That is your opinion. Many may agree. Many may disagree.
The sadistic serial rapist would disagree.
Speaking atheistically you are no better or worse than he is ultimately.
I'm not sure the rapist would disagree. They still might like the law to protect themselves. They might just break the law because they think they can get away with it. Either way it doesn't matter.
Without protecting people from each other, there would be no civilisation. If the rapist understood the implications of this, they probably would support the law, even if they broke it.
Theses are fair questions to ask... I'm just not sure you are asking to try to work to find an answer, or you just want to call my atheism into question by saying everything is my opinion.
Also, I'm not sure why you 'atheistically'. Atheism is a position on God, not one on morality or law.
Why is that opinion of yours the "objective truthful way to treat people"?
What makes your opinion more truthful objectively than the opinion of the serial rapist?
Because I don't hold myself above others with my actions. Well, in practice I probably do, but I try to be a better person. If there is no outside value, then we are all equally valueless. From an objective perspective, there is no reason to treat one person's will as more important than another's. So you could say it is truthful to acknowledge the will of others, and objective to not treat your own will as more important.
I know I don't have it all worked out though.
Maybe so.
Many do not.
Many like to be brutal and sadistic. Many do not care about themselves let alone anyone else.
If each person determines their own meaning in life, then the rapist is simply doing what he wants. When he dies, he will die and become dust just like you.
True. I don't know what you want me to do about that though.
Paradoxum, I get that. All I am trying to do is open up the possibility that the God you reject is also rejected by me, yet I would still believe that God exists.
Paul Tillich in his
Systematic Theology says
I know you believe in a different sort of God, but I'm not sure if it should be called God.
What does it mean for God to be 'being-itself'? Existence? If God is just 'being-itself', then why not called it 'being-itself', rather than 'God'?
I can't tell how far your beliefs are from my former beliefs. I did think God was the ground of all being, and that he was the existence of everything, but that he was also also a being 'Himself'. ie: a perfect being beyond and within space and time.
Do you think God has values, does he love, or purposefully take actions in the world? Is it more than existence?
He also says
The BIG question is what we are talking about when we talk about 'God'. If we are understanding 'God' as being a Supreme being' who sits upon a throne up beyond the clouds and if we call this 'theism' then atheism is natural in an age of space exploration. But why should our concept of God be beholden to premodern ideas? So when you say that you reject God, I am not so sure you do!
Well there are mid points between a greek style god in the sky, and what you seem to believe. For example, you might think there is a personal God that is beyond space and time.
I understand God to be personal in some sense. By that, I mean more than a force or state. Conscious in some sense. If it has objective values/ morality I might consider it to be God.
What do you think God is, in more detail?