Are atheist morals PLASTIC?

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Fred75
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Are atheist morals PLASTIC?

Postby Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 5:23 pm

Are atheist morals PLASTIC?

plastic adj. Capable of being shaped or formed: plastic material such as clay. See synonyms at malleable.


IE... do atheist based morals change with the social value of the day?

Let's think in terms of abortion and homosexuality.
Both of which religion does not tolerate.

Vote YES if you consider atheist morals to change with the political wind.
Last edited by Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 7:11 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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The Colonel
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Postby The Colonel on Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:13 pm

No, atheist morals place morality in the hands of the individual - NOT society.

An individual innately knows right from wrong. Atheists are able to look at facts and reason - something the religious are NEVER able to do.

You mention homosexuality - atheists look at the love between two people, the fact that people have a right to be happy, that they do no harm and so on.

The religious are completely irrational and disregard the above. They won't accept the love argument as they are so fixated with love being between a man and a woman. Their minds are dogmatic and fixed. Atheists' minds are free and open to new evidence and arguments.

Same with abortion.

My morality on abortion happens to be the same as yours Fred.

However, I reached my decision by THINKING. You reached yours by being PREACHED at. The superior decision is therefore, MINE.
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Fred75
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Postby Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:19 pm

The Colonel wrote:No, atheist morals place morality in the hands of the individual


That then, BY DEFINITION, means that your morals are based on what you FEEL today.

Individual morals are then going to differ from one person to the other.

Again... far more plastic compared to SET religious morals.
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Fred75
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Postby Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:21 pm

The Colonel wrote:An individual innately knows right from wrong.


No they dont.
Morals are LEARNED.
Last edited by Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 8:37 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Fred75
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Postby Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:29 pm

The Colonel wrote:Their minds are dogmatic and fixed. Atheists' minds are free and open to new evidence and arguments.


Correct.
Atheist morals are a social experiment.
They are based on what society feels that day.
PLASTIC.
Last edited by Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Fred75
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Postby Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 6:34 pm

The Colonel wrote:No, atheist morals place morality in the hands of the individual - NOT society.


Also, I might add, that to an outside observer, your society would be moral-less because of all the individual interpretations of how each person FEELS they should act that day!
PLASTIC.
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Fred75
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Postby Fred75 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 8:39 pm

The Colonel wrote:No, atheist morals place morality in the hands of the individual - NOT society.


History, China and North Korea (atheists) teaches us that MORALS are set by whoever is in charge that year!
Not the INDIVIDUAL.
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Postby Cambridge on Sun Mar 30, 2008 4:49 am

Fred wrote:
No they dont.
Morals are LEARNED.


That’s an incredible admission for your Fred. So morals are not innate? From whom are they learned? Perhaps the KKK? No, I don’t want to brand you. I just use them as an example of where you can learn morals, if that is your belief.

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The Colonel
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Postby The Colonel on Mon Mar 31, 2008 12:27 am

Fred75 wrote:
The Colonel wrote:No, atheist morals place morality in the hands of the individual


That then, BY DEFINITION, means that your morals are based on what you FEEL today.

So do yours as a matter of fact.

Individual morals are then going to differ from one person to the other.

Newsflash - they do with everyone anyway.

Again... far more plastic compared to SET religious morals.

Yeah, they are so great aren't they?
Let's have SET slavery,
SET execution for adultery,
SET beatings and executions of women for not obeying their husbands,
SET death penalties for abandoning religion
SET penalties for alcohol and .
SET codes of dress
And much more!

Let's not think about it! Let's be an idiot and follow it!
Let's be sheep! Let's be the biggest fool in the village! Let's be the clown! Let's be the dumbass! Let's not think at all!



UTTER shite from you as usual.
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The Colonel
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Postby The Colonel on Mon Mar 31, 2008 12:41 am

My morality is based upon the Millian concept that:

"We are free insofar as we do not cause harm to others". (Mill was non-religious, even anti-religious at times).

Therefore Frederick -

Murder - immoral
Rape - immoral
Abortion - immoral
Peadophillia - immoral
Assault - immoral
Unconsenting infant/adult circumcision - immoral

Homosexuality - moral
Atheism - moral
Drinking - moral (provided you are not drunk and cause problems, which then is immoral)
Self-defence - moral

Things that cross between the two must be judged on a case by case basis.

For example - Drugs. An individual is free to do as he/she wishes with his/her body. However, this must be judged with such things as crime to feed a habit. In which case paternalism is required.

That is my morality. Very very simple.

As a result, you should be able to work out my morality on most things from the above definition (except grey areas).

Not dogmatic. Makes a clear what is always right and always wrong. The grey areas are to be judged on the circumstances of the issue. That is rationalism.

The religious are irrational as they NEVER consider ANYTHING outside the word of scripture. Could they have their heads any further in the sand?

NO SOCIAL EXPERIMENT.
CLEAR AND FIXED, BUT OPEN TO NEW EVIDENCE AND ARGUMENT AS MAY BE REQUIRED.

GOT IT?
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Re: Are atheist morals PLASTIC?

Postby Sharon den Adel on Mon Mar 31, 2008 12:27 pm

Fred75 wrote:IE... do atheist based morals change with the social value of the day?

Let's think in terms of abortion and homosexuality.
Both of which religion does not tolerate.


Is Fred an annoying fool who lives in the dark ages and forgets that there are more and people out there who don't follow a book? Yes.
Don't have to be afraid
A tear is only water, a sigh is only air
Whenever you feel haunted
Truth lies out there

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Fred75
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Re: Are atheist morals PLASTIC?

Postby Fred75 on Mon Mar 31, 2008 12:38 pm

Sharon den Adel wrote:
Fred75 wrote:IE... do atheist based morals change with the social value of the day?

Let's think in terms of abortion and homosexuality.
Both of which religion does not tolerate.


Is Fred an annoying fool who lives in the dark ages and forgets that there are more and people out there who don't follow a book? Yes.


Not follow the Bible... you may be right.... What did the Catholic church just announce... There are now more Islamics than Catholics!
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Postby Gibbous Moon on Mon Mar 31, 2008 12:40 pm

Morals are rules that enable us to live socially.

We want to live socially because there are economic and social benefits to living in a group. Those benefits increase as society becomes more complex. Therefore the positive morality required to manage interactions between individuals and groups of individuals become more complex.

People value morality and the Moral and have an innate sense of morality because societies in which people stick to the rules do better than societies where everyone cheats. Societies that want to stick to the rules require internal and external policemen. So people evolve to prize their own morality and to prize the morality of their fellows.

There are fundamental rules, ways of deciding if a positive rule is well founded, ground norms such as Mill’s doing no harm to others or doing what you say you will.

A number of thinkers have tried to come up with robust bases for atheistic moral codes of which the most used today is the concept of Natural Law.

I think the difference between atheist morals and religious morals is that atheist positive morals can be explicitly linked to the ground norms with a statement like “In this set of circumstances these rules of behaviour are moral because they rest on the ground norms in such and such a way”. For example, whilst putative fathers are unable to determine if children are theirs or not and neither gender has good control over pregnancy both genders should refrain from sexual relations outside marriage because harm is done to the father if he supports a child that is not his and harm is done to the child if it is not supported by its father.” When technology moves on and allows both genders good control over pregnancy rules on extra-marital sexual relations become less important. Religious morals tend not to explicitly link positive rules to the ground norms. They gain wide spread support for the positive rules by making them a) tenants of faith b) subject to endorsement by the deity, c) subject to punishment by deity. Because they have been made articles of faith and because of the lack of explicit link from ground norm it’s difficult for religiously based morals to change without undermining the whole basis for their widespread acceptance. One change to one rule casts the basis for the rest into doubt.

You can see the difficulties that the Anglican Church has gotten itself into over homosexuality.

So whilst Atheist morals might appear more plastic on the surface in that the positive rules change as society and technology changes they are fundamentally based on universal and unchanging ground norms coupled with the right, the duty and the ability to test positive rules against ground norms and to see if they are still appropriate.

A number of influential religions are quiet on the subject of homosexuality or abortion (or post-birth exposure of unwanted infants). I also notice that the sons of Ham are no longer set to labour quite so firmly as they used to be.

GM

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Fred75
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Postby Fred75 on Mon Mar 31, 2008 12:43 pm

The Colonel wrote:

NO SOCIAL EXPERIMENT.
CLEAR AND FIXED, BUT OPEN TO NEW EVIDENCE AND ARGUMENT AS MAY BE REQUIRED.

GOT IT?


No.
It's a social experiment.
Whoever is in charge and or can sway a population like Hitler did.... makes the morals of the day.
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Fred75
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Postby Fred75 on Mon Mar 31, 2008 3:04 pm

Gibbous Moon wrote:Morals are rules that enable us to live socially.

We want to live socially because there are economic and social benefits to living in a group. Those benefits increase as society becomes more complex. Therefore the positive morality required to manage interactions between individuals and groups of individuals become more complex.

People value morality and the Moral and have an innate sense of morality because societies in which people stick to the rules do better than societies where everyone cheats. Societies that want to stick to the rules require internal and external policemen. So people evolve to prize their own morality and to prize the morality of their fellows.

There are fundamental rules, ways of deciding if a positive rule is well founded, ground norms such as Mill’s doing no harm to others or doing what you say you will.

A number of thinkers have tried to come up with robust bases for atheistic moral codes of which the most used today is the concept of Natural Law.

I think the difference between atheist morals and religious morals is that atheist positive morals can be explicitly linked to the ground norms with a statement like “In this set of circumstances these rules of behaviour are moral because they rest on the ground norms in such and such a way”. For example, whilst putative fathers are unable to determine if children are theirs or not and neither gender has good control over pregnancy both genders should refrain from sexual relations outside marriage because harm is done to the father if he supports a child that is not his and harm is done to the child if it is not supported by its father.” When technology moves on and allows both genders good control over pregnancy rules on extra-marital sexual relations become less important. Religious morals tend not to explicitly link positive rules to the ground norms. They gain wide spread support for the positive rules by making them a) tenants of faith b) subject to endorsement by the deity, c) subject to punishment by deity. Because they have been made articles of faith and because of the lack of explicit link from ground norm it’s difficult for religiously based morals to change without undermining the whole basis for their widespread acceptance. One change to one rule casts the basis for the rest into doubt.

You can see the difficulties that the Anglican Church has gotten itself into over homosexuality.

So whilst Atheist morals might appear more plastic on the surface in that the positive rules change as society and technology changes they are fundamentally based on universal and unchanging ground norms coupled with the right, the duty and the ability to test positive rules against ground norms and to see if they are still appropriate.

A number of influential religions are quiet on the subject of homosexuality or abortion (or post-birth exposure of unwanted infants). I also notice that the sons of Ham are no longer set to labour quite so firmly as they used to be.

GM


Let's examine your morals for not stepping out in a marriage.
In the UK... where you have a social state... women can step out freely because ALL are children of the state.
The morality of whether or not it''s right or wrong is lost in the fact that society, NOT the father, is responsible for the child.

That's where religious morals come into play and are more stable.
Religious morals just deal with the right and wrong of it PERIOD!
Social states like the UK degrade the father.
Religion never let's go of family values!
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