blackshoe, on 2014-December-26, 19:52, said:
Seriously? On what basis do you assert that morality isn't relative?
In every century....arguably every generation...of which we have a record, societies exhibited beliefs and practices that we today, at least in the West, generally find to be repugnant, yet these beliefs and practices were viewed as not merely morally correct but as self-evidently correct.
Whether we are speaking of public hangings, ownership of slaves, child labour in mines and mills, bear baitings, burning alive of cats, floggings, slaughter of heretics, forced emigration, residential schooling for children of aboriginal peoples, forced imprisonment of unwed mothers, and so on, we can see that these and many other now-unacceptable practices were found to be perfectly proper.
What the Spanish did in Central and South America was endorsed by the Popes of that time...and today many millions see the current pope as an arbiter of the moral, as did most of 'Christendom' for the past 1,500 years. Forced conversion to Xianity was common for many years, just as forced conversion to islam is practiced by some islamists today...see ISIS
Residential schools in Australia and Canada inflicted their abuses within living memory...almost all run by religious organizations. Look at Ireland for the treatment of unwed mothers until recently. Those who set up and administered these institutions did so secure in the knowledge that they were doing god's work.
Look at the Founding Fathers....was Jefferson immoral for his abuse of his negro mistress, and his keeping of slaves? Not by the standards of his day.
How is it that you can claim that today your moral values are absolute? Why would Jefferson be wrong were he to have said the same in his day? Or do you think that slave ownership is morally correct?
Can you really assert that those who 100 years from now both disagree with your view today of morality and claim that they are right have to be wrong? And you right?
Do you have any idea of the arrogance required to claim both that one is morally a good person AND that morality is absolute? Billions of humans over all of history and probably pre-history had different morals than you, and yet you and only those who think as you do are and have ever been 'right'?
That isn't to say that morality is non-existent, nor is it to say that we cannot consensually agree on goals to which we as societies should strive. I know a lot of religious believers argue that morality has to be absolute and that a denial of that reality equates to amorality. I am sure it warms the cockles of such believers smug hearts to think that, but they are profoundly mistaken.
On that note, a recent survey of Americans about whether waterboarding and rectal feeding, and the other abuses documented in the report on terror constituted 'torture' or was 'justified' found that on balance those who believe in god felt the practices were not torture but that if they were, then they were justified, while the majority of those who disclaimed religious belief felt that the abuses were torture and were unjustified. Since generally speaking it is the religious who claim that there is an absolute morality, this makes for interesting reading.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari