- May 20, 2021
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I agree, they ought not but they seem to reliably do so.I agree, but I don't think one would hold that their opinion "is as logically unassailable as any other opinion."
Principles that are not self-evidently true normally appeal to some authority. In a syllogism, premises are assumed true. If one can defeat the truth of a proposed premise then the other needs to reformulate his argument, eg., to defend the contested premise as true. The non-believers regularly reject the First Principles of Philosophy as applicable in many of these threads. (As do many empiricists today.)I would say it comes down to these principles or premises, not to authorities.
Good luck with the non-believers. They could/would not agree that human beings have a right to life or that it is never moral to directly kill an innocent human being. I would think it rather an uphill battle from there.I think non-believers can argue about which consequences of a moral act will obtain and which will not, for they hold to at least some common principles about what is good and bad. For example, being fined or going to jail are generally considered bad.
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