Brown_Pride
All Star

There are two languages being spoken, they just happen to consist of many of the same words.
You guys are arguing circles vs squares.
Apples and oranges.
Just...just stop already.
why are you asking "non religious" people this question?
I'm not an atheist but I will play alongwhere do your morals originate and why do you have them?
for what reasons do you hold dearly to these idealogies? is it because you genuinely feel they are appropriate or simply because they seem to naturally occur within your deepest human psyche
what purpose do they honestly serve in the grand scheme of things? and why do other animals not have them?
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That has more to do with translating one language into another rather than 'convenience'. For instance, there is no Arabic word for 'compromise' AFAIK.
That behavior isn't confined to religious people.
But many religious people would argue that dogs have no souls sowhy does my dog not attack me? does he have "morals"?
There is no premise stating that 'either x or not-x' are the ONLY choices. This is why ED is invalid. It presents two options, but they are neither necessary nor inescapable.
mbewane said:That's exactly my point. How can you base your behaviour on a thousand year old text that has gotten to you after various translations?
mbewane said:And who said it was confined to religious people?
DANKTHRONE said:Ugh...
Either a) God has reasons for his moral edicts or b) God does not have reasons for his moral edicts.
William Lane Craig said:God is necessarily good, and it is His nature and character that is the exemplar of what goodness is. God’s commands to us are an expression of that goodness and become our moral obligations.
You think they base their behavior on a text? Nah, the vast majority use logic and reason to base their behavior.
You did (by omission) since hypocrisy is a human trait.
these religions all originated at some point. so were there no morals before that?
Are you implying that religion predates humans making moral decisions??
Or........c)
Do you see now why ED is invalid?
The Real said:That isn't a truly logical argument, breh. It fudges ontological priority with logical priority, imo, since the justification, as Craig argues, comes from the supposed ability of necessary truths to co-exist with no ontological hierarchy whatsoever. It doesn't provide justification for that claim properly, as Craig's own examples show (they all make this mistake of fudging ontological with logical priority as I said above.)
Of courseHow old is religion? Has there ever been a time when humans didn't believe in a power or powers greater than themselves?
I agree. The problem is still inherent in the ED that allows for this to occur since it is not a *true* dilemma. WLC just takes advantage of it.
Or........c)
Do you see now why ED is invalid?