Or does being atheist tend to make their beliefs more subjective since there is no God to say what is right and wrong?
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Or does being atheist tend to make their beliefs more subjective since there is no God to say what is right and wrong?
I have never understood what "objective morality" is supposed to be. To me it appears to be an oxymoron.Do atheists believe in objective morality?
Well, from the subjectivist´s viewpoint, an objectivist´s opinions are as subjective as those of an subjectivist. IOW, claiming "my morals are objective (have an objective source)" does not make it so.Or does being atheist tend to make their beliefs more subjective since there is no God to say what is right and wrong?
Or does being atheist tend to make their beliefs more subjective since there is no God to say what is right and wrong?
To me Objective morals are like saying, "THis is always right or always wrong 100% of the time." while subjective means this can be considered 0-98% of the time right or wrong, but there can always be a situation where it could be considered either moral, or at the least lesser of two evils.
When Christians usually talk about objective morals, they tend to mean that, "Lying is always a sin, no if ans or buts, it may be better to lie about the jews in your basement to the Nazi's, but it's still lying and still a sin." Or abortion is 100% wrong, or so on.
I find that to me there isn't really anything that I would call 100% objective moral, closses might be, lesser of two evil situations where yeah it's wrong 99.99999% of the time.
To me even as a Christian, I find that saying X is always wrong and a sin and evil, or Y is always good and godly removes the laws and situations from the people.
When you say abortion is always wrong, and a evil act and a sin, you end up like those bizzare situations down in Brazill *or where ever it is* where that 6-9 year old is pregnant with twins from her step father, her chances of surviving long enough to give the twins birth were as close to zero as possible, but the church down there still considered it a evil act, excomunicated everyone in the family, except the step father, and the girl when she had a abortion to save her life.
No consideration for wether the childs life was more important then two babies wich had virtually no chance of surviving, no consideration to wether then child should go through the mental trauma of having the children even if they all survived, just a, "It's wrong, to hell with the kid."
Rapier-like poignancy.Take the Nazis, for example.
matthewgar, whilst this may be a use- and meaningful distinction (which would be an interesting but separate discussion - see below), I don´t think this is what objective vs. subjective means (of course, you are free to redefine words as you see fit, but I think that simply ignoring the established definitions is not really helping a successful communication.To me Objective morals are like saying, "THis is always right or always wrong 100% of the time." while subjective means this can be considered 0-98% of the time right or wrong, but there can always be a situation where it could be considered either moral, or at the least lesser of two evils.
Exactly.I see all moral statements as statements of like and dislike. The sentence "Murder is wrong." is actually "I don't like murder.". Any statement of this type is inherently subjective. Therefore, I think all moral statements are subjective.
Trying to attach objectivity to moral statements results in an endless series of "why" questions:
"Murder is wrong."
"Why is murder wrong?"
"Because of the harm it does to families."
"Why is harming families wrong?"
.
.
.
Sounds like you like peaceful and productive coexistence.Oh, I don't think that all ethical judgments can be reduced to a mere question of personal taste, as in: "I don't like murder".
People tend to conflate ethics (the "nuts and bolts" of social coexistence) with morality (specific "codes" that are perfectly subjective and - at least when watched from the outside - random).
It is true that there is no such thing as an universal morality - each and every culture had its own set of taboos, and even concepts we regard as absolutely anathema, such as cannibalism, are not universally condemned by all cultures throughout history. But there is only a limited number of possible configurations that will establish a sound foundation for a relatively peaceful and productive coexistence.
matthewgar, whilst this may be a use- and meaningful distinction (which would be an interesting but separate discussion - see below), I don´t think this is what objective vs. subjective means (of course, you are free to redefine words as you see fit, but I think that simply ignoring the established definitions is not really helping a successful communication.
The distinction you describe is - traditionally, by the etymologically established meaning of the words, and in the philosophical discourse - not "objective vs. subjective" but "absolute vs. relative (or situational)".
Something that happens only sometimes still happens objectively, and independently of the subjective perception of the beholder.
So much for a mere semantics issue.
As for the distinction you have in mind: Personally I don´t think it makes much sense because it merely depends on the way you form the concept that´s being discussed. I´ll give you an example: Killing.
According to your distinction, everyone who does not condemn each and every killing (no matter the circumstances or the nature of the killed object) would be a moral relativist (or "subjectivist" in your terminology). Yet, hardly any of those who take comfort in calling themselves moral "absolutists" (or "objectivists", in your terminology) actually hold that view. Instead, they create a fine-tuned concept (e.g. "murder") in order to get the opportunity to call something "absolutely" (or "objectively", in your terminology) wrong. IOW, each supposedly "absolute" moral stance has always qualifications (an "...unless...") built into the concept used.