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#51
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On Thu, 1 Feb 2018 11:58:59 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc
wrote: On Tuesday, January 30, 2018 at 12:24:58 PM UTC-7, Chris L Peterson wrote: Yes, it does. "Right" and "wrong" are human inventions as well. What is right in one society may be wrong in another. There are no absolutes here. *Of course* there are absolutes in this matter! Wishful thinking. And IMO, highly dangerous thinking. Once you propose absolutes, you allow people to claim that their choices are those absolutes. It takes reason out of the equation. It is the fiction of such absolutes that has resulted (and continues to result) in the great harm religions usually cause. Would _you_ want to be a victim of the next Holocaust? No. But what I want doesn't enter into it. No? Well then, if not, come and join us to make _sure_ that everyone recognizes their obligation to obey the moral absolutes... and their permission to intervene, by force, against anyone who doesn't. I need have no concept of moral absolutes to argue for a moral system that would define holocausts as bad. |
#52
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On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 11:06:24 -0700, Jibini Kula Tumbili Kujisalimisha
wrote: Chris L Peterson wrote in : On Thu, 1 Feb 2018 12:20:46 -0500, Bill wrote: On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 07:31:32 -0700, Chris L Peterson wrote: I don't believe it makes sense to consider non-sentient entities as having rights. You need to understand the concept of rights to have rights. You need to be able to understand the concept of rights to appreciate that you have them; but you need not understand the concept of rights them to have rights. After all, a newly born infant, or comatose person, does not have the capacity to understand much of anything - yet they have rights under our (U.S.) law. Sure. But I would not call those "rights" (yes, I know the law does). Which is to say, you choose to use words differently than anyone else, and not admit it until called out on it. I make it clear how I'm using words. This usage is not different from anyone else. It's a perfectly common usage within moral philosophy. |
#53
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On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 13:19:56 -0700, Jibini Kula Tumbili Kujisalimisha
wrote: Chris L Peterson wrote in : On Thu, 1 Feb 2018 11:56:28 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc wrote: On Tuesday, January 30, 2018 at 12:24:58 PM UTC-7, Chris L Peterson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:49:14 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc wrote: But yet the society at the time authorized the practice with its laws. Of course. Because these people had fewer rights, which was reflected by the law. No, the law *caused* them to have fewer legal rights. Agreed. Because rights are ultimately defined by laws. So, when you said that just because the law defined certain rights, they weren't rights in your opinion, but now, you agree that rights are defined by laws. I didn't say that they weren't rights in my opinion. |
#54
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On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 13:18:16 -0700, Jibini Kula Tumbili Kujisalimisha
wrote: I make it clear how I'm using words. When you get called out on it, yes. From the very first post, I was explicit in pointing out that I was describing my usage. This usage is not different from anyone else. Then why did you explain how it was different? Because there are always ignorant people such as yourself who have never learned that many words have different meanings. It's a perfectly common usage within moral philosophy. And it's in conflict with other common usages, whether you're too ****ing stupid to accept it or not. Why isn't it the "other common usages" that are in conflict with the usage of philosophers? It is a sign of the dogmatic and poorly informed when complaining about how a word is used is the only argument they are capable of. |
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Chris L Peterson wrote in
: On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 13:19:56 -0700, Jibini Kula Tumbili Kujisalimisha wrote: Chris L Peterson wrote in m: On Thu, 1 Feb 2018 11:56:28 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc wrote: On Tuesday, January 30, 2018 at 12:24:58 PM UTC-7, Chris L Peterson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:49:14 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc wrote: But yet the society at the time authorized the practice with its laws. Of course. Because these people had fewer rights, which was reflected by the law. No, the law *caused* them to have fewer legal rights. Agreed. Because rights are ultimately defined by laws. So, when you said that just because the law defined certain rights, they weren't rights in your opinion, but now, you agree that rights are defined by laws. I didn't say that they weren't rights in my opinion. Yes. You did. Maybe you should drink less while posting to Usenet. A *lot* less. -- Terry Austin Vacation photos from Iceland: https://plus.google.com/u/0/collection/QaXQkB "Terry Austin: like the polio vaccine, only with more asshole." -- David Bilek Jesus forgives sinners, not criminals. |
#56
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Chris L Peterson wrote in
: On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 13:18:16 -0700, Jibini Kula Tumbili Kujisalimisha wrote: I make it clear how I'm using words. When you get called out on it, yes. From the very first post, I was explicit in pointing out that I was describing my usage. After you got called out on it. This usage is not different from anyone else. Then why did you explain how it was different? Because there are always ignorant people such as yourself who have never learned that many words have different meanings. And idiots make up more all the time. It's a perfectly common usage within moral philosophy. And it's in conflict with other common usages, whether you're too ****ing stupid to accept it or not. Why isn't it the "other common usages" that are in conflict with the usage of philosophers? Philosophers, like you, should drink less while posting to Usenet. A *lot* less. It is a sign of the dogmatic and poorly informed when complaining about how a word is used is the only argument they are capable of. Indeed, that describes you quite accurately. -- Terry Austin Vacation photos from Iceland: https://plus.google.com/u/0/collection/QaXQkB "Terry Austin: like the polio vaccine, only with more asshole." -- David Bilek Jesus forgives sinners, not criminals. |
#57
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On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 14:39:33 -0700, Jibini Kula Tumbili Kujisalimisha
wrote: I didn't say that they weren't rights in my opinion. Yes. You did. Not much I can do if your reading comprehension can't keep up with a discussion of a non-trivial nature. |
#58
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On Thursday, February 1, 2018 at 1:56:03 PM UTC-7, Chris L Peterson wrote:
On Thu, 1 Feb 2018 11:56:28 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc wrote: On Tuesday, January 30, 2018 at 12:24:58 PM UTC-7, Chris L Peterson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:49:14 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc wrote: But yet the society at the time authorized the practice with its laws. Of course. Because these people had fewer rights, which was reflected by the law. No, the law *caused* them to have fewer legal rights. Agreed. Because rights are ultimately defined by laws. It did not affect their human rights... It defined their human rights. No. Human rights and legal rights are two different things. Otherwise, we would have no way of saying that slavery was wrong then, no way of saying why it would be a bad idea to reintroduce it now. John Savard |
#59
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On Thursday, February 1, 2018 at 1:58:19 PM UTC-7, Chris L Peterson wrote:
I need have no concept of moral absolutes to argue for a moral system that would define holocausts as bad. You may have noticed that I was talking slightly with tongue in cheek, to show that there was another side to the argument. Of course argument by intimidation isn't valid. However, while perhaps one could come up with some complicated philosophical or evolutionary rationale for saying that the Holocaust was, oh, suboptimal or something... to most people, the notion of moral absolutes, existing irrevocably and independently of human wishes or fashions, is easily understandable. And while no empirical guide to exactly what those rights are may exist, a whole bunch of them seem to be sufficiently obvious to obtain consensus. Of course, the danger is: the concept of moral absolutes can be misused to get people thinking they're justified in making war on other societies to impose the customs of their own culture or the beliefs of their own religion. John Savard |
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On Thursday, February 1, 2018 at 1:58:19 PM UTC-7, Chris L Peterson wrote:
And IMO, highly dangerous thinking. Once you propose absolutes, you allow people to claim that their choices are those absolutes. It takes reason out of the equation. It is the fiction of such absolutes that has resulted (and continues to result) in the great harm religions usually cause. Ah, you have addressed the specific point I thought I'd mention. However, religion, by its very nature, posits the existence of God, and so it will put forward moral absolutes even in the absence of secular ethical philosophers who propose natural law theory. So it fails one of the tests for dangerous thinking; it lacks the power to make things worse. Religion is - one of the forces in this world that discourage people from lying, cheating, and stealing, and it is a force that encourages people to make charitable contributions, and so on. If non-religious thinking goes to the extreme that you advocate of being different from religious thinking, then it has the problem that it will fail to provide moral guidance in a form that is understandable to ordinary people. The "American civil religion", or secular belief in the democratic principles of the Declaration of Independence and so on as having inherent absolute moral value, is at least understandable and emotionally appealing. That our innate sense of fairness and justice reflects something as absolute as mathematics - may or may not be true, but it seems the best way for us to understand it at this time. John Savard |
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