.org/wiki/Principle_of_non-aggression
2. https://www.ucsusa.org/clean-vehicles/vehicles-air-pollution-and-human-health#.W_S-aC2ZMUs
"P1: If objective moral facts exist, then God exists."
"Objective moral facts are infinite, I mean that they transcend time, culture, place, religious traditions"
"Who or what commanded us to not kill?"
"Con's moral framework seems to be a mixture of the libertarian Non Aggression Principle (NAP hereafter) with his own stuff. His framework has quite a few holes in it."
"Con's principle of framework contains moral paradoxes, many of which are undesirable."
"Is it morally wrong to rape a comatose person if no physical or emotional harm is suffered and the person is unaware of what occurred? Under your framework, the answer will be no. It does not harm the person nor does it harm the homeostasis between the two people."
"Is driving immoral?"
"FURTHERMORE all forms of pollution from industrialization and farming become immoral."
"Who's harm is it anyway?...Imagine Jack wants to rape Jill. Jill would be harmed by being raped and Jack is being harmed (in some way or in his own mind) by not raping Jill. Who's homeostasis is more important?"
"Con's framework applies to all life because all forms of life experience homeostasis from the single-celled organisms to humans...indeed con concedes, at least in part, to this point:...but why should it stop with humans and other animals?"
Northeast. Heat waves, heavy downpours and sea level rise pose growing challenges to many aspects of life in the Northeast. Infrastructure, agriculture, fisheries and ecosystems will be increasingly compromised. Many states and cities are beginning to incorporate climate change into their planning.
Northwest. Changes in the timing of streamflow reduce water supplies for competing demands. Sea level rise, erosion, inundation, risks to infrastructure and increasing ocean acidity pose major threats. Increasing wildfire, insect outbreaks and tree diseases are causing widespread tree die-off.
Southeast. Sea level rise poses widespread and continuing threats to the region’s economy and environment. Extreme heat will affect health, energy, agriculture and more. Decreased water availability will have economic and environmental impacts.
Midwest. Extreme heat, heavy downpours and flooding will affect infrastructure, health, agriculture, forestry, transportation, air and water quality, and more. Climate change will also exacerbate a range of risks to the Great Lakes.
Southwest. Increased heat, drought and insect outbreaks, all linked to climate change, have increased wildfires. Declining water supplies, reduced agricultural yields, health impacts in cities due to heat, and flooding and erosion in coastal areas are additional concerns.
Climate change leads to an increased frequency of violent phenomena and natural disasters. This will result in the repeated management of crises with serious deaths and injuries. This will also lead to the emergence of epidemics and an increase in the flow of patients requiring emergency services. Moreover, climate change will be responsible for a change in the epidemiology of pathologies usually encountered in emergency health settings. It will also be responsible for the emergence of new diseases and the re-emergence of extinct diseases. Emergency departments should anticipate the increase in consultations because of climate changes and acute variations in temperature. Educational institutions and health and human service organizations must commit to increasing access to disaster simulation-based education and exercises, in an effort to enhance disaster preparedness of emergency caregivers.
How does atheism account for free will? If there is no free will, then you must claim that there are no objective moral facts, correct?
"Here we use an ultrasensitive optical microscopy technique to directly monitor the formation and dynamics of self-replicating supramolecular structures at the single-particle level."
"He necessarily concedes that free will exists. I gave several arguments why an atheistic world view cannot account for free will."
Whether or not I buy the god claim doesn't indicate whether or not I can account for free will.
"Con begins by attacking P1 by arguing against God's existence."
"As this is really not a debate for that, I'm going to ignore the K."
"If the universe did not exist, torturing babies for fun will still be an immoral act."
"Homeostasis cannot command us to not kill and to not torture babies for fun. From an evolutionary point of view, the only thing that matters is me, myself, and I."
"By [Con's] own reasoning, any form of sexual intercourse harms homeostasis and is thus immoral because it necessarily means that some physical trauma is given. But con ignores the hypothetical framework. In a hypothetical framework that I showed, there is no physical harm and thus no physical trauma."
Even if there's not physical trauma, which anatomically seems impossible, there is still the bypassing of one's ability to maintain homeostasis during sexual acts.
Our human bodies regulate during sex, and someone deliberately bypassing that attempt to maintain homeostasis is immoral.
"Furthermore, if someone were to rape a comatose person by oral sex or molestation, there definitely is no physical trauma."
"Certainly the long term harms are outweighed by the short term benefits."
*Homeostatic Principle*
"Any action that harms homeostasis is immoral."
I never said ANY actions.
2. Why would we need god to determine someone's homeostasis?
I. On the Debate
I was trying to make a self-affirming point, in that, if I were to freely choose to believe in free will, that would alone prove that free will exists...
The reason I am not giving either side sources is that while Con only uses his for providing definitions of things, Pro only uses his to credit others for theories... Which is basically saying that neither side actually used sources to reference facts or give validity to put-forth statistics or any such thing. You may think that Con used sources better but he was only clarifying points and expanding on his rant, he was not actually proving anything correct in and of itself that is key to the case. I will explain why in later stages.
Pro wins the debate because Con never ever, not even hinting at it, explains what is the reason for which we should have homeostasis as the basis of morality. On top of that, Pro explicitly causes Con to fail via encouraging Con time and time again to fall flat by pointing out how even eating vegetables can be (and is) evil under Con's regime. This means that Con's moral framework is proved to be ridiculous and that it's then up to Con to no longer be able to say 'well I'm obviously giving a reasonable morality system' but now has to explain why the ridiculousness of it is justified by a supreme basis other than God. Con is constantly on a backfoot as the only way to win this debate as Con is to break rule 6, meaning this was an autoloss trap from the get-go that Con fell into.
Without a supreme, unquestionable and insurmountably intelligent entity being the source of morality, there is ALWAYS the flaw of the source of morality being taken into question as means to negate said morality system altogether. The only way to overcome this is to prove your system to be subjectively less ridiculous and more overall sensible a moral system than the opponent's. The issue here is that this debate is angled such that the only way for Con to win would be to Kritik from the angle that 'only' is refuted since even with God the morality would be subjective to all involved.
Con keeps reexplaining how, if we assume irrationally that homeostasis is a valid objective foundation for moral framework, that we then can have objective morality without God and keeps framing his argument as 'this can work' and not 'this does work and is objectively the right and wrong thing to do without us subjectively assuming that death or ending homeostasis is inherently evil or wrong'.
Because of this, Con could not ever meet his BoP. Con didn't actually fail due to lack of skill, he had no way to succeed in the first place.
Wow, what an intense debate! And these intense votes, I don't know if I can top those. But I will try.
-RELIABLE SOURCES-
Con used Biology Online, the NLM, Cambridge University, and Oxford Dictionary to support Con's points of what homeostasis is, why H2O2 is poisonous, how and why there's consciousness to consider in Con's case, and definitions that negate the god in the resolution respectively. All of the sources are credible upon me checking them and solidly substantiate Con's case and rebuttals particularly on those points I mentioned. Pro used A scientific American Blog, CARM.org which is an apologist website, Union of Concerned Scientists, a wiki page about the NAP, merriam webster, NASA, and 3 books to show a mismatch with what we think is our choice and what we actually choose, that atheism cannot account for free will, that driving cars is causing climate change, that Con's case is like the NAP, a definition for command, more climate change data, and various faith-based arguments respectively. The problem with Pro's sources is that the CARM website lacks any real credentials or reliability and upon reading is extremely biased and opinionated, and since Pro used this to show that an atheist cannot explain free will and Con did explain free will, I have to take an actual atheist's example of how free will works over a clearly anti-atheist website which also shows this site's lack of reliability on the matter of atheistic free will. Pro also sourced wikipedia for the NAP and as Con clearly states later, the NAP is irrelevant to Con's case, so Pro ends up using another source that didn't go to any length to chip away at Con's case, which was the intent of the source. Also, while I do find the union of concerned scientists and NASA reliable sources, Pro used these to show an activity that Con pointed out was not really moral or immoral because it didn't involve behaving towards others, so while Pro was trying to come up with a morality example to present to Con, Pro used his sources to substantiate a moot point unrelated to the resolution of morality. Since some of Pro's sources were questionable and didn't exactly substantiate Pro's case or rebuttals, Con's sources reign supreme for their credibility and effectiveness in the debate.
-ARGUMENTS-
Pro has to show two things.
1. Morality can be objective.
2. Objective morality necessitates god's existence.
#1 Is clearly agreed to by both debaters, it's just that Pro thinks morality is based on god's commands and Con thinks morality is based on the "homeostatic principle."
#2 Is not substantiated by Pro but vigorously challenged by Con.
The god in this debate is defined as the creator and ruler of the universe, and as far as I see it, nothing in Pro's entire debate mentions the universe, how it was created or what it was created by. I can't tell that god exists or how god's existence is related to objective morality from anything Pro posts at all, and Con challenged that the universe was not created to which Pro said "I'm going to ignore the K." The argument is not a K, it's a direct attack on one of the burdens of Pro, to show that god must exist for objective morality to exist, and since god is the creator of the universe and Con pointed out that the universe was not created so there was not a creator of the universe and Pro clearly states he's ignoring it and both debaters agree that objective morality exists, I have to accept that the resolution is dead here for Pro.
Also it seems Con went to great lengths to ask Pro to name moral actions not reducible to the homeostatic principle, and Pro failed to do this the entire debate. It makes me have to believe that all moral actions are reducible to the homeostatic principle and since Pro only talks about immoral actions, I have to take from this debate the only real moral action mentioned which I think was giving your child water instead of hydrogen peroxide to which Pro never responded and it seems like homeostasis is the exact reason I would give my kid water instead of a poison, not a universe creator.
I don't read this debate and think, "you know why I don't harm or mistreat people?...a creator and ruler of the universe, that's why"
I think like most people, I'm going to remember how our homeostasis is affected by people's actions not whether or not a universe creator makes those actions moral or not.
Pro never refuted that the homeostatic principle accounts for all moral actions, which means that morality is objectively measured by homeostasis, and Pro never refuted that the universe was not created, so objective morality exists and given Pro and Con's performance, god is not required for this objectivity.
https://www.debateart.com/debates/338?open_tab=comments&comments_page=1&comment_number=16
https://shrib.com/#MVisEVyqTjwcm6aFvH6l
Hahaha consequentialists.
Actually the victor is always on the right side of history.
This is basic stuff that any voter should know...my suspicion is that you know this, but voted fraudulently knowing bsh1 would love to stick it to me and not remove your vote...whatever, I'm on the right side of history and when all the shit hits the fan from the voting coercion that I've observed going on, I'll know that I tried to do the right thing to stop such idiocy in votes.
Did Pro make that point?
No.
Then a good voter would accept that considering the conscious creatures that enhance our homeostasis is perfectly reasonable in the homeostatic principle.
I am confused how you think that plays into homeostasis. Agony is irrelevant to physical decay.
Consciousness of animals that experience the heights of human experience. It was untouched by Pro as well...
The vegetable point was extremely significant. Do we value your homeostasis or thr vegetable's... Why is homeostasis objectively right?
Yeah whatever that meant...
You forgot to throw in a couple of words in all-caps there. How else are people to understand you really mean what you’re saying?
One day the moderators will use their removal power to remove dishonesty from votes...one day.
Or is that like expecting punishment for violating an RO twice...not meritorious?
Unfair for all to see.
Votes will be removed for their monolithic focus...unless it's this one...perfect logic.
Wack
The rationale for the decisions was explained. The decisions stand as previously indicated.
How does "Con could not ever meet his BoP. Con didn't actually fail due to lack of skill, he had no way to succeed in the first place" fit in with ignoring arguments?
The issue with Outplayz vote was that it never explained why winning the homeostasis argument was sufficient to win the debate. Sure, he said that it "was sufficient" but that doesn't tell me "why" it was sufficient. Outplayz goes on to explain why Con wins the homeostasis argument, but not why Con's winning that argument overrode all the other arguments in the debate.
By the voter constantly mentioning "Con covered himself" and "Con proved that homeostasis is sufficient enough to explain why there are objective moral facts" the arguments examined by the voter were shown to be main arguments by them making Con's argument able to "cover himself" and "sufficiently prove" his case.
I don't think you read my reply to your comment, which was: "RM explains why only that argument mattered, whereas I am not seeing that kind of analysis from Outplayz." If a voter indicates why it is not important to survey all the main arguments, then they are not required to do so.
RM makes no mention of any of Pro's arguments and again, as you pointed out in the removal of Outplayz's vote, RM had not "surveyed all or almost all of the main arguments of the debate--the voter talks with singular focus about the homeostasis argument" this could be written about RM's RFD, just look at it.
RM explains why only that argument mattered, whereas I am not seeing that kind of analysis from Outplayz.
Yeah, but bifolkal's vote realized that there was only one moral action throughout the debate and of course we think of the child's homeostasis not some command never mentioned in the debate by a god that was never proven to exist...the moral commands were refuted and the refutation was dropped by Pro so that's probably why the most competent voter only glazed over it.
Ramshutu doesn't vote me down vindictively, just erroneously, but RM and his crew of circle-jerkers are definitively out to get me, it's been discussed thoroughly with moderation in private...it's not up for dispute.
And Bilfokals too, I mean no one so far seems to have even referenced moral commands
">Reason for Mod Action: While the voter does an acceptable job of weighing arguments, it is not clear that the voter surveyed all or almost all of the main arguments of the debate--the voter talks with singular focus about the homeostasis argument (Con's case) while failing to address Pro's case. Since a comprehensive survey of the arguments is required to award argument points, the vote is insufficient."
This can be said of RM's vote as well.
Well, I seem to get either “excellent, well balanced RFD”, or hundreds of PMs about how unfair my vote was.
Guess what each of those two categories have in common!
That was the only argument i felt relevant to decide who won and the other arguments were a tie. That's why i only voted on the significance of that one argument. But, whatever... Sorry magic.
"come on voters who have blocked me and I've blocked them and are vindictively trying to vote me down!"
Wow. Do you seriously think that?
Well, somehow I feel offended and left out :(
Thank you!!
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>Reported Vote: RationalMadman // Mod action: Not Removed
>Points Awarded: 3 points to Pro for arguments
>Reason for Mod Action: The vote was found to be sufficient per the site voting policy standards.
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>Reported Vote: Jamesgilbert // Mod action: Removed
>Points Awarded: 3 points to Pro for articles
>Reason for Decision: Con's main argument against pro was homeostasis. However, he never sufficiently proved why that determines right and wrong.
>Reason for Mod Action: The voter does not survey the main arguments, analyze those arguments to determine who won each, or weigh the main arguments to determine a winner. In order to cast a sufficient ballot, the voter should do all three of these things.
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>Reported Vote: Bifolkal // Mod action: Not Removed
>Points Awarded: 5 points to Con for arguments and sources
>Reason for Mod Action: The vote was found to be sufficient per the site voting policy standards.
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>Reported Vote: Logical-Master // Mod action: Not Removed
>Points Awarded: 3 points to Pro for arguments
>Reason for Mod Action: The vote was found to be sufficient per the site voting policy standards.
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Outplayz RFD, Part 2:
Furthermore:
"I had said that actions that lead toward the homeostasis of those towards whom we are acting are considered more moral than those actions that don't."
With those he covered himself on perceived or immoral acts that don't directly harm someone. Which i was having a problem with too and agreeing with pro. Bc how is it homeostasis if i have sex with a dead body? What makes that wrong since there is no harm to the one that's dead. Surprised pro didn't use that example btw since it's a little stronger than the comatose person one. But still, con covered himself by saying homeostasis can also be perceived. That it doesn't have to be literal. One knows having sex with a dead body is a detriment to them due to all types of health issues. But not even that, since a dead body can't consent... you would know if the person was alive and didn't consent you would be going against that person's homeostasis. Since he defined homeostasis as being able to be defined as such... i feel he did his job in refuting that something else other than god can account for our morality. Very good debate. I don't have much time to go on so i hope this is sufficient. Good job in any case to both.
Outplayz' RFD, Part 1:
Very interesting debate. One of few i've actually read the whole thing and can now vote on. Con proved that homeostasis is sufficient enough to explain why there are objective moral facts. It seems to me pro was trying to trap him in paradoxes and/or fallacies by changing what con meant by homeostasis. Pro claimed it's like the harm principle and gave paradoxes that on hearing them i agreed until con cleared up what he meant by homeostasis. When con replied
"The homeostatic principle allows for aggression when the net homeostasis of those attempting to maintain everyone's homeostasis is preserved by the aggression.
Also if aggression were to eliminate a potential detriment to the homeostasis of those attempting to maintain everyone's homeostasis, i.e. self defense, then aggression is fine."
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>Reported Vote: Outplayz // Mod action: Removed
>Points Awarded: 3 points to Con for arguments
>Reason for Decision: See above.
>Reason for Mod Action: While the voter does an acceptable job of weighing arguments, it is not clear that the voter surveyed all or almost all of the main arguments of the debate--the voter talks with singular focus about the homeostasis argument (Con's case) while failing to address Pro's case. Since a comprehensive survey of the arguments is required to award argument points, the vote is insufficient.
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I hope bsh1 can get to the reported votes before the voting period ends.
I kind of agree with that on the front of the K, I think the only way to argue against position (if pro makes a perfect pitch) is to argue against moral absolutes, or at least partial objectivity (applies to humans - but not to animals outside).
One thing I will point out, for your own future growth, is that con effectively conceded the whole debate twice: When he argued an additional mechanism of judging moral decisions in addition to homeostasis: he’s effectively conceding homeostasis can’t explain morality, and as what he raises is fairly arbitrary and subjective ad-hoc rationalization - he concedes the objective point too. In addition, he argued that the teeniest, tiniest harm allows morality to be judged, you mostly pointed this out: but he basically conceded that homeostasis can’t renser moral decisions because you cannot use them to weight harms.
If you had pointed these two out in more detail: the latter simply by saying that the homeostatis of slapping someone is more aggregious than the least harmful form of rape: it would have been easier to award you the debate on the spot. It’s always harder to spot in the debate than out of it.
Conversely: the big wedge for me that I was hoping you would exploit more, was moral compulsion. We feel compelled to follow morality, con offered no explanation for why we feel that, and it was mostly implied by most of your argument on commands - but it wasn’t explicit enough: that compulsion on its own is neatly unanswerable by homeostasis could have made the debate far more one sided. Instead you were mostly lucky that con hinges the debate on homeostasis, and you argued it slightly better.
You won on penalties after missing 3 open goals!
If Pro didn't bring up that point, in fact, if Pro never responded to how suffering exists in opposition to homeostasis, you've no reason as the voter to think it doesn't, you treat it as a dropped point and you also treat Pro never responding to the claim that all MORAL actions can be reduced to homeostasis. Pro was asked every round and never responded.
Suffering isn't even homeostasis related.
suffering and maltreatment are in no way at all objectively evil in and of itself. to a hedonistic capitalist, it's morally right to make others suffer at your pleasure and for the hardworking Christian, suffering and undergoing maltreatment without getting revenge for it is going to be highly moral to do.
Aside from that, you need to prove that any axiom, even that suffering is evil, is objective and not subjective.
From voter:
"Pro wins the debate because Con never ever, not even hinting at it, explains what is the reason for which we should have homeostasis as the basis of morality."
From Con in the debate:
"Homeostasis exists in opposition to suffering and maltreatment, things associated with actions of immorality, and is an objective way to measure whether or not an action is moral i.e. does it lead to homeostasis?...For example, if your child had been running around for hours, and, as a result, had become dehydrated, it would be a perfectly healthy behavior to administer water (H2O) to them, because this action would lead to their homeostasis."
There are examples, explanations, and a claim, dropped by Pro, that ALL moral actions can be reduced to the homeostatic principle, and if the voter were the least bit honest, he would have mentioned that too...this fucking site.
You know what really says "Yeah I assessed debater performance?"
"Con didn't actually fail due to lack of skill, he had no way to succeed in the first place."
You can't win, so I vote Pro...come on voters who have blocked me and I've blocked them and are vindictively trying to vote me down!
Come on!
Thanks for the vote!
The problem with any K is that Con already accepted P2. If he didn’t accept P2 he could easily argue against moral absolutes. Once you accept P2 then you have to explain an objective framework
Actually fair point.
Yeah, it’s more the case you can’t handle people voting against you and feel more inclined to harass and harangue them repeatedly in private. I vote for you when you win, and against you when you don’t.
I do find it hilarious when you take it so personally.
Yeah, fraudulent votes don't get removed for voting on sources that weren't there...
No wait, yeah they do.
https://www.debateart.com/debates/386/comment_links/3561
Bifolkal, take it from a guy who doesn't have votes removed, you're correct, there is a small syndicate after me...I don't mind, it's flattering.
Nah, I don’t see many fraudulent votes at all, there’s a couple of individuals that are generally rather mad at him: but they don’t actually seem to vote on anything he puts up. In my view he has good days and bad days.
Tbh i cant really blame him, it seems like there's a few debaters out there trying to knock him down b/c he's one of the top debaters, bt they use such fraudulent votes...it's really weird actually.
Oh is that why the voters don't like him?