I disagreed with that the last time you said it, too.
But I didn't just say it. I provided evidence from studies done on babies. You can disagree but you would need some counter evidence to do so.
You didn't provide evidence that substantiated your claim.
Yes I did here they are again.
The Moral Life of Babies
Morality, then, is a synthesis of the biological and the cultural, of the unlearned, the discovered and the invented. Babies possess certain moral foundations — the capacity and willingness to judge the actions of others, some sense of justice, gut responses to altruism and nastiness. Regardless of how smart we are, if we didn’t start with this basic apparatus, we would be nothing more than amoral agents, ruthlessly driven to pursue our self-interest.
The Moral Life of Babies
“certain moral foundations are not acquired through learning. They do not come from the mother’s knee … ” It turns out instead that the right theory of our moral lives has two parts. It starts with what we are born with, and this is surprisingly rich: babies are moral animals.
https://fs.blog/the-origins-of-good-and-evil/
Do Babies Have A Sense Of Morality?
This study proved that babies have a rudimentary sense of morality. The scientific evidence presented here only means that the basic foundation for a well-developed sense of morality already exists in infancy.
Do Babies Have A Sense Of Morality?
Evidence, please. Because this doesn't seem correct to me.
Well we know Christ stood for Human Rights and this was way before the UN codified them. We know we already knew these Rights at the time of the Magna Carta guarenteeing freedoms, equality and Rights of commoners and the US Declaration which was used as the basis for ending slavery for example.
But this Truth about all humans being made in Gods image being equal and worthy can be traced back to the Old testament with the creation of humans being made in Gods image. The 2nd greatest commandment encapulates Human Rights and this forms the basis for morality in how we should live together. This commandment the Golden Rule is like a law of nature that in inherent in us being endowed with Gods image which is Christ Himself.
The philosophers of Greek and Roman antiquity “lacked the concept of human dignity,” As Christianity became more widespread, leaders of the church developed more influence, and some rulers even became Christians. This “created the grounds for the development of human rights.”
You can find sources for universal human dignity in the Hebrew Bible as well. These advocates of late antiquity were drawing off of principles from both the Old and New Testaments. Based on Christian convictions, they sometimes made first-in-world-history arguments against these practices. They did not need to wait for Jefferson or Immanuel Kant to enlighten them.
“Equality by creation” is the most powerful concept to emerge from the American Revolution. But really, it is a concept with deeper roots in the Judaeo-Christian tradition.
Did the "Enlightenment" give us the concept of human dignity and equality? One historian suggests that those ideas have much deeper Christian roots.
www.thegospelcoalition.org
I don't see how the second sentence here follows from the first.
It seems when Christ spoke about truth it was something we could know not create. Christ represented that truth in His Words, His teachings. I think Christs interactions with the Pharisees and High priest best shows this. Christ was pointing out how they did not know the truth because they did not know Christ. As a result they were in darkness so to speak, living a lie.
John 8:31-32 Jesus said, “If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. 32 Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”
Also it seems that truth is something we can live by as an important principle even greater than our words. To be able to love by truth we would have to know what that truth is. Christ and all great people and movements throughout history have lived by this truth which is the Golden Rule.
1 John 3:18 Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth.
I see. So you make outlandish claims about the basis for human rights, and then decry others as not "right minded" when they don't agree with you?
Whats the outlandish claim, that Human Rights should be based on something that should not be subject to fallible human ideologies and politics. I think it makes perfect sense that we seperate these Rights from social constructions that make no destinction between oppressive and harmful constructions and good and noble ones. Simply agreeing doesn't make something good and Right.
There needs to be some unmovable and transcendent basis (beyond human construction, conventions, beliefs, ideologies) for it to even work and make sense. Otherwise its self defeating. We have seen through our history how humans believed they were doing good when they were actually causing harm as far as Human Rights are concerned. I don't trust a bunch of power hungry polititians and ideologues in charge of the show.
This doesn't make any sense to me. I argue that on the basis of the experience of human horrors, we have agreed to limit the destructive ways we might treat each other, and then you say it's not something preferred or felt? I'd say it's both preferred and felt.
Yes that is part of it but its not the basis for Human Rights. Thats because each nation or culture will have a different set of preferred and felt Rights. The basis has to come from something greater than culture. That is why learning these Truths the hard way are so effective in bringing out the Truth of human behaviour and how not to behave probably more than how to behave is a realistic basis.
More or less its just doing the opposite of what we did when we behaved so badly. But as well as our bad nature we are made in Gods image so we have this good nature that is reflected in us. We are moral beings and simply being with others naturally brings out this conflict of good and evil nature and we know it. Therefore we know what it takes to live together which is basically the Golden Rule.
It's not "the" trans point of view. It's an argument put forward by some people, and hotly contested.
Yes its not the general view of Trans people but its a logical result of Trans ideology. It would make sense to a Trans person that if they are to have a happy life including a sex life like everyone else then a big part of that is acceptance, affirmation that they are the real identity their align with.
So principly what some Trans advocates are protesting about when they complain that they keep get rejected in the dating world comes from the same belief that being authentic is vital to their existence and survival. Like I said the truth is when Lesbians and heterosexual strait people reject Transpeople because they don't think they are authentic all Trans people feel the same just in different degrees and some just keep quiet.
It's not a matter of what I feel comfortable with. A lot of what you post comes across to me as fairly confused. I answer the parts of your post that I can make enough sense of to make a constructive response.
The thing is its a complex issue. Most people don't really understand the thinking, the history of the ideology and most important the logical implications if followed through which we are seeing today with the conflicts we are having in real life situations. I think its important to get education on this issue because it helps reduce the confusion.
What thought experiments?
I was mainly referring to the practical examples I used to help explain how the ideology pans out in real life situations. I think this cuts to the chase as it brings reality into focus. That is why I think people don't like to address these as they get straight to the point.
I created a couple of thought experiments/scenarios in trying to help you understand how rejecting transpeople is not just about personal preferences but also about rejecting an entire gender identity. Like if a contestant on a dating show and whether its transphobic for a lesbian partner or any partner to breakup with a transperson if they did not tell them they were trans.
Using someone's preferred pronouns is not, in any way, analogous to having sex with them.
Its exactly the same ie you said regarding a sex workers choice to say no in relation to sex being made a commercial tramnsaction and consent for sex. I am saying the same thing for gendered pronouns and free speech in that so long as your arguements for a persons rights to prefered pronouns doesn't as you said diminishes the importance of consent to sex, or (freedom of speech).