Dave Ellis
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- Dec 27, 2011
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So you think in overall general terms they are wrong?
Yes, your analogy does not make sense.
No, I am not deifying them but most political scholars do think that they are some of the greatest political thinkers in history, so it is not just me.
That's not what you said, you said greatest thinkers, not greatest political thinkers. By saying greatest thinkers, you open them up to comparison with everyone, including the great philosophers of history, many of whom the founding fathers got their ideas from.
Thomas Jefferson didn't invent the concept of freedom of religion, he read about the concept from others, saw its value and worked to entrench it in the constitution when he had the power to. Some colonies had freedom of religion prior to the revolution. Some ancient empires, notably the Achaemenid Empire under Cyrus the Great had freedom of religion back in 550BC
There are very few completely unique and new ideas that the founding fathers came up with by themselves. The House of Representatives was based upon the British House of Commons. The Senate was based upon the Roman Senate (from which it draws its name) and the "upper house of government" element comes from the British House of Lords.
Even the democratic republican system of government can be tied to ancient Greece and the Roman Republic.
The founding fathers were well educated and wise on a number of issues, and constructed a very enlightened system of government for their time. This is why their model has been emulated in numerous other countries around the world.
I'll even grant you that they were great political thinkers for cobbling all of those concepts together in a written legal document (the constitution). However the credit for the heavy thinking comes from the people who invented those concepts in the first place, and those people far predated the founding fathers.
Actually the 3/5 compromise is often misunderstood, it actually was a procedure to LIMIT slavery.
No, not really. The effect was a compromise between the northern states who didn't want slaves counted at all, and the southern states who wanted slaves counted fully in the population when it comes to government representation. It also affected the tax burden that states should have to pay.
The effect was to reduce the tax burden on the slave states, and give white slaveholders increased representation in the house of representatives compared to people in the northern states
Again, that is a straw man, I never said they were perfect.
I never said you claimed they are perfect. I was merely highlighting that they made some major mistakes.
Exactly, since most were Christians they knew they all had sinful natures so they had checks and balances to limit their power. This had never really been done before.
Nonsense. Magna Carta (which was another influence upon the founding fathers) put checks and balances on the King of England back in 1215.
It has nothing to do with Christianity or a sinful nature, it's a simple recognition that unchecked power is a danger to everyone, so that power must be kept in check. This wasn't a new concept by any means.
That was not an ad hominem.
You're attacking me personally, calling my a hyperskeptical atheist. That's off topic and incorrect. I am skeptical, however reasonably so. Disagreeing with you when you have not justified your arguments does not make me "hyperskeptical".
In short, you're trying to justify your argument by denigrating me, that is an ad hominem.
Just because Texas has executed a large number of murderers does not mean that that is not enlightened thinking. It is called justice. First degree murder should be a capital offense.
Perhaps if you live in the bronze age.
The civilized world on the other hand has moved beyond that way of thinking.
Texas lawmakers are not exactly known as shining beacons of enlightenment.
No, I explained earlier in this thread how indentured servitude saves expenses.
And it didn't make sense from what I could tell. Could you restate your point in case I missed something?
I said it may only be necessary in extreme circumstances.
No, there isn't. Even in an extreme circumstance there is no justification for enslaving someone else, ever.
You can offer shelter to people, you can offer food to people, and you can ask them to repay you by doing work around the house or at your business.... however at no point can you justify enslaving them. There is no way to justify taking that extra step.
No, if something exists outside the human mind then it objectively exists.
Sure, if anything exists outside of any mind, then it objectively exists. We agree on that, however that doesn't really address my point though.
You are being rational but your foundation of reasoning is subjective if it is based on valuing humans over other animals. It is rational to favor your own species but its foundation is not objective it is subjective, ie based on your feelings for your own species. Since humans are not objectively more valuable than other species.
Sure, I agree on that. However, again it doesn't really address my point.
Whether you are, or are not being rational is an objective fact about your line of argument. That's because the rules of logic are just that, rules. Those rules don't depend on our minds to be true, they are true regardless of what we think about them. If you abide by those rules, then you are said to be acting rationally.
It is not subjective opinion that someone is, or is not being rational.
For example, if I use an argument that contains a number of clear logical fallacies and other bizarre unfounded claims, it is an objective fact that the argument as it has been presented is irrational. If I subjectively believe my argument is rational, it doesn't matter. I am wrong.
Likewise, if I use an argument that contains no logical flaws and is well supported by the evidence, it is a fact that I have constructed a rational argument. Likewise, in that case it doesn't matter if someone believes it is irrational, that person is also wrong.
Another way of thinking about it is breaking it down a little further. The law of non contradiction isn't subjective opinion, it's an objective fact that two contradictory things can not be true at the same time. If you employ an argument that breaks that law of logic, you have an objectively irrational argument.
No, see above about the foundation of your reasoning and argument. Your foundation is based on feelings for other humans, not on anything objective.
No, I said there is no such thing as being subjectively rational in my previous post, and explained in the section directly above this why the rationality of something is always objective.
It is rational for me to care about other people because of self interest. It makes us all stronger to work together. That's not just subjective opinion, that is an objective fact.
No, see above. If something exists outside the human mind then it exists objectively. Our value to God exists outside our minds, ie it objectively exists.
The problem is you're tying the word "human" into that phrase. Whether it's a human mind, a dog's mind, a cat's mind or a god's mind, it doesn't matter. If something is the product of a mind, it is subjective.
Value is always the product of a mind, therefore any value on any item is always subjective. If god values humans, that is god's subjective opinion of us.
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