Ledifni said:
So you are (after now noticing your gender icon.) Sorry about that.
And you said that there is no such thing as an objective argument, based on the premise that we can't know for sure whether the thing being argued for is in fact objective. Which is exactly what I said.
You're confusing categories. A truth proposition is not "objective" or "subjective." It's
true or
false. The objective/subjective distinction refers to the perspective of the knower.
No. The point is that an objective argument is one that is made
for a premise that isn't considered objectively true by all participants, using premises that
are considered objectively true. If part of your audience disagrees with one of your premises, then you have to support that premise. Do you disagree with one of my premises? If so, then tell me what it is and I'll attempt to support it. Don't try to discredit my argument by claiming that it can't possibly really be an argument no matter what I say.
Again, premises aren't objectively or subjectively true; they're true or they're false. I may agree with any of your given premises or I may not, but that's not the point. The problem you have is that your position implicitly denies knowability at all. Even if you and I both
think or
feel or
are of the personal opinion that people have a responsibility to foster agreeable human societies, we have no inherent "right" to foist that opinion on others, if this view is not actually and
knowably true. Yet you seem to presume that Christians must justify our view that homosexual behavior and particularly, I believe, "homosexual marriage" should not be socially and legally sanctioned if our will is to prevail in society. You seem to presume that, only if our view is justified in accordance with premises common to everyone can it be valid as a societal standard. By this standard, though, your own views of good and bad laws are equally ruled out as long as there are people who reject your premises.
Of course, you'll probably respond that it doesn't matter if everyone shares your premises--only that the majority does. But then in that case, you have no grounds for complaint if the Christian premises become the majority view, and homosexuality then loses its social and legal sanctioning.
As an aside, though, I would say that the sanctioning of homosexuality
is destructive to society as is the sanctioning of extra-marital sex, abortion, divorce, and a host of other things in a way that is recognizable by Christians and non-Christians alike. I'm not arguing that point, though, because I chose to address what I consider much more foundational--the flaw in your premise for even expecting such an argument.