- May 3, 2015
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- US-Libertarian
Firstly, what are they?
Law of identity: A is A
Law of non-contradiction: A can't be A and non A at the same time and in the same way
Law of excluded middle: A is either A or non-A, there is no in between.
So, the questions are these. Are these laws absolute? If they are then how does the relativist deal with the fact that there are absolutes while still holding to the view that there are not? If they are not then can you explain how or why? And finally, if there are absolutes then what would preclude God from declaring that there are such things as sin (for our purposes falling short of an absolute standard of behavior), for example murder, rape, etc.?
Law of identity: A is A
Law of non-contradiction: A can't be A and non A at the same time and in the same way
Law of excluded middle: A is either A or non-A, there is no in between.
So, the questions are these. Are these laws absolute? If they are then how does the relativist deal with the fact that there are absolutes while still holding to the view that there are not? If they are not then can you explain how or why? And finally, if there are absolutes then what would preclude God from declaring that there are such things as sin (for our purposes falling short of an absolute standard of behavior), for example murder, rape, etc.?