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#71
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On Fri, 02 Feb 2018 09:31:25 +0100, Paul Schlyter
wrote: So your rights are merely a concept in theoretical philosophy, with no implementation in the real world? There is no suggestion within moral philosophy that rights are merely "theoretical". The question is one of what they are (the definition problem) and where they come from (the origin problem). |
#72
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On Fri, 02 Feb 2018 09:26:33 +0100, Paul Schlyter
wrote: On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 11:13:43 -0700, Chris L Peterson wrote: Sure. But I would not call those "rights" (yes, I know the law does). I recognize them as legal obligations placed on people to protect those unable to protect themselves. This could apply to animals, as Can you give some examples of what you consider rights which have no corresponding legal obligations? And if the law doesn't enforce those rights, who will? God? A lynch mob near you? Anyone else - who? You're understanding my comment wrong. All rights imply legal obligations. But there are legal obligations that don't involve rights. |
#73
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On Fri, 02 Feb 2018 09:19:16 +0100, Paul Schlyter
wrote: On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 07:31:32 -0700, Chris L Peterson wrote: Just calling them "rights" could imply that they also apply to non-human such as animals. 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 However, you can get punished for torturing e.g. your dog. So some non-sentinent but living entities do have some rights according to law, even if those rights aren't human rights. A law against cruelty to animals does not mean that animals have rights. |
#74
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Chris L Peterson wrote in
: 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. I know you are, but what am I? -- 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. |
#75
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Paul Schlyter wrote in
: On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 13:59:52 -0700, Chris L Peterson wrote: 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. So your rights are merely a concept in theoretical philosophy, with no implementation in the real world? And if those rights are severely violated, some philosopher might make a note about it in a notebook but apart from that nothing happens? And out of the other side of his mouth, he acknowledges that rights are created by laws. Boy can't keep his bull**** straight from one post to the next. -- 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. |
#76
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On Thu, 1 Feb 2018 19:05:03 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc
wrote: 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. AKA argumentum ad baculum. However, while perhaps one could come up with some complicated philosophical or evolutionary rationale for saying that the Holocaust was, oh, suboptimal or something... Indeed, that's an excellent way to approach the question. to most people, the notion of moral absolutes, existing irrevocably and independently of human wishes or fashions, is easily understandable. Sadly true. Because so many people are programmed into their beliefs as children and never educated in the methods of actually thinking critically. Critical thinking is not something that occurs naturally in most people. 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. I'd say there are actually very few things that could be described as nearly universal moral beliefs across all cultures. Very, very few. |
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On Thu, 1 Feb 2018 19:17:51 -0800 (PST), Quadibloc
wrote: 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. Not all religions do this, or at the least, they do it to very different degrees. 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. A coin with two sides. Religion is also one of the forces of the world that enables people in lying, cheating, and stealing. (A recent study on charitable giving found that when you remove giving to churches themselves- which is hardly charitable- nonreligious people give more.) 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. Actually, if we can teach ordinary people to avoid dogma, it isn't at all hard for them to understand the basis of humanism. The idea is quite natural for modern, western people. A good deal of the conflict we see in our societies today (most especially in the U.S.) comes from the dissonance created by a religion-based moral code that is increasingly seen as wrong by more and more people. 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. This innate sense, which I refer to as our moral engine, does appear universal. It has an organic basis (in brain structure) and even exists in some other animals to some degree. But do not confuse it with moral strictures, which are entirely invented by people and their societies. A sense of fairness and justice does not in the least preclude moral systems that support slavery and genocide, for instance. Humanism is the only basis I know of for defining moral strictures that seems actually able to produce the sort of world most enlightened, modern people seem to wish for. |
#78
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On Friday, February 2, 2018 at 2:16:07 AM UTC-7, Paul Schlyter wrote:
If your absolutes had been present then, there would have been no holocaust, and no Armenian genocide either for that matter. For a value of "present" that no one subscribes to. The absolutes were present in the sense I mean before both events; thinking people recognized the Armenian genocide as a bad thing when it happened, and in the case of the Holocaust, nearly the whole world condemned it along with the Axis aggression. Bad people do wrong things. That is dealt with by the police using force against the bad people, as the very wrongness of those things, unfortunately, does not cause the ground itself to rise up and restrain them. John Savard |
#79
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On Friday, February 2, 2018 at 1:31:28 AM UTC-7, Paul Schlyter wrote:
On Thu, 01 Feb 2018 13:59:52 -0700, Chris L Peterson wrote: 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. So your rights are merely a concept in theoretical philosophy, with no implementation in the real world? And if those rights are severely violated, some philosopher might make a note about it in a notebook but apart from that nothing happens? Well, one of the things that happens is that when people use force to enforce those rights, they can now do it with a clearer conscience. John Savard |
#80
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On Friday, February 2, 2018 at 9:28:25 AM UTC-7, Jibini Kula Tumbili Kujisalimisha wrote:
Paul Schlyter wrote in : So your rights are merely a concept in theoretical philosophy, with no implementation in the real world? And if those rights are severely violated, some philosopher might make a note about it in a notebook but apart from that nothing happens? And out of the other side of his mouth, he acknowledges that rights are created by laws. Boy can't keep his bull**** straight from one post to the next. No, rights are absolute and eternal and independent of human laws. However, laws do create another thing called "legal rights". The same word is used in their name, because there is a resemblance between the two. I have been perfectly and unwaveringly consistent, and quite clear as well. If you have trouble making sense of it, it's your problem, not mine. John Savard |
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