- May 22, 2015
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I already addressed this straw man "ice cream is the value I base all morals on" nonsense back in post #416. You failed to address my response then, and you're rolling it out again which doesn't lend your argument much credibility. My choice of chocolate ice cream isn't arbitrary either. It isn't random. I'm not just as likely to say chocolate ice cream is good as I am to say carrots are good. My love of chocolate ice cream is a deeply ingrained part of my being, and not some mere flight of fancy. It has value to me now, and even if it doesn't have value later when I'm dead, that doesn't mean it never had value. This whole paragraph is just your subjective opinion that my subjective opinion is absurd. If it is objectively absurd, demonstrate it. If you need me to come up with the reasons for you, then I seriously doubt you have any. But if you're to the point of outright admitting that you hear what you want to hear instead of what I've said, your claim is probably dead in the water.Actually, this is a better example than I first gave it credit for, because it really does drive home the absurdity of the whole situation.
What is the intrinsic value of ice cream? There is none. You might like it because of its taste, but "good" is just a value you are arbitrarily attributing to it. At the end of your life, it won't matter how much ice cream you ate, because you will be dead and your memory of the taste of chocolate along with you. Even while you're alive, ordering your priorities over the best way to obtain more ice cream is absurd if you take a moment and look at it. I would hope that even atheists would agree that this is completely meaningless.
If work is "good" because it gives you money to to buy more ice cream, then work becomes absurd and meaningless as well. There is no purpose behind it except ice cream, and again, ordering your priorities around ice cream as the ultimate meaning of life would presumably come across as problematic in anyone's book. Just stop and contemplate the ridiculousness of this example for a moment and hopefully the concept of the Absurd will dawn on you.
Here's the key: some of us see that very absurdity stretching far beyond the ice cream example and infecting every finite thing. Whenever someone talks about the subjective meaning they derive from life, they might as well be waxing poetic about the divine qualities of chocolate ice cream, because that's what I'm going to hear. This is probably the best way to illustrate that point.
Another straw man. Thanks, "So's Law". I gave you a very specific situation in which it would be morally wrong because an analysis of the risk to reward ratio is far too low, and somehow you concluded that all risk is greater than any reward. Nope. I never said any such thing.So it's immoral to be a firefighter, police officer, or lifeguard?
Is it not obvious that being well trained, and well equipped to deal with specific situations within your specialty would lower the risk? Come on.
These are just distractions to try and attack my personal view of morality instead of demonstrating that atheism necessarily entails nihilism. Talking about my views on specific matters shouldn't be necessary in the slightest, yet you can't get away from it. Go to town, though. This approach only weakens your claim.
Fair enough as far as your explanation goes. But if there's no reason to think it's true other than "hope", I'd say it can be dismissed. I mean, if the only reason to think it might be intrinsically good is because of subjective opinion that might just coincide with objective truth, I might be recognizing intrinsically good taste in chocolate ice cream. Some people disagree on the taste of chocolate ice cream, some people disagree on the goodness of existence. There's really no way to know for sure.I'm trying to explain the difference between something being ontologically true and being a matter of definition. Do zebras only have stripes because people have subjectively decided they do?
I'm not providing "evidence" that existence is inherently good. There is none. I'm trying to explain what it would mean for existence to be good in its nature instead of "good" only being a quality subjectively attributed to it. This is a different metaphysical system with a different way of looking at values. We subjectively recognize the intrinsic goodness of existence instead of arbitrarily deciding that it's valuable.
I never said God had to change His stance on anything. His likes and dislikes are unchanging, fine. His preferences are a part of His nature, sure. Are you saying that he doesn't prefer that I put change in a homeless man's cup over killing a pizza delivery boy? Why is God "love" instead of "hate"? Why is God "good" instead of "bad"? If it's just His nature to be these things, then his attributes are arbitrary. And deferring to His nature doesn't get you out of the boat you think I'm in.Classical theists in the Christian tradition would look at this differently. God is good, God is holy, God is love, and he will be these things regardless of individuals' actions. God does not change his stance and suddenly hate sin, but sin is instead incompatible with the goodness and holiness of God. We can align ourselves with God's nature, or we can align ourselves against his nature, but his nature remains the same.
I can't cause someone to cease to exist in most versions of theism. If there's an afterlife of any kind, that poor pizza boy still exists.Would preventing someone else from participating in existence by murdering them be good? I don't see how. It's a deprivation, not a participation.
It seems you value what the universe thinks of your actions. You can subjectively find value in that if you want. I think it's a bit silly. But that's the great thing about purely subjective opinions. They aren't correct or incorrect. They aren't measured in that dimension. It would be a bit like asking how long a certain point is in mathematics. So I can have opinions about your opinions and vice versa. The trouble is when people start thinking their subjective opinions are objective facts. Objective facts can be demonstrated. Demonstrate that values which persist eternally are somehow more valuable or matter more or have more meaning than values which cease to be eventually.How do they actually matter? They may subjectively have some arbitrary importance to you, and there's no reason to refrain from subjective valuation (because there's no reason for anything), but is the universe going to care if we blow ourselves up tomorrow? Presumably not.
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