Morality - Is Atheism More Reasonable than Theism?

Author: PGA2.0

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@Amoranemix
Better is a subjective term. It is only useful if we first have a reference point. If the reference point is human welfare then I believe my viewis "better" at promoting welfare. If the reference point is some possibly fictional god then until the god is demonstrate along with s ok me methodology for unambiguously (not subject to interpretation) determining the will of said god then even if it exists we are still all just guessing. If I understand your method properly it is very suspect specifically because it is subject to interpretation which allows subjective opinions to again enter the conversation.
PGA2.0 263
How can it be better if it is subjective? Better in relation to what???[83]
Well-being, in whose opinion?[84]
Human welfare in whose opinion, the woman who kills her unborn human child? How is that well-being for the unborn?[85] You selectively choose who you will apply wellbeing to. When food is short are you still going to be looking for the wellbeing of your neighbour? Look at the world around you and see how, in practicality or livability, this principle of wellbeing works in most countries of the world, especially socialist and communist atheistic states.[86]
[83] Your worldview is a serious handicap for understanding reality. In order to understand these things you must open up your worldview to it.
No, you're mistaken. Moral relativism can only go to battle with subjective opinion. Open it up to your relativism? Who are you to tell me what is right and wrong unless you can show me that what you believe is based on an actual fixed reference point? Who do you think you are to dictate from your subjectivism that there is no necessary fixed measure? How do you, as a subjective human being, know this is true? You can't even live by your own system of thought. You are inconsistent. That is a troubling sign in a worldview. A fixed reference point is what is necessary for the understanding of morality. Your system of thought on morality is morally bankrupt. When discussing the moral "better" concerning a specific thing, there must be a fixed reference point for it to have meaning or how it can be measured as better. A constantly shifting standard has no comparison for better because things are always in flux. Abortion is a case in point. Before 1973, abortion was considered a moral wrong except in special circumstances. Now it is considered a moral right for the woman to choose whether (or not) to kill her offspring. Which are the correct view and true identity of abortion?  

You have nothing sensical to offer. 

It can be better by meeting the definition of better described in the (omitted) standard. Better is a relation. Something is better than something else.
Yes, better is a relationship. To have better, there must be a best to compare better to or else how can you gauge something as better? Yes, something is better than something else only if there is an ideal comparison for that something. What is the ideal for the right and wrong of abortion, since I am referencing a specific better and not just speaking of the concept of better anymore? (This is where you get derailed, the difference between an actual case and the concept in your evaluation of what I am saying)

Is it better to murder innocent human beings (ones that have done nothing wrong) if you choose to, or should we protect them and identify murdering them as wrong? How do you determine the moral better in this case? 

Well-being, in whose opinion?[84]
[84] Dude, ask clear questions.
Don't try to obfuscate. The question is clear. Who gets to define what well-being is?  Don't isolate the context. I gave you a clear example. You are basing morality on opinion, preference. Why is your opinion of well-bing better than mine regarding the unborn and abortion??????????

Human welfare in whose opinion, the woman who kills her unborn human child? How is that well-being for the unborn?[85]
[85] Is that well-being for the unborn?
You tell me. I'm asking you a question. Quit evading my questions. 

How is it well-being to kill an innocent human being? How is it wellbeing to deny its right to life? Who gives you or the woman the 'right' to decide for it? How just is such a decision? Do you apply the same standards to other human beings? How about the mother's toddler. Can she kill it, too, because she is looking out for its "well-being?" Why are you applying a standard to one human being that is different from another? Is it just your opinion to have unequal justice, where you choose how you will apply fairness? For one, you choose to kill it, and for the other, you choose to let it live. If so, your justice system is unlivable, and if the tables were turned and someone applied the same unfair standard to you that you call justice, then you would be dead.  

You selectively choose who you will apply wellbeing to. When food is short are you still going to be looking for the wellbeing of your neighbour? Look at the world around you and see how, in practicality or livability, this principle of wellbeing works in most countries of the world, especially socialist and communist atheistic states.[86]
[86] Look at the world around you and see how, in practicality or livability, God as a source of morility and justice in most countries of the world, especially in religious states.
The Christian answer: You fail to see the bigger picture. God has given you a will, and you are free to exercise that will for the number of days He has granted you, yet you constantly choose evil. Evil is choosing to go against the good that is God. Thus, without repentance and God's provision for sin, you will, upon death, answer for your sin. We are all accountable to God, and whether we are held accountable in our merit or the merit of another depends on what we believe when we die. 
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@Amoranemix
Remember that there were 19 million miscarriages last year also. Doesn't god know anything about quality control? Why did god use atoms and 10 sextillion suns to create one planet that life would finally form on?
PGA2.0 273
How many of those deaths are attributed to the individual and how they live that results in the miscarriage?
I don't know and I am not told why He used so many atoms.
Cool. Now I can quote you saying “I don't know”, totally out of context and completely misrepresenting what you meant. Just the way you like it.
I don't know the cause of the 19 million miscarriages other than indirectly, the Fall, and I don't know how many suns there are in the universe, but I know they display the power and glory of God. 

PGA2.0 247
Sure you can make up meaning, but ultimately it means nothing.
Yes, and....? So what?
PGA2.0 273
So you live inconsistently with what you know as true - you live a lie, you deceive yourself.
So do you, but your belief in the lie is stronger. You know the lie to be true.
Who are you to tell me what is a lie regarding God? How reasonable are you being? Do you want to argue against the Christian God specifically? That is the only God I believe in. Do you want to examine the reasonableness of your evidence as opposed to mine? I like to start with prophecy and its reasonableness. We can have a formal debate on that subject if you like.

Or the stuff in the universe was always around in various forms, cycling from big bang to big crunch eternally.
PGA2.0 280
How do you get to the present universe from an infinite of universes? These universes coming and going? They do not all exist simultaneously. So what created the universe? What is this 'stuff' and how can it 'act' as an agent?

You can't have an infinite causality and get to the present causality, can you? Explain how it you think so
What relevance does any of that have?
The relevance? I am answering and challenging a specific statement of his. I am asking him for his explanation. 

First, it is off topic.
Directly, yes. Indirectly it ties into morality. Just as with the universe, so how you view the causal tree of the origin of the universe correlates with how you arrive at the moral. 

Second, suppose ludofl3x doesnt know, so what? [a] The only attempt at relevance I can see is that you are looking for evidence for the first premise of the God of the gaps argument: [b]
P1 Atheists can't explain how this or that is possible.
P2 God is responsible for everthing atheists can't explain.
C Therefore, God exists.

Officially, most Christians admit it is a bad argument, but they use it anyway, because it works. Why do you think it is that so many people still fall for it?
[a] As per above, you come to a false conclusion once again. I gave you an example of further relevance. It is more about atheism of the gaps. 

[b] That is not my argument. It is the argument given by Willian Lane Craig, citing Leibniz, in On Guard, p. 54,

P1 Everything that exists has an explanation for its existence.
P2 If the universe has an explanation of its existence, that explanation is God.
P3 The universe exists.
P4 The universe has an explanation for its existence.
C. Therefore, the explanation of the universe's existence is God. 

So, do you wish to tackle the four premises or the conclusion?
 
[Complaint about God ordering the killing of women and children in Numbers 31: 15-18]
PGA2.0 287
I'm not sure if that particular verse teaches the killing of children (among the little ones), but and innocent life God takes (a life that has not committed sin and is not able to reason or yet be accountable) God will restore to a better place. Jesus taught the kingdom of heaven belongs to little children.
[a] Why would God need to restore the children to a better place? [b] Whatever God does is good and just according to his own standard.
[a] Because it is not in His nature to punish but to reward the innocent. The better place is an intimately personal relationship with the Almighty God in heaven. 

[b] God's nature is the standard. To understand goodness, we look to God. 


PGA2.0 287 to 3RU7AL
The point, there are explanations for why this happened.
The point is off topic. This is a debate about morality. Behaviours need not be explained, but justified.
I contend that morality goes deeper than human beings. Your subjective mindset is not sufficient for understanding morality. 

My analogy goes like this: 

What is the root cause of morality? You say human beings, and I say what caused human beings for there to be morality. In thoroughly examining any causal tree, you need to arrive at the root cause to understand the causal factor's relationship. One of the many jobs I have had in my life is one of a Safety Coordinator in which I had to investigate and analyze the root causes of accidents to eliminate accidents in the future. That meant investigating the causal tree and looking at the cause-effect relationship of an incident/accident. That is what I am after with you atheists in your thinking on morality. That involves investigating the root cause or how the chain of events happened to arrive at the incident in question, right and wrong, from the starting point (or however far back we need to determine what caused the incident). The problem is that atheists can't sufficiently identify the root cause and, therefore, how the other causes are traced back to the root. They look at and sometimes identify the symptoms but can't prescribe the cure.  They say, "This happened" (i.e., Joe took a gun and shot her for eating sour grapes), but they can't determine what lead to it happening (the motive, the actions to the incident, the reasons involved) to prevent it from happening again. The symptoms are different from preventing it from happening in the first place. 
Amoranemix
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PGA2.0 800
Then he goes onto an evolutionary account (27:57). That explains nothing morally. As I have pointed out many times before, why does what one being does as influenced by their genetic makeup, environment, and social conditioning need to be the same another being does.[171] The DNA makeup programs one to work one way and another with a different program? Remember, a descriptive order does not prescribe what should be, only what is.
[171] If you had asked that question before, you would have committed another loaded question fallacy. So far you have been unable to prove that what one being does as influenced by their genetic makeup, environment, and social condistion need be the same as another being does.

PGA2.0 800
Human success, he says, is largely due to our power of cooperation (28:00).[172] What if a Hitler authoritarian, totalitarian type figure dictates what you do, and your future depends on being obedient (slaughter 11 million undesirables as he defines undesirable).[173] You have to concede then that killing these people is morally good for the larger group.[174] And with China, the majority gets even bigger but again is controlled in the hands of a few, the elites. [ . . . ]
[172] Indeed. Peter Millican says sensible things. That is nothing like the fallacies we usually get from Christian lectures. He must be a skeptic.
[173] Personally, I would disapprove. Relevance ?
[174] How so ?

PGA2.0 801
Milligan wants to relegate superiority to brain size and development.[175] I smell more elitism. He wants you to conform to what he believes, another shell game.[176] There is no substance in what he believes.[178] He thinks such a God as Christians worship is willing but unable to prevent evil (29:16 - 29:26).[179] But what about Millican's god - himself and humans as the measure?[180] [plaintive questions]
[175] Your fallacy of choice is : the appeal to motive.
[176] You on other hand, don't want people to conform to what you believe, another shell game.
[178] I have already discovered your predilection for bald assertions in our previous debate.
[179] I doubt he thinks that.
[180] I think Peter Millican is an atheist.

PGA2.0 801
Millican fails to understand that God has given humans a timeframe (their lifespan) in which they have a volition as to what they will do and decide, then judgment, so evil is answered by God.[181] Next, how do moral relativists like Millican (who pretends to be a moral realist) distinguish evil? Evil compared to what? Compared to what he likes or those in control like? Why is that right? Again, he puts the cart before the horse.
[181] You fail to understand that God has not done that.
You seem to be under the impression that asking questions constitutes evidence against someone's worldview. However, that is not the case.

PGA2.0 801
With the evidential problem (34:09), Milligan falls into his own trap. There are so many different views on what is evil, and so many different governments vying for different ideas of what is good that the question needs to be answered by Milligan as to what is evil.[182] From his subjective mindset, why should I believe him? And yes, the solution to the problem of who is right is inferred by presupposing God, not by presupposing relative, limited human beings.[183] They don't have what is necessary for defining evil if they cannot produce an absolute, objective, unchanging reference point or measure..[184] And human history evidentially shows they can't. Thus, we can INFER they do not have what is necessary to make the correct determination.[185] God can and does.
[182] You ASSUME without justification that he cannot do that.
[183] Relative, limited human beings actually exist. They don't need to be presupposed.
[184] Is that a fact or just your personal opinion ?
[185] You are mistaken, for it shows no such things. Dictionaries, on the on the other hand, prove that humans have been able to define evil.

PGA2.0 801
[ . . . ] That brings me to the final point, why do we seek meaning and purpose in a meaningless universe? No ultimate reason if you are an atheist. You live inconsistently with your belief system (no ultimate meaning). [ . . . ]
So you claim, but can you prove that ?

PGA2.0 801
Millican offers "two extreme solutions" to the problem of evil (38:00); God is not omnipotent, or God's goodness is a mystery. There is another solution; God allows evil, so that good will come of it. [ . . . ]
Millican addressed that possibility on the previous slide.

PGA2.0 801
And "the way God wants us to see the world" (38:56) is not how Millican implies. We must seek the good, do what is right, honour and care for others, punish wrong, not torture people or inflict evil upon them. Then he implies Godis a liar (38:10) and that we are truthful.
You seem to have the time stamps wrong.
I doubt he implied God is a liar and we are truthful. You should not create your own meaning, but read the meaning of the author.

PGA2.0 801
And yes, this guy has such a poor understanding of God's justice that he continually misses the point (41:14). So far, with this guy (Millican), it has been one falsehood after another.
LOL
I have seen many more falsehoods and half-trutsh in your critique than in Millican's lecture.
There is a difference between not addressing the point you desire and missing the point.

PGA2.0 801
With Millican's point, "Conjectures and Fictions," it is not true we, as Christians, have nothing to support the biblical claims. I have gone through those reasons often enough.[186] Prophecy, in conjunction with history, offers reasonable proofs/evidence. So does the internal consistency and unity of the Bible, and making sense of existence without God.[187]
[186] I am not aware of any on topic ones that are still standing.
[187] Those are on topic in the sense that proving God's existence is necessary for building your case. Without them, you have nothing. So, go ahead. Prove these two claims.

PGA2.0 801
"The Vale of Soul-Making " John Hick's argument (43:30) neglects the warnings of the Bible that there are none (accountable) who are righteous.[188] His argument does not wash about an omnipotent God, just creating a morally perfect being. Such a being would be a robot, not able to think anything but what the Creator programmed.[189]
[188] That would be righteous only according God's personal, self-serving opinion, which is irrelevant.
[189] Millican did not say God should make morally perfect beings. He argued there are alternative ways for soul-making that do not require eliminating the creatures that do not meet the desired standards.

PGA2.0 801
Then Millican goes on about the same tired worn out arguments about God creating a too heavy stone for Him to lift (44:55) to show that theism is intrinsically contradictory. [ . . . ]
You are mistaken, as you so often are, for Millican did not do that.

PGA2.0 801
Up to the 45-minute mark, IMO, the whole lecture was poorly justified.[190] Notice how Millican escapes without explaining how any of his four criteria*** are objective is beyond me. He just asserts it.[191]
[190] It was a decent lecture that undermines your worldview. Hence, it is to be expected you dislike it.
[191] Indeed. Shame on him. You would never do that, assert something.

3RU7AL 725
You can't just say "quantitatively or qualitatively" and pretend they're not OPPOSITE (mutually exclusive) CONCEPTS.
PGA2.0 801
You misunderstand my point. I agree they are different value standards, but both qualitative and quantitative are values. One is easier to verify by the mind in conjunction with the physical senses because the standard is empirical.
Qualititative values require a reference standard that gives the quality's meaning. Language usually does not provide a default standard. Without such standard, implicit or explicit, qualitative claims are merely someone's opinion.

PGA2.0 812 to SkepticalOne
Again (and you did this in your debates too), you dehumanize the unborn, making it a bunch of or clump of cells rather than what it is, a complete human being, a separate entity from the woman, a unique, complete organism that directs its own grow from within. The analogy again fails since you compare apples to oranges, a kidney (an organ) with an unborn (a complete individual human being with its own kidneys and organs forming and growing).
Apparently you still don't understand the analogy, despite SkepticalOne already pointing out your error in post 739. The child stands for the foetus and the kidney stands for the foetus' needs, like oxygen and nutrients.
Maybe if you based your worldview on reality i.s.o. an invisible sky magician, analogies would be easier for you to grasp.

PGA2.0 812 to SkepticalOne
There is a difference in moral obligation between a family member and a stranger.
That may actually be a pertinent difference, if it can be demonstrated. I have already asked about it, but don't know your response yet.

SkepticalOne 806 about definition for moral relativism
Clear and concise would be nice.
PGA2.0 812
No universal, absolute moral values, but everything is open to interpretation and subjectivism. 'Good' means whatever a person, a group, a society decides it means.
That appears inconsistent with other things you have claimed, including that article you have made me read.
Defining beauty relativism analogously, that would be :
No universal, absolute beauty values, but everything is open to interpretation and subjectivism. 'Beautiful' means whatever a person, a group, a society decides it means.

A good [chess] move is one that gives you the tempo and puts your opponent on the defensive by applying pressure and exploiting weaknesses.
In regards to morality, you said right could not be determined without an "objective moral standard". By that reasoning, the absence of an 'objective chess standard' would leave us unable to objectively determine 'right' chess moves.  Do you have an 'objective chess standard'?
PGA2.0 813
Again, you are equivocating and comparing apples to oranges.
No, he is not. He was comparing one kind of apple (chess) with another kind (morality).


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@Amoranemix
Have you managed to distill any moral AXIOMS?
PGA2.0 288
How do you mean? I believe I have.

I work from the principle of the Ten Commandments, which delves into most aspects of morality for it deals with what happens when someone wrongs instead of loves others. Abortion centers on the "thou shalt not kill/murder"principle. Abortion is a spiteful act that does not take into account the life of someone else but thinks of self. It is not loving.[87] All human life is created in the image and likeness of God. It is God's right to take human life since we are His creatures.[88]
God permits exceptions for civil societies to function. Wrongdoing - life for life; that would be equal justice. The exception to abortion is when the woman will die before the unborn is developed enough to save it. Then it is permissible to take its life because the death of the woman would be unavoidable and so would that of the unborn. At least one is saved, so it is the greater outcome of the two - one dead instead of two. When someone dies unintentionally, in the case of manslaughter, the intent is not to do harm (but sometimes it can be because of carelessness), but an accident results in death. That is not the same thing as malicious or spiteful intent - murder - that the commandment deals with.[89]
[87] So is rape. [a] Yet I don't see any prohobition against that in the Ten Commandments. From biological evolution point of view on the other hand, rape is useful, as it helps the distribution of the rape gene. No god is required for that.
The principle of love for your neighbour is in the commandments as a prohibition against rape. Jesus expanded on the Ten Commandments then condensed them into two. There are various principles contained in the commandments that apply to rape, like coveting, adultery, and idolatry. You may even include stealing (taking something that has not been given to you). The law is very just when it comes to rape. It takes into account the good of the woman, whether married or single. Remember, this was Ancient Near East culture (ANE) where killing a man (the family's protector) would leave the women and children vulnerable. So, here is what we find:

Deuteronomy 22:25-29 (NASB)
25 “But if the man finds the girl who is betrothed in the field, and the man seizes her and [a]rapes her, then only the man who [b]raped her shall die. 26 And you are not to do anything to the girl; there is no sin in the girl worthy of death, for just as a man rises against his neighbor and murders him, [c]so is this case. 27 When he found her in the field, the betrothed girl [d]cried out, but there was no one to save her.
28 “If a man finds a girl who is a virgin, who is not betrothed, and he seizes her and has sexual relations with her, and they are discovered, 29 then the man who had sexual relations with her shall give the girl’s father fifty shekels of silver, and she shall become his wife, because he has violated her; he is not allowed to divorce her all his days.

Verse 25-27 deals with a betrothed or married woman. If such a woman is violated, the guilty man is killed (he will only do it once) if found out.

Verse 28-29 deals with the virgin or single woman. Once the woman is violated, the principle here is she will have a hard time supporting herself or finding a husband, so the guilty party, if agreed by the father, will marry and take care of her.  The guilty man will support her all her life (not allowed to divorce her). 

I can get into warfare too, but that is more than I want to cover here since my time is short.  

It is God's right to take human life since we are His creatures.[88]
[88] How is that supposed to follow?
You may not like the principle of God taking life, but when you make something, you are free to do with it as you want. It is your creation. Would you agree? God designed humans to know Him. Being in His universe, He has the right to determine how you should live. Sin or wrongdoing against God is something we are accountable for, yet God is merciful and has provided a way in which we can renew our fellowship and relationship with Him. 

In Eden, He allowed humanity (represented by Adam) to live in perfect fellowship with Him for eternity. Adam decided to blaze his own way. The result is humanity's inhumanity. Thus, God put roadblocks in our way that we would not live perpetually in disobedience and evil towards Him and also for our learning. First, He barred humans from that close fellowship experienced by Adam and Eve in the Garden (spiritual death). Barring us from Eden, humans could not participate in the tree of life and live forever. Then He provided curses or obstacles in our lives, the world, the universe, that would remind us of our fallenness and evil. Finally, He gave humanity a limited human lifespan in which our physical bodies would return to the ground (dust to dust, ashes to ashes).

These limitations help us to realize the futility of our existence without God. We witness the evil that we do without God's guidance. We witness that there does not seem to be a suitable solution outside of God's provision, and some of us thus seek Him out and find Him. The evil in the world is a constant reminder of our sinfulness. So, the principle - sin causes death. But God is not finished with us. He wants us to know of His merciful provision - forgiveness and restoration to Him in His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ.  Because of His innocence, we can experience forgiveness and reconciliation with God. Without this forgiveness, we live our futile and often meaningless lives. 

God permits exceptions for civil societies to function. Wrongdoing - life for life; that would be equal justice. The exception to abortion is when the woman will die before the unborn is developed enough to save it. Then it is permissible to take its life because the death of the woman would be unavoidable and so would that of the unborn. At least one is saved, so it is the greater outcome of the two - one dead instead of two. When someone dies unintentionally, in the case of manslaughter, the intent is not to do harm (but sometimes it can be because of carelessness), but an accident results in death. That is not the same thing as malicious or spiteful intent - murder - that the commandment deals with.[89]
[89] I don't see the Ten Commandments mention any of that. Is that just your personal opinion you use to fill the gaps in your moral axioms?
Life for life is equal justice. 

Abortion is murder. It kills another human being. Thus it is covered under "You shall not kill/murder."

Miscarriage is not usually malicious, intentional murder. The woman aborting the unborn to save her life is not murder since if she does not, she will die, and so will the unborn due to its lack of viability. In ANE times with tubal pregnancy, both died since the medical knowledge back then was primitive. Today, we can save one. 

Nope. Please explain.
PGA2.0 301
Words carry specific meaning when in context. From a context you can determine what is spoken of. If not, the author needs to make his meaning more clear. If you have not grasped the author's meaning, you have not understood what the author said or communicated.
What if the author fails to make the meaning more clear?
By questioning him/her, you inquire into the true meaning. When the author is not available to supply the true interpretation, there is obscurity. That is not the biblical case, although you will probably argue otherwise.

I sometimes debate a Christian who keeps throwing moral attributes around without specifying the referenced moral standard.
I have always made it clear that I argue for no god but God (the biblical God). Thus, I am particular when speaking about morality per the thread's title and my opening post. The reference is God, and by His nature and revelation, we come to understand His goodness. Only one God has been revealed as omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, omnibenevolent, immutable, and eternal.

He assumes that when different people use the same word, like good or right, they mean the same thing. The author appears to want to sow confusion (the Christian's friend).
I speak of the right and wrong principle and sometimes get into specific examples as I did with abortion. I keep asking you what you mean by "the good" if goodness is relative, and there is no fixed and final standard - God and His nature. You have provided nothing that withstands scrutiny. 
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@Amoranemix
Secularmerlin 326 to PGA2.0
(EITHER) a person's kidney (and their uterus) are their possessions protected by their right to personal bodily autonomy (in which case NO ONE can use them without consent)(OR) a person's body (such that its use is only a danger to the individual but they could live through the process) is commonwealth and anyone in possession of two kidneys is just as guilty of murder by proxy as a woman who gets an abortion.
Actually, just now I get the sense of your analogy. You should have explained it. It thought the kidney stood for the fetus. I suspect PGA2.0 didn't get it either.
It is a common argument used by abortion advocates that stems from Judith Jarvis Thomson's violinist analogy. It would help if you familiarized yourself with such arguments before you make these claims against me. I understand it well, and I disagree with the premise for several reasons, and here are a few of them:

1. The unborn human being is an innocent human being (it has done nothing wrong). It has a body too, thus what about its bodily rights?
2. I would argue that it is most reasonable to believe the unborn is a person from conception, just less developed than you or me.
3. A pregnant woman has an obligation to protect her offspring that she shares her DNA. The violinist is a stranger.
4. The woman (in approximately 95-99% of pregnancies) gives consent to have sex, knowing that with sex, there is a chance of pregnancy and thus moral responsibility.
5. The person being hooked up to a violinist gave no consent to be artificially hooked up to the violinist. Your body is not directly connected to the violinist.
6. The unborn is violently killed, its body being torn and ripped to pieces via suction in one form of abortion. In another, it is chemically burned to death. In a third, it is cut or stabbed and mutilated.
7. Pregnancy is temporary and natural. Pregnancy is common, and our existence as humans depends on it. Being hooked up artificially to a famous violinist is not common, nor does human existence depend on it. 

Thus, the analogy fails in comparison in many ways, some of which have been listed. 

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@PGA2.0
P1 Everything that exists has an explanation for its existence.
P2 If the universe has an explanation of its existence, that explanation is God.

This looks pretty dumb as a set up here. First, if everything that exists has an explanation for its existence, you'd now have the question of what explains the exisence of god. And P2 does not in any way follow from P1, it's a leap of leaps. You can replace God with anything and it has the same validity. I know, I know, you only argue for the god of th bible, which makes this argument correct in your view, but it will never move anyone who doesn't already believe as you do.  I' mean I'm not familiar with the rest of the argument, but on its face, this is not a very sound syllogism. 
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Yes, I can see that God would be upset that a baby was aborted so it couldn't die of starvation (3 million children in the world died of starvation last year) or get pediatric cancer. 
Isn't God sending us a message that he only cares about Preacher Kenneth Copeland who is worth $760 million?  I bet Copeland thinks he WILL fit through the eye of a needle.
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PGA2.0 815 to SkepticalOne
The person needing the kidney is usually a stranger, not related in any way. The unborn is the woman's biological offspring. The person is not violating the kidney recipient's bodily autonomy; rather, the Judith Thomson example is the opposite. The violinist or his doctors violate the donor's bodily autonomy by touching it and hooking up tubes without consent. The donor does not touch the recipient's body directly with his/her body, so the analogy fails here. [ . . . ]
How so ? What relevance does the (in)direct physical contact have ?

9). Sex is not consent to pregnancy - addressed above.
PGA2.0 815
It is for it is indirectly understood that pregnancy may result.
How does that qualify as a sufficient reason ?

You are arguing consent and rights in general are non existent when they cannot be understood? Can someone without the ability to understand right from wrong do whatever they like?
PGA2.0 815
That someone can if they have the mental ability to do right and wrong, but they will suffer the consequences of the wrongs from those who enforce the laws.
The question was poorly formulated IMO.
Does someone without the ability to understand right from wrong have the right to do whatever they want ?

11). Most abortions occur by medication long before the ability to [1] feel pain or awareness has developed and [2] at least half of all conceptions end *naturally*-You're [3] attempting to poison the well with emotionality built on dishonesty and/or ignorance.  
PGA2.0 815
[2] There is a difference between what happens naturally and what happens by intent. The one we can't prevent, the other (intent to do harm) we can.
God allegedly could prevent it.

PGA2.0 815 to SkepticalOne
The question is whether what I said is true and whether you should be morally outraged or not in determining whether I poisoned the well, instead of just the label and false charge (well prisoner) to persuade others the well has indeed been poisoned when the water is still fine to drink.
Is that one should be emotionally outraged by abortion just your personal opinion or is that an ought according to an absolute, universal, ultimate, fixed standard ?
Should one also be emotionally outraged by worship of another god ?

As said before, consent to sex is not consent to pregnancy - it is consent to share one's body with another who exists at that moment.
PGA2.0 815
That consent to share bodies may result in a pregnancy. If I consent to be a lumberjack, then I consent to the risks that may involve. It is up to me to be aware of the dangers involved.
Your analogy is false, as there is a key difference : the lumberjack cannot avoid the risk, while the women can avoid pregnancy, even after sex.

PGA2.0  815 to SkepticalOne
Every one of your 14 responses is a weak, weak argumentation.
Thank you for sharing your personal opinions with us. You know how much we value them.

PGA2.0 745
Some label or call that framework moral conventions or moral norms. With such conventions or norms where two countries or two individuals oppose each other, then who is right? What then is the actual case?
3RU7AL 746
THE BIBLE DOESN'T SOLVE THIS "PROBLEM".
PGA2.0 818
Yes, it does, provided the biblical God exists and is who He is described as. It solves the problem in that it is a written testimony that gives a universal, ultimate, absolute, objective, unchanging, eternal, omniscient best or final measure and reference point to compare good and bad against.
Describing God as being by his nature the source of morality, does not make him so. It is a gratuitous claim, one that never will be demonstrated. If I were to describe Barack Obama - whose existence can be proven - as being absolute, ultimate and objective, then that would be nothing more than three bald assertions.
What do absolute and ultimate mean in that row ?
What is the difference between a universal, objective, unchanging, eternal, omniscient and a universal, absolute, objective, unchanging, eternal, omniscient best or final measure ?
What is the difference between a universal, objective, unchanging, eternal, omniscient and a universal, ultimate, objective, unchanging, eternal, omniscient best or final measure ?

3RU7AL 747
FACTS must be empirically demonstrable and or logically necessary.
PGA2.0 819
Again, how do you demonstrate the laws of logic empirically?[175] Until you can demonstrate the laws of logic are empirical and not abstract conceptual, your argument unravels on your claim that facts must be empirically demonstrated.
[175] The laws of logic are empirically verifiable. The fundamental laws of logic a simple and easy to test. All of them have been tested extensively. If one of them were false, we would have noticed.
How do you propose we test moral laws ?

3RU7AL 747
This means they are always  VERIFIABLE.
PGA2.0 819
Only the ones we can verify. (^8

Many facts are not yet verifiable by human beings. The law of gravity was not verifiable until Newton demonstrated it. That does not mean it did not exist or was not operating. We did not know it.
How many facts are in principle not verifiable by humans ?
The law of gravity has always been verifiable in principle.
You also make another good point : because we could not verify the law of gravity, we had no rational warrant to know it.

3RU7AL 747
No "appeal to authority" needed.
PGA2.0 819
"Appeal to authority" is different from an actual authority. You can appeal to anyone as an authority. Just doing that does not make them one. They have to show they understand and are an expert on the subject matter in question.
So far no one has been able to demonstrate God is an authority on morality. All we have are claims from an ancient collection of manuscripts.

3RU7AL 747
#2, even  (IFF)  we accepted the "commandments" as 100% "true"  (AND)  we tried to follow them to the letter (THEN) we still end up with a ridiculous number of loop-holes and unanswered (perhaps unanswerable) legal (and moral) questions
PGA2.0 819
What happens is we realize we cannot meet the standard because once we are guilty of breaking any commandment, we have wrongs not only our fellow human beings, beings who are also imperfect, but God who is morally good, pure, holy, and perfect.
Your fallacy of choice is : missing the point.
You also failed to dispute or challenge 3RY7AL's #1 : Your allegedly moral facts are not empirically demonstrable, nor logically necessary.

PGA2.0 758
Because God is love. Injustice concerns Him. [ . . . ]
3RU7AL 766
I've seen Christians do this before, but I still can't figure it out,
LOVE =/= PUNISHMENT
PGA2.0 834
A justice and righteous Judge would not be good and loving if He left a wrong unpunished.

If you loved and wanted the best for someone would you let them do something that hurt others then say, "That's okay." If you see Antifa go into your neighbourhood and burn down your neighbour's house after they have robbed it and beating them up would the loving thing be to do nothing? Or would it be loving to seek justice for a wrong?
Seeking justice is not loving.
If you see Antifa going to a Hindu Shrine and worship Brahma, it would be unjust and unloving to punish her.
If you see God promote war and genocide, would it be loving to do nothing ? Or would it be loving to seek justice for a wrong ?

FLRW 770
Have they considered what atheism is doing to the mind in closing itself to Inana, a Sumerian goddess of fertility and war?
PGA2.0 834
Who are they? If you mean Christians, they would agree that these false gods need to be shown for what they are.
'They' are the ones you yourself referred to in 768. Your ignorance illustrates that authors themselves sometimes don't even know what they are saying, making interpretation impossible without reading into it something they author was not conveying.

3RU7AL 780
You can freely choose to go to any restaurant you wish.
However, if you go to one I don't like, I will beat you with a baseball bat.
PGA2.0 845
So, you feel it is morally permissible to beat someone up if they go to a restaurant you don't like. So morality to you is doing whatever you like, and if anyone interferes, you enforce your standards of like on them by using your bat. So someone who can use their fists or bats better than you is morally justified in beating your face to a pulp? Dog eat dog!
Your fallacy of choice is : missing the point. Read the post again without assuming that 3RU7AL was not being cynical.
You are hypocritical. If 3RU7AL is playing a might makes right fan, then you criticize him. If God is imposing his might makes right justice, then you defend him with excuses.

PGA2.0 845 to 3RU7AL
[ . . . ]
Now God's commandment not to eat of the tree of good and evil was morally good.[176] Since Adam was the only human being other than Jesus Christ not to be influenced by other people's choices (he was a blank slate), he chose to set the course of human history. He had the initial two inputs, God's commandment to him (before Eve was created) and Satan's counter through Eve to him - the two choices he was completely free to choose from. When Eve took of the fruit and offered it to him he made a bad choice.[177]
[176] Is that a fact or just your personal opinion ?
[177] When 3RU7AL's victim picked a wrong restaurant, he also freely made a bad choice.

3RU7AL 780
Just pick the one you like best.
PGA2.0 845
I did, my gun in opposition to your baseball bat. You will do what I say, but you are "free" to choose! Weigh the consequences well!
Personally, I don't like might makes right morality either, but what are we to do ? We are too weak impose a different morality upon God. Perhaps his fans could stop worshipping him until he implements justice the way you defined it : treat everyone equally without making self-serving exceptions for himself.

3RU7AL 790
Oh, right, the biblical God who orders their followers to slaughter the children of non-believers.
PGA2.0 848
If God let Israel be influenced by other wicked nations that practiced child sacrifice and idolatry, Israel would not follow His good decrees and judgments. If those other nations in the Promised Land (which God owned) decided Israel was not going to stay in the land and decided to kill all the Israelites, then God's sworn plan of redemption in which the Messiah, [ . . . ]
As for the children, any innocent children would be restored to a better place by God - His presence. [178]
Can you demonstrate that God owned the Promised Land ? You may assume for the sake of the argument that God created that land.
[178] So you claim, but can you prove that ?


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PGA2.0 330 to SkepticalOne
Now you mention two types of foreign slaves, one a war captive and therefore a reparation for the damages suffered [90], and the other bought to serve the Hebrew family from a foreign country, again usually becoming a slave in a foreign land because of poverty or debt. Even so, the type of slavery or servitude was different between the treatment in Israel to that experienced in other ANE nations. But to your point, the foreigner, during a war, would be responsible for the damages inflicted on the victor.[91] [ . . . ]
[90] I doubt the Israelite's victims found enslavement sufficient compensation for the damage they suffered.
Thanks for yet another doubtful opinionated statement!  Are you speaking of matters you know something about? Have you done any research on ANE slavery? What do you know about ANE slavery???

[91] [a] Might makes right morality. In that respect [b] your fictional worldview does not differ from reality.
[a] It was common in ANE cultures to use might. The Mosaic law was based on justice and mercy. I've explained it briefly above and in other posts.  

[b] Your same old worn-out tune. Show you can explain morality. That is what this post is about, which worldview is more reasonable concerning morality. 

PGA2.0 330 to SkepticalOne
War reparations or restitution was a different principle, the principle of damages owed, damages paid. In our penal system the damages would have to be repaid or else the person would face prison time.
I don't know what banana republic you live in, but in our justice system, [a] it is not necessarily the one who lost a conflict that has to pay the damages. [b] If Bob stole and wrecked Alice's car, in my country it would be Bob who would have to repay the damages to Alice, not the other war round.
[a]





[b] You are the one turning it around (give your head a shake). Just as Bob stole Alice's car, so Germany inflicted great loss in many countries during WWII. 

Biblically speaking, God owns all things since He made the universe and gives life. He gave Israel the Promised Land and brought judgment on those who practiced wickedness inside the land. Those who attacked or plotted against Israel were intent on damaging Israel for their own gain. In the greater picture, if Israel were defeated, the promised Messiah's bloodline (as prophesied) would be compromised and lost. 

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Your fallacy of choice is : missing the point. Read the post again without assuming that 3RU7AL was not being cynical.
You are hypocritical. If 3RU7AL is playing a might makes right fan, then you criticize him. If God is imposing his might makes right justice, then you defend him with excuses.
Well stated.
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Yes, I can see that God would be upset that a baby was aborted so it couldn't die of starvation (3 million children in the world died of starvation last year) or get pediatric cancer. 
Good point.
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If I consent to be a lumberjack, then I consent to the risks that may involve.
So, if you accidentally chainsaw a gash in your leg, you should be expected to "fend for yourself"?
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You also failed to dispute or challenge 3RY7AL's #1 : Your allegedly moral facts are not empirically demonstrable, nor logically necessary.
Step One.

Pretend you've never heard of "YHWH" and you've never heard of "The Bible".

Step Two.

Convince me I should accept your LAWS.

How did Abraham convince anyone to listen?

There was no book he could wave over his head.
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I think you, and many people, overly complicate morality. We only need to agree on something by which to measure our actions. Your preference is god. Mine is well-being.
PGA2.0 331
Well-being in whose eyes? Your subjective eyes? No thank you.
His point exactly. You dislike well-being. He dislikes God. In the real world we all have our preferences.
I dislike injustice. Hitler's or Kim Jung-un's or Margret Sanger's or your relative, subjective well-being is only good for the select members of society, not everyone. Thus, it is unjust for where there is not equal justice; there is none.

PGA2.0 331 to SkepticalOne
How does that answer my question? You continue to evade my questions.
Read who is writing.
What is your point other than another ad hom? 

PGA2.0 331 to SkepticalOne
That is your subjective opinion. What makes that right or anything you say right since you have no objective standard of appeal. Why SHOULD (a moral imperative) I trust your subjective opinion since it appears that is all you have got? Your subjectiveness is what wars are fought over.
Religious wars are far more popular than subjectiveness wars.
In most cases, they are the same. The "just wars" are few and far between. 

PGA2.0 331
Abortion bad -abortion good - abortion bad again - abortion good again.
[a] Something you are missing is that in matter of abortion, almost everyone agrees on what has value, i.e. [b] they have shared preferences. [c] Both the rights of the mother and the life of the child have value. [d] The contention is about what has most value. [e] Almost no one is of the opinion that abortion is good. However, many people consider, i.e. are of the opinion, [f] that in some cases no abortion is even worse.
[a] I did not miss it. Tens of millions disagree that abortion is a good thing. The only value comes when saving the woman's life in a tubal pregnancy.

[b] I must remind you that preference makes nothing right, just doable if the person, group, society has the might to act their preferences. 

[c] What about the "Rights" of the child/unborn? Why are you only giving the woman rights? Must I again remind you, the most basic natural right for any human being is the right to life.

[d] So, once again, you do not recognize that all human beings have equal rights to life. You join the long list of people like Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Kim Jong-un, Pol Pot, Putin, Yi Jiping, who are selective in who lives and dies. These people dehumanized those that they see as less valuable.

[e] Wrong. Many are of that opinion since they are woefully ignorant about what is being killed. They would not support abortion if they thought is wrong. 

[f] 95-99% of abortions are "choice-based" on want or affordability, depending on what source is cited. Since when could anyone other than a mother kill her own offspring based on not wanting them or not being willing to support them? 


  • 0.36% of abortions done to save the life or health of the mother (5,200 per year)
  • 0.09% done in cases of rape or incest (1,300 abortions per year)
  • 0.24% done for fetal birth defects (3,470 per year)
  • 0.69% done for all the hard cases combined (9,970 per year)
  • 99.31% of all abortions are therefore performed for social or economic reasons

Again, I will remind you that you discriminate against one group (the unborn) yet not the other. How is that equal justice? Since when do you or others get to decide who lives and dies based on economic or personal wants? When are you allowed to kill people based on their economic position or because you don't want them? Yet, you advocate this what you call "right" to the woman??
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You validate the moral codec of "YHWH"by using YOUR moral intuition.
PGA2.0 335
I validate them by pointing to a standard beyond myself that is necessary because it is fixed and unchanging. [92] Logically, that is what is necessary because the law of identity (A=A) falls to pieces if every subjective being has a different view on what is right and good.[93] So, it is self-evident for anyone who thinks about what is necessary. A subjective standard does not meet what is necessary.[94]
[92] That doesn't look like what you are doing. [a] You seem to be of the opinion that slavery is wrong, but the Bible appears to condone slavery. [b] So you torture the Bible to make it say what you want. With success. Now the Bible only rarely condones slavery and the slavery it does condone isn't that bad. *sigh of relief*
Moreover, you have so far been unable to demonstrate that being fixed and unchanging are necessary attributes for a standard.
[a] Chattel slavery is wrong. It was the standard of many ANE cultures but not Israel. God strictly forbade mistreatment of others except in the case of wrongdoing for the purpose of punishment and to teach a lesson. 

[b] I use reason to interpret it and understand that God has a specific meaning He wants the reader to understand - His meaning. If God is just and good, and the Bible states Him as being so, we need to understand what exactly took place or was meant to take place according to the Mosaic law. I have gone through it in some depth, and it was largely ignored or talked over, although I will give some credit to SkepticalOne and Stephen for addressing the subject in depth. 

Remember who the OT addressed. It was a people (Israel) living in hostile surroundings with savage practices in these other nations. The slavery or servitude the Bible condones or permits is not the same as these other nations. The biblical servitude is designed to look after and protect those employed. I have likened it to an employer/employee relationship in many ways for you, as an employee subject yourself to the conditions of those who employ you. 

[93] No, it does not. You have admitted yourself in post 301 a word's meaning depends on context. Hence one person may mean something different with the same word. So, if one person is saying “Trees are marpalent.” and the other is saying “Trees are not marpelent.”, then that could mean:
a) They are contradicting each other. In the real world it happens that people contradict each other. That is why that also happens in the worldview of skeptics, because, unlike you, skeptics base their worldview on the real world.
It is common sense and not logically consistent to believe two opposite things regarding the same thing can both be true about it simultaneously and in the same relationship. If you want to deny logic's laws, I think we have gone as far as we can because you are being irrational. A thing cannot be what it is and what it is not at the same time. 

b) [a] Both persons do not mean the same thing with 'marpalent'. Hence, they would not be contradicting each other. You gave as example in post 301 how green can have more than one meaning. In our debate on debate.org, you said a few times that things can't be both right and wrong in the same sense, because you realize they could be [b] right and wrong in a different sense. But then you also realized that guarding term was underming your argument, so you stopped using it and assumed that the same word always means the same thing, thereby leaving reality and entering your fictional worldview, where there is room for God.
[a] I don't even know what the word means if there is such a word, but if there are several meanings, then the same meaning must be used in both cases to be understood or else there is no equivalency. If I say, "The grass is green," it does not mean the same thing as saying, "I am green with envy."  One use of the word green speaks of the literal grass's colour, the other speaks of jealousy/covetousness/desire. In the second instance, I am not saying I am literally green.

[b] I'm not sure of your specific reference since you once again gave no actual context or link.

If the context is speaking of one thing, you can't switch that context to another thing. When you speak of the moral good, you can't switch that to what you like and call that morally good. The two are used to express different things; one an ought, the other a desire or like. There is equivocation going on when that happens.  

[94] A subjective standard is not supposed to meet what is necessary. My bycicle doesn't meet what is necessary, yet that doesn't make my bycicle wrong and it would be stupid to discard my bicycle because of that.
Again, there is a disjunction happening here. You are again trying to equate riding your bicycle with moral good. Not only this, but you are equating a thing as necessary as opposed to a person/persons. Morals come from sentient beings. They do not come from bicycles. Bicycles are not necessary for morals; beings are. 

And then you credit "YHWH"for gifting you the moral intuition you use to validate "the ten commandments".
PGA2.0 335
An objective standard is self-evident for morality. Without one how do you justify your OPINION is BETTER than that of anyone else?[95] Are you going to force your beliefs on others? How does that make it "better."
[95] [a]You seem to be assuming that one needs to be able to justify one's opinion to be better than someone else's. However, if I understand correctly, [b] you yourself are unable to justify your opinion to be better than someone else's. You certainly haven't done so.
[c] Notice again how you omitted to provide a definition or reference standard for “better”. You wouldn't want people to know what exactly you mean with “better”, would you?
[a] Oh, boy... Better is a comparative term. It implies it is being compared to something else. If there is no ideal, then what are you comparing it against? Something that constantly changes? How do you KNOw it is better in such a fleeting standard? Your mark keeps shifting. 

[b] Again, I have what is necessary for there to be a "better." Your worldview does not, or at least...you have not been able to demonstrate it does. I have what is necessary to justify morality; you do not. Thus, once again, my Christian system of thought is more reasonable to believe than yours. 

[c] I have pointed to the standard many times - the biblical God, as I did in the next paragraph, it appears. You continue to ignore it and blow smoke. I can give you many avenues of reasonable proof of His existence. Choosing not to believe them is your choice. 

PGA2.0 335
Furthermore, since [a] the Bible makes the point that we, as humans, are created in the image and likeness of God, we would have a consciousness that retains some of His goodness [96] (even while denying Him), but the problem is that the moral standard is garbled by the Fall and our subjectiveness without God
because we have no clear ideal we can mirror right and wrong against, just a dim reflection.[97] So, even to an extent, Hammurabi can reflect some of the standards of God without that close personal relationship. We see that Caan knew that killing (murdering) his brother was wrong. He hid from God just as Adam did when he took the fruit of the tree of knowledge.
[96] Is that hypothesis supported by evidence?
[a] Yes, evidence you continue to pretend does not exist. The Bible is evidence. It makes claims that are backed in several ways.

[b] You continually speak of good and bad, right and wrong as a reasoning being that the Bible says is made in His image and likeness.  

You like to ask how questions. Answer one yourself. How did God inscribe morality in our hearts?
By creating us as intelligent beings who are capable of finding MEANING and purpose. The problem is that we mar the meaning and purpose when we do not rightfully understand where it comes from or that there are objective truths regarding meaning/morality/right/wrong. 

[97] [a] So God messed up. Did he mess up on purpose or out of clumsyness?
[a] Again, a false assumption from a biblical perspective. God did not mess up; humanity did. That is a clear message revealed in its writings. Even those who are mentally challenged can understand it. 

[b] He did not mess up, yet He allowed us to by giving Adam a free will to choose. Even though you have a will to choose, you will not choose God without His mercy and grace. Thus, in a sense, your will is not free but in bondage to whatever controls it. 

Any human can detect their own moral intuition without any assistance from a book.
PGA2.0 335
I would argue they are personal preference, not moral right, unless the belief reflects God's principles.
Then they would reflect God's personal preference.
God knows all things. Thus, He has an objective knowledge of all things or, if you like, a real, true knowledge. You do not unless you think His thoughts after Him. I have been trying to demonstrate the inadequate, small-mindedness of our limited reasoning without God, and you are doing an outstanding job of backing me up!
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@Amoranemix
The same way you do. Moral instinct. Moral intuition.
PGA2.0 352
It is not moral instinct that I prove what is right and wrong. It is by the revelation of Another, even though we are created in His image and likeness, thus we too are moral beings. The thing is, without His revelation sin prevents us from doing what is right.[98] We want todo what feels pleasant to us or what we desire rather than what isgood.[99] And since the Fall, we are marred with sin. Thus, we thinkapart from God, making up our own moral values that are way too oftencontrary to His standard.
[98] [a] Right according to God's personal morality (GM), you mean. So what? [b] Why should people who don't believe in God and who dislike GM, want to do what is right according to GM? [c] That sin is preventing me from doing that, doesn't bother me.
[a] So what? He knows all things; you do not. 

[b] They don't usually. They want to do the opposite, like giving a licence to kill the most innocent human beings (the unborn). If they truly want to find out what is the right thing to do, it requires an omniscient, omnibenevolent, immutable, eternal God revealing it to them. 

But sometimes, people get tired of all of humanity's inhumanity and look for the answer and find God in/as that answer. 

[c] You are not telling me anything I don't know. 

[99] Indeed. [a] Biological evolution tends to generate animals that [b] couldn't care less about GM.
[a] That is your worldview, biological macro-evolution, not mine. I believe human beings were created differently from the animals to their own kind. You think that we have a common ancestor, the one-celled organism, whereas I believe that our common ancestor is God. You believe the "evolutionary chain" shows animals adapting and changing from that one common ancestor. I believe we are similar and yield similar traits because we share the same environment and food sources. Thus, we must share common traits. 

[b] Except for humanity. Most societies throughout history have looked to God or gods. 

The ten yamas are:
[ . . . ]
PGA2.0 352
Some of these are restated in the Ten Commandments. Others I disagree with. Finally, who is the authority who revealed them? Is such an authority almighty? If so, let's discuss that being.
So what if the source is not mighty enough [a] to your taste? I am sure God, were he to exist, [b] could smite all his competitors, but [c] not everyone likes might makes right morality.
[a] You mean your "tastes." We are not even there yet until you understand that your worldview is insufficient and unreasonable. 

[b] Yes, He could immediately. Instead, He has given us a lifetime, and when we die, we will come into His presence and be accountable. Usually, He lets our sins reach their maximum before He holds us accountable, but all the while, we face trials in this life that turn us to or against Him. The trails can come by our fellow human beings doing wrong that affect us, or they can come by a natural disaster in which judgment comes in some form, even up to the taking of our lives. 

[c] The only might that is right is the might that knows right. You have not demonstrated that you know what is right. It can change according to who holds the idea in your worldview. After all this time, you still have avoided proving what you believe as an atheist is more reasonable than what I believe as a Christian. 

PGA2.0 352 to 3RU7AL about the the 10 niyamas
Why is this guru sufficient?
Since when does a guru need to be sufficient?
Only if you want to be certain of the truth or have what is necessary for certainty. Does 3BRU7AL have a god that is necessary for certainty? How does his god compare to the Christian God? How has his god revealed himself/herself/itself, and what proofs has it given us? Again, his god is dismal in comparison to the evidence for the Christian God. 
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@3RU7AL
Is being free your moral preference?
Individual freedom is impossible without the individual ability to freely generate their own food, clothing and shelter.
That is a big assumption; providing physical necessities makes you free. If your mind is not free, neither are you. Whatever controls you keeps you unfree. 
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@3RU7AL
You say one thing but have no footing to prove it true. Why SHOULD I believe what you have to say?
You say one thing but have no footing to prove it true. Why SHOULD I believe what you have to say?
I can give you reasonable proofs, but I have learned that a person cannot be convinced against their will. I am willing to do so too, but I have found it a waste of time to date. People will always make up another "what-if" to infinity unless they come to the end of their rope. It is in times of trouble that many people come to know God. Of course, many others blame God in times of trouble instead of relying on Him. 

If you wanted proof, I am willing to go into the prophetic argument as to its reasonableness. Are you willing to go there? If not, I will not bother. If so, I want a commitment to staying the course, and I want feedback from you. When I ask a question, I would expect an answer.  
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@PGA2.0
If you wanted proof, I am willing to go into the prophetic argument as to its reasonableness.
That's not a logical proof.

Your old book made some predictions.

I'm not going to dispute your claim about prophecy.

The ability to make some accurate predictions does not mean everything in the book is 100% factual.
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@PGA2.0
Individual freedom is impossible without the individual ability to freely generate their own food, clothing and shelter.
That is a big assumption; providing physical necessities makes you free. If your mind is not free, neither are you. Whatever controls you keeps you unfree. 
(IFF) you cannot freely generate your own food, clothing and shelter (THEN) you must submit yourself to your (human) provider
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@PGA2.0
God knows all things. Thus, He has an objective knowledge of all things or, if you like, a real, true knowledge.
GOD = SMART

HUMAN = DUMB

I get it.

HOW CAN WE KNOW WHAT GOD KNOWS?

AND.

HOW CAN WE VERIFY IF A HUMAN IS SPEAKING FOR GOD?
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@PGA2.0
99.31% of all abortions are therefore performed for social or economic reasons
Great.

Why don't the "anti-abortion" people support SOCIAL OR ECONOMIC SUPPORT FOR THE POOR??

It seems like effective SOCIAL OR ECONOMIC support could prevent 99.31% of abortions.
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@PGA2.0
Chattel slavery is wrong. It was the standard of many ANE cultures but not Israel. God strictly forbade mistreatment of others except in the case of wrongdoing for the purpose of punishment and to teach a lesson.
The "YHWH" only prohibits chattel slavery OF ISRAELITES.

The "YHWH" does NOT prohibit chattel slavery OF FOREIGNERS.
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@ludofl3x
This looks pretty dumb as a set up here. First, if everything that exists has an explanation for its existence, you'd now have the question of what explains the exisence of god. And P2 does not in any way follow from P1, it's a leap of leaps. You can replace God with anything and it has the same validity. I know, I know, you only argue for the god of th bible, which makes this argument correct in your view, but it will never move anyone who doesn't already believe as you do.  I' mean I'm not familiar with the rest of the argument, but on its face, this is not a very sound syllogism. 
Well stated.
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3RU7AL 849
I usually read the first page of the topic and then skip to the end and read them in reverse order (I use "likes" to keep my place).

If the conversation is productive (and I hope this one is a good example) then the salient points should become compressed towards the tail end of the discussion.
I usually read the whole thread. Therefore I usually avoid already long threads. I don't have the impression salient points are compressed towards the end, especially since the end is no fixed reference point. ;)

3RU7AL 794
We have similar experiences and therefore understand similar words similarly.
My point is that even though we have similar understandings of some words, that doesn't mean that the  MEANING  of those words is "set-in-stone" (as you seem to believe).
PGA2.0 854
Think of what you are staying, will you?
Do words in context convey a specific meaning or not?
When you look in a dictionary, the possible word usages are given, the contexts in which a word is used one way or another.
The context is sometimes insufficient to determine the meaning. Sometimes the author even does not know the meaning.

PGA2.0 854 to 3RU7AL
You say no; words don't have meaning in a context that is set in stone. They can mean whatever a person wants them to mean. These dictionary definitions mean nothing. Thus, in your opinion, in those contexts, they can mean whatever the person wants them to mean.[179] Please note, I am not saying word meanings do not change over time.[180] I am saying that what words mean in context are defined and set until  a new meaning catches on; then, the dictionaries change/add to reflect and include the new contextual meaning.
[179] You are mistaken. Words are not decided by individuals, but by society. Again, language is conventional. Just like with morality, it could also be decided by those in power, giving 'might makes meaning' language. However, in the case of language, those in power rarely care enough to impose their opinion on others (except by imposing a language).
[180] 'Good', 'right' and 'wrong' are also words. Yet you dismiss the possibility of their definition changing for no apparent reason other than your need of God-belief.
You also dismiss the possibility of the meaning of those words changing because a change in historic context for no apparent reason other than your need of God-belief.

3RU7AL 796
Only a fool would claim to know things that they don't have any way of validating.
PGA2.0 854
All evidence of origins is interpreted. No one was there to witness origins. No one can repeat the process of origins. The data needs to be interpreted. The evidence does not come with the phrase, "happened 13.8 billion years ago." So, depending on where you start depends on your thinking because ideas are built upon core beliefs. That is why atheist thinking is naturalistic and materialistic. They exclude from their thinking God or gods as a workable reason for anything. They try to analyze everything via nature, which, incidentally, I contend, points to God.
If you could decide which are the categories available to put in people who disagree with you, most people would not fit an any category.

PGA2.0 781
Okay. Which opposing social norms are the true right? Are you saying that they both are?
Neither are inherently "right."[a] They're just what we've agreed upon works for the species. As we dominate all resources on the planet, it's worked out well.[b]
PGA2.0 856
[a] Then your system of thought is irrational and illogical, as I have explained before. I don't think I can reason with you.
[b] Who agreed to? Are you arguing the fallacy of Ad Populum?
[a] Your fallacy of choice is the non-sequitur : your conclusion does not follow from the premise.
[b] You are guilty of decimating your intelligence again. Two posts back you explained how words can change meaning if a new meaning catches on and yet that did not beg the questions to you about who it catches on with and whether that could be an ad populum fallacy. Rightly so, for those would have been stupid questions. Then you decided to decimate your intelligence in order to write post 856.

PGA2.0 857 to Amoranemix
I am going to have to break your post into sections. There is too much information to cover with one post, and your words all run together and make it difficult to read. Maybe you should check your copy apt. Somehow the information becomes jumbled together when you copy and paste. Please correct that for further communication.
It is probably due to a bug in the forums parser when I post text copied from OpenOffice. I have tried the cumbursome task of re-adding spaces by hand. Now I am trying to use Wordpad for an intermadiate copy, which I think overal is less work.

PGA2.0 857
Also, we have had long discussions on Debate.org (in some cases over a thousand posts) in which nothing was accomplished because you swamped me with more than I could handle in each post, a habit we are both guilty of doing. (^8
You could have just taken the time needed. You still can as the thread is still active. There are hundreds of questions and challenges waiting for you. A typical interaction goes like this :
PGA : [bald assertion]
Amoranemix : “So you claim, but can you prove that ?”
PGA : [no response]
Amoranemix : “What a surprise.”

It is interesting to me that you acknowledge the subjectivity of chess and still look for a 'best' move. Aren't you the same person that claims there can be no 'best' without a fixed (absolute, universal) reference point? You are contradicting yourself.
PGA2.0 860
You are comparing apples to oranges again. How is chess a moral issue unless I cheat?[181]
The fixed standard is too complicated for us to know every possible outcome. We would have to think countless moves ahead to determine the best outcome for every move.[182]
[181] Obviously, it is not and none has suggested otherwise.
[182] Must that fixed standard for chess also be absolute, ultimate and universal ? Can that standard also exist without God ?

[1] You are the one putting all youreggs in the basket of a mythical, invisible sky magician. SkepticalOne is open to anything supported by evidence.
PGA2.0 864
Thanks for your assertion and opinion.-
Are you speaking for SkepticalOne now?
I have in common with him that I also don't put all my eggs in the same basket, which allows me to much better appreciate his reasoning than you.

[2] Why would that [skeptics putting all eggs in basket of mythological naturalism] be? Skeptics follow the evidence, wherever it may lead.
PGA2.0 864
Because they dismiss God or gods, therefore they look for explanations in the natural realm.[182] They are left with mindless naturalism.
Skeptics follow their worldview presuppositions. No one is neutral.
[182] Skeptics dismiss God after seeing the (lack of) evidence, not before. Moreover, dismissing God does not imply looking for answers, especially not the answers to your questions.

PGA2.0 in OP
Atheists, as people who have thought about existence, often make the claim that Atheism is an absence of belief in God or a deity. Does that argument work?[3] I say no. I could claim theism is a lack of belief in atheism or an absence (not the presence) of the denial of God or gods.[4] In either position, both the atheist and theist hold lots of beliefs about God or the lack thereof. An atheist not believing in God as Creator would have to believe something else as there cause, yet something about God too in their denial of Him.[5] You can't deny something you have no idea of and SkepticalOne definitely has views about God. Thus, atheism is a worldview.[6] It examines life's most basic questions and comes to a conclusion from a standpoint lacking God.[7] It is a belief system in its own right usually with philosophical or methodological naturalism as one of its cornerstones or core tenants.[8] But is atheism as justifiable or as reasonable as a belief in the biblical God? I plan to examine this in a number of areas. This topic is about one area of atheisms reason - morality. Can atheists reasonably justify morality in comparison to Christianity/Judaism?[9] That last statement is a nutshell of the topic of debate.
[3] A claim is not an argument.
PGA2.0 864
The argument is that atheists have thought about existence and God or gods displayed when they say something about such a being.[183] The argument is that atheists make claims such as atheism is an absence of a belief in God or gods (some other deity). I have heard atheists say such things. How do they know God does not exist? They don't; they assume it.
[184] No, that is not the argument. Is is not even an argment. You are merely making claims. Arguments are claims with their support.
[183] That is not true for atheists in general, but probably true for those debating about Chistianity.
[184] What evidence can you present that atheists just assume God and a gazillion other deities do not exist ?

[4] I could say a cup of coffee is the lack of the absense of a cup of coffee, but I prefer not to complicate things.
PGA2.0 864
Okay? So what?[185]

When claiming something, it needs support, reasons. I have given lots of reasons. I say the atheist denies God/gods, but their initial presuppositions by denying God are not reasonable.[186] As simple as that. And I have gone into depth on that in several areas, including this topic.[187]

When you deny nothing, then what exactly are you denying?[188] The atheist who denies God, what exactly are they denying?[189]
[185] So nothing apparently. Presumably you said that because it serves no purpose other than to distract from the fact that you don't have a case.
[186] So you claim without any support or reason, but can you prove that is an atheistic presupposition ?
[187] You have touched it superficially. I don't recall having read a coherent argument demonstrating that the presupposition “God does not exist” is an unreasonable one, probably because you have not presented such argument.
[188] Nothing I presume. You can look up a description of nothing on the internet.
[189] Good question. There is no single coherent description of God.

[5] That doesn't follow. He or she can be agnostic on the issue. However, most atheists believe that nature did it and indeed, no atheists knows everything about it, which, in the atheistic worldviews, is to be expected.
PGA2.0 864
What does not follow? What issue - God?[190] Even being agnostic, the unbeliever looks to a naturalistic framework for the reasons of existence, as you confirm.[191]

Yes, not knowing all things is to be expected from limited subjective beings. Thus, looking for a purely naturalistic explanation has no guarantees, but if God exists and is revealed as per the Christian framework, we can know it as a certainty.[192] So God, once again, has what is necessary for certainty.
[190] Your claim that an atheist would have to believe in something else as their cause does not follow. The issue : the atheist's cause.
[191] You are mistaken, for I have never confirmed that bald assertion of yours.
[192] Certainty is ambiguous as it may or may not refer to a fact. That God exists has not yet been proven and that God, if he exists, is as revealed as per the Christian framework also has not yet been proven.
In addition, whether or not an atheistic or Christian worldview can provide certainty, if true, is off topic.

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@PGA2.0
[6] That doesn't follow. Atheism is an attribute of worldviews that lack a deity.
PGA2.0 864
They understand the God they deny while claiming there is evidence for Him. They refer to the Bible, which says it is God's revelation to humanity. They also treat Him as a real being, claiming that God is unjust and immoral. How can a non-existent being be unjust and immoral?[193] They hate this God? Why are they hating a non-existent being?[194] So, their worldview is inconsistent.
Your fallacy of choice is the hasty generalization. That some atheists do these things does not imply all atheists do.
[193] Your ignorance is tiring. Why don't you choose a worldview that allows you to answer such questions i.s.o. bothering skeptics with them ? I base my worldview on reality. It allows me to answer many questions that are unfathomable to you. You should try it.
Nonetheless, I will help you. Does Lex Luthor, a DC Comics Superman villain, exist ? If not, is Lex Luthor immoral ? If so, how can he be ?
[194] Your fallacy of choice is the loaded question, for you have so far been unable to demonstrate atheists hate God.
A predilection for fallacies is an indication of a deficient worldview.

[7] What are those life's most basic questions atheism examines and reaches conclusions from?
PGA2.0 864
Atheists answer the same question religious believers do.

What exists? (Metaphysics)
Atheist: Nature, the universe. [195]
Christian: The natural and supernatural.

What am I?
Atheist: We are a biological bag of atoms, a living organism. [195]
Christian: I am a creation of God with a physical body and spirit, a living soul.

Who am I? (Identity)
Atheist: A highly evolved animal that traces a common ancestry back to a singled celled ameba. [196]
Christian: A special creation of God, made in His image and likeness, different from animals, created to their own kind.

Why am I here/why do I exist? (Ontology)
Atheist: Without God or gods, you are a cosmic accident, and there is no reason for your existence. [196]
Christian: God made me for a purpose. I am here for a reason.

How do I know? (Epistemology)
Atheist: Through empirical verification, I can know. [195]
Christian: God has revealed, and we have been created in His image and likeness. Thus we are capable of reason and discovery. When we think His thoughts after Him, we truly know something. The natural universe displays His mighty power and reveals Him further. Thus, we think His thoughts after Him. We discover laws; we see beauty and order; we find self-evident truths.

What difference does it make? (Axiology)
Atheist: Nothing, ultimately. The universe is meaningless, and we pretend there is meaning by making it up for a short period of time, then return to the meaningless void of nothingness where nothing matters.[196]
Christian: We were created for a purpose, and if we find that purpose, we find true and everlasting life with God.

What happens to me when I die? (Destiny)
Atheist: I die. I cease to exist.[195]
Christian: If I believe, I live with God as a joint heir with Christ forever where the joy I experience eclipses anything else I have ever experienced.
[195] These anwers common to most atheists are scientifically demonstrable.
None of the Christian answers are scientifically demonstrable.
[196] Answers vary from atheist to atheist.

[8] I think that is more what you would want it to be than what it really is.
PGA2.0 864
Why should I believe you? How reliable is your mind in determining what really is?
Assuming you want to believe true things, because reality is what I base my worldview on and what I think is rarely false. The reliability of my mind depends on the topic.
On the other hand, I should not believe you when making bald assertions, which you did at [8].

Can atheists reasonably justify morality in comparison to Christianity/Judaism?[9]
[9] Is justify the right word, or do you mean explain?
PGA2.0 864
Yes
Definition of  justify
transitive verb
1a: to prove or show to be just, right, or reasonable trying to justify his selfish behavior I shouldn't have to justify myself to them. Justify the ways of God to man— John Milton
[other definitions]
I use it in the 1a sense here.
That refers to justice, showing something is just, not showing something is true. So, I will assume you ask for an explanation in stead.

Obviously not all atheists can, but all can say nature did. [10] in post 798 goes in more detail. That explanation has the advantage of being based on something that exists : nature. Alternative explanations tend have difficulty demonstrating the latter.

I will zoom in even further on the last step, namely the appearance of social animals.
Social animals exhibit types of behaviour that is typical for them, i.e. that is not usually found in non-social animals (nor other lifeforms). That is even more prevalent in humans because they are very intelligent (compared to other animals) and often live in large societies. This leads to two characteristics that strongly influence human behaviour :

- Two capacities humans have evolved is empathy and theory of mind. It allows to assess and even feel the emotions of other (e.g. pity) and to envision the world from the perspective of others. In the interest of peaceful coexistence and coöperation it is often advangageous to use those abilities to preserve or defend the interests of others, which may even extend to the treatment of animals.
- In the interests of coexisting in large groups, societies have developed rules, be them implicit or explicit, to favour the functioning of those societies. Those rules concern how to treat and how not to treat others and can also even extend to animals and the environment.

Humans tend to give concepts that are important names, as that makes it easier to ponder over and communicate about. The above type of behaviours and rules of behaviour, combined with their associated intentions, are considered important. In the English language humans have named that morality.

If I understand correctly, you are unwilling to have your worldview examined the same way as the atheist's worldview, correct?
PGA2.0 864
Where did you gather that conclusion from? The purpose of this thread is to find which of the two worldviews better explains morality.
I don't remember, but it is typical for presuppositionalists, including you.
So, all are open to inspection.

PGA2.0 864
I conclude both from the Christian worldview and by the lack of explanatory power of other worldviews. Once God [or gods - necessary being(s)] is denied, you would fall on the sword of naturalism and chance happenstance as the root cause of your existence. By following the causal tree to its roots, you find that an atheist cannot justify what they have built their beliefs upon. It is not reasonable, and it does not make sense.
So, that is the case you set out to build. May you succeed before the end of next millennium. Good luck.

First, what is the origin (reasoning the chain of events back to its furthest point possible) of moral conscious beings?[10] Is such a causal factor intentional (thus mindful) or random, chaotic?[11] A personal Being who has revealed Himself as omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent, immutable, and eternal would have what is necessary in determining what is moral because there would be a fixed measure or reference point in which a comparison can be made as to 'the good' (since there is a best).[12]How does SkepticalOne arrive at best? What is the ideal, the fixedreference point? That necessary Being is reasonable to assume sincewe only witness or observe moral mindful beings deriving theirexistence from other moral, mindful beings.[13] With atheism (no Godor gods) what is left for the origins of morality and beforethat conscious beings? I say it is a blind, indifferent, mindless,random chance happenstance.[14] How is that capable of anything, letalone being the cause of moral mindful beings?
[10] I am sure you are superficially familiar with the story. In a nutshell : Big Bang, inhomogeneity, separation of fundamental forces, inflation, dark matter, gravity, first generation stars, possibly second generation stars, formation of the solar system, the goldilock zone, comet strikes, organic molecules, appearance of life, cambrian explosion, first social animals.
And no. I don't know all the details perfectly, which is perfectly consistent with my worldview.
PGA2.0 871
[a] Just like you?

So, somehow organic molecules happen from inorganic matter and become conscious of their environment? They develop eyes, and hands and everything needed to interact with this chance universe. How does that happen, and where have you ever witnessed it happening? What you propose is great in theory, but it is not experiential. It takes great faith to believe these things.[195]
[a] I suspect my understanding is less superficial than yours.
[195] That is a poor description with disparaging intent, but not entirely inaccurate. It does seem off topic though, so I won't get into it and won't challenge you for a mechanistic explanation based on your worldview that would allow comparison. If you think it is relevant though, you may give a mechanistic explanation consistent with and specific to your worldview.

PGA2.0 871
[b] Big Bang - That means you support a beginning to the universe. Why did it happen?
Here is “The Leibnizian Cosmological Argument” for the existence of God as put forth by William Lane Craig and others:
[the argument]
Why assumes a motive. The scientific community has not (yet) been able to establish a motive, let alone what it would be. Most experts do not believe there is a motive.
The mechanism of the Big Bang appears off topic. The cause may be on topic if it can be proven.
The Leibnizian Cosmological Argument is a bad off topic argument.
The rest of your rebuttal is also off topic.

[11] Or could it be neither?
PGA2.0 871
I'm listening. What do you propose?
I am not proposing anything, for I prefer to stay on topic. If you want hypotheses for the cause of the Big Bang, then search the internet. If you  limit yourself to scientific ones, then you won't find God among them.

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[12] Moral according to who?[*] Does it have what is necessary to know what is moral according to itself ?[**] What a great achievement ! Adolf Hitler also had what is necessary to know what is moral according to himself, despite him lacking of a fixed reference point. Kim Jong Un as well.[***]
And while you are at it, that best that there is, is best according to who ?[****]
PGA2.0 871
[*] Already explained above. There is only one Being who fits the mould.
[**] "It?" With a being who is good and knows all things, why not?
[**] I certainly hope you are not serious with that statement, just being facetious?[196] No, Adolf Hitler nor Kim Jung-Un do not have what it takes, what is necessary. They are subjective, relative, limited human beings.[197] Why are they right?[198] First, they do not have to exist for there to be morality.[199] People were making moral judgments long before they existed. Second, morality has to be based on a 'best' for comparison[200]; otherwise, it is relative, and the moral good can be whatever anyone wants to make it.[201] Thus, it does not pass the logical consistency test or that of the laws of logic.[202]
[****] Best in light of God, the ideal, the measure, a necessary being who knows all things and is benevolent by nature.
[*] You have not explained it above and it did not require an explanation, just the reference moral standard, which you, as usual, have omitted.
Assuming you mean moral according to God, then you are claiming that a  personal Being who has revealed Himself as omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent, immutable, and eternal would have what is necessary in determining what is moral according to God.
So what ? Why would anyone care about what is moral according to God ? What about those who prefer to know what is moral according to Kim Jong-Un or Bashar Al Assad ?
You assume that God's morality exists without having given a good reason to believe so.
[196] I am serious. It is a parody of your claim, but actually true. It is just not enlightening. That is the point : your claims, even when true after lifting the veil of ambiguity, are not enlightening. They are just a bout an egomaniacal god who likes his own morality and wants everyone to share his preference. In that he is not unique. He may just be wiser and mightier than his rivals and lack existence.
[197] You claim that Adolf Hitler and Kim Jong-Un do not have what is necessary to know what is moral according to themselves. Please demonstrate that claim.
[198] Right is ambiguous. I assume you mean moral according to themselves. Why is Kim Jong Un moral according to himself ? I assume because having a self-serving morality suits him as much as it does God and he likes what suits him.
[199] What relevance does that have ? We are talking about their own pesonal morality, which is dependent on their existence.
[200] Is that a fact or just your personal opinion ? If I were to ask you ask you what best God bases his morality on, the most sensible thing you would say would probably be : God's nature. Assuming that, Kim Jong-Un's best could be his nature.
You are also confusing morality in general and their personal morality.
[201] So what ? You dislike it ? Do you still believe reality cares about your likes and dislikes ?
[202] Your fallacy of choice is the non-sequitur. It is not illogical for different people to give different meanings to a word or a word having the possibility to mean anything.
[****] So you claim there is a best according to God who is benevolent by nature. Please demonstrate that claim.

[13] How is that supposed to follow? Please elaborate your argument.
PGA2.0 871
What part?
Your argument appears to be the following :
Definition : the necessary being =  A personal Being who has revealed Himself as omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent, immutable, and eternal
P1. We only observe moral mindful beings deriving their existence from other moral, mindful beings.
C. Therefore, it is reasonable to assume the necessary being.

That argument is invalid and weak.

Your 'support' :
A necessary being as reasonable? What attributes would such a being need? The ones I described apply to the biblical God.”

Hence, your 'improved' argument :
P1. We only observe moral mindful beings deriving their existence from other moral, mindful beings.
P2. The necessary being has the attributes of God.
C. Therefore, it is reasonable to assume that necessary being.

That argument is still invalid and weak.

The inablity to construct valid or strong arguments is a sign of a deficient worldview.

PGA2.0 871
Moral beings the causal agent in producing more moral beings? First, morality is a mindful process. It requires conscious, living, intelligent beings to ponder such abstract things. Second, all we ever witness is the conscious moral agents giving birth to other such beings. We don't see them arising out of inorganic matter.
We don't see any arise out of God either.

Second, how do relative, subjective beings determine anything other than preference - what they like? IOW's, why is your 'moral' preference any 'better' than mine?[15] Is it more reasonable? I say no. It does not have what is necessary for morality. Preference is just a like or dislike. What is good, morally speaking, about that?[16]
For example, with a ruler, I, a subjective being, can objectively measure the length of a table. Can you not do that ?
[15] Define 'better'.
[16] Good according to who ?
PGA2.0 864
[15] Morally, of superior quality, more excellent than what is good.
You forgot to answer my question.
Assuming the answer is yes, it is possible for subjective beings to determine some things objectively.
[15] Then the answer is that SkepticalOne's moral preference can be 'better' than yours by being 'morally, of superior quality, more excellent than what is good' than yours.

PGA2.0 864
[16] Precisely! If morality is relative to the person or group holding the belief, what makes what you like, your personal taste, good?[203] It just is. Your liking ice-cream is not something I must like. You are not going to convince me abortion is good because you like it as a choice for women in the same way you will not convince me it is good to kill innocent human beings, of which the unborn is. If you think it is good to kill innocent human beings, would you willingly allow you and your family to be the next ones to be killed?[204] The point: you can agree to many things, but you can't live experientially with such thinking.[205] Justice must be equally applied for something to be just. Equality must be applied for all, or else there is no such thing operating.[206] Once you make a law that discriminates and dehumanized one group of humans (i.e., Hitler with the Jews; abortion with the unborn human being), there is no longer fairness there (it becomes unlivable for whoever they want to villanize).   Furthermore, such thinking does not pass the logical consistency test.[207] Good = Good. Good has a specific identity.[208] What is good cannot at the same time be bad regarding the same thing.[209] Good, then loses its identity. It can mean anything depending on who thinks it (moral relativism and postmodernism, in which all values are deconstructed and rebuilt).
[203] You had omitted to mention the reference moral standard, making the question unanswarable. So I asked you. You refuse to answer. In stead you ask another question without mentioning the reference moral standard.
Why do you systematically refuse to mention the references for your qualitative claims and questions ? To sabotage the discussion, I suspect.
[204] That depends on further context of that hypothetical situation.
[205] That point may be relevant. Please prove it.
[206] That throws your fondness of God's preferential treatment out of the window.
[207] What thinking are you talking about ?
If you were talking about on topic atheistic thinking, demonstrate it does not pass the logical consitencey test.
[208] Context may be insufficient to determine the exact meaning, especially if the author omits to mention the reference moral standard of moral terms.
[209] In the mean time have refuted that in post 985, but that was for right and wrong. The good / bad version is :
Good and bad are not necessarily mutually exclusive. Language is conventional. Meaning of good and bad is decided by people, e.g. by the author. The meaning given to the word 'good' by Bob does not necessarily exclude the meaning given to the word 'bad' by Alice.
If Bob says : “Apple pie is good”, he may mean : “Apple pie is good for my health.”
If Alice says : “Apple pie is bad”, she may mean : “Apple pie is bad for my health.”

The only relevant, possibly true claim you made was your 'point'. The rest appears to be a display of your ignorance.

I believe you are making a category error. How are evaluations of chess actions and evaluations of life actions fundamentally different...other than you saying so?
PGA2.0 872
No, you are making a categorical error.

One set of evaluations has to do with what is (the descriptive), the other with what ought to be (the prescriptive). [ . . . ]
So, according to you :
– “Bishop takes h7+ is a bad move.” is descriptive.
– “Sabotaging your colleague's work is a bad behaviour.” is prescriptive.
How do you justify claiming that difference ?

Please take note of the difference between qualitative values and quantitative values. I describe what I like. That is, I do not prescribe what I like as a must that you like it too. I like ice-cream is a personal preference. I do not force you to eat it too as a moral must. If I liked to kill human beings for fun and believe you SHOULD too, that would be a moral prescription, although not established as an objective one. The words 'should,' 'must,' or 'ought' denote a moral prescription.[17] No one will condemn me for my preference of liking ice-cream but they will in my preference for killing others and prescribing others should like it too. That is because there is a distinction between what is (liking ice-cream) and what should be, a distinction between the two that has been called the is/ought fallacy. There is no bridge between what is and what ought to be in that one is a mere description of what is liked or what is while the other is what should or must be the case.[18] Whereas I believe I derive my moral aptitude from a necessary moral being, you believe you derive yours from chance happenstance. How is that more reasonable? Am I missing something here?
[17] One should, must or ought according to a standard or goal. In case of moral prescriptions they refer to a moral opinion or standard.
PGA2.0 878
Which standard or goal???[210] You forget the goal MUST reflect the good.[211] A moral opinion or standard??? Whose???[212]

Why are your goals any better than any other? Nothing, unless there is an objective, universal, fixed and unchanging reference point.[214] What is that?
[210] Any moral standard or goal will do.
In stead or rebutting with your usual tire, omit the red herrings and prove your relevant claims. I know you can't do that and I just want to draw attention to it.
[211] I am forgetting no such thing. The referenced moral standard defines the good in that context.
[212] That depends on the circumstances. You already know that, but it does not suit you because God has nothing to do with. You need God to be in there, but is he is cramped for space.
[214] Can you prove there is an objective, universal, fixed reference point ?
If so, why are your goals better than any other ?
If not, why are your goals better than any other ?


Mopac
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@Amoranemix
Mopac 386
The Truth isGod.[101]
As atheism is adenial of Absolute Truth or Ultimate Reality, it is the position ofnihilism.[102]
Nihilismdemolishes morality. Anything built off nihilism is like a housebuilt on sand. Morality becomes a matter of convenience for whomeverhas the ability to excercise authority.[103]
[101] What do you mean ?(The Truth is God)

I mean that The Ultimate Reality is God. That is, God is what is ultimately real. The singular reality, The Truth.


[102] Can you prove that ? (Atheism is denial of absolute truth, the position of nihilism)

As God is The Ultimate Reality, to be an atheist towards this God is very naturally the position of nihilism.


Nietzsche himself, who was instrumental in bringing nihilism to the forefront of philosophy said...

"That there is no truth; that there is no absolute state of affairs-no 'thing-in-itself.' This alone is Nihilism, and of the most extreme kind." 





[103] If morality becomes a matter of convencience, then, contrary to what you claimed, it is not demolished.

It certainly is, because this is not morality. This is arbitrariness. From the orthodox standpoint, morality has everything to do with one's relationship with The Truth. If The Truth doesn't exist, there is no way of operating that can be properly called moral.




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@Mopac
Which flavor of ice-cream does "YHWH" think is the one-true-ultimate-and-perfect flavor of ice-cream?
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@3RU7AL
As you know, this is an absurd question.