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Hitler

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Originally posted by Fetchmyjunk
I agree that some people may view it as morally acceptable but I still believe it is intrinsically wrong.
Does this statement apply to every single scenario and example I've offered?

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Originally posted by Fetchmyjunk
Sometimes people do bad things to save their families. That doesn't make the bad things good.
You mean people saving their families from dangerous immoral actions is, in and of itself, an immoral act if it involves telling the lies to the attackers or or people posing the threat?

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Fetchmyjunk, there is an absolute stack of observations, points and questions that you have been dodging or ignoring stretching back for pages. I hope that you intend to address them.

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Originally posted by FMF
How can you possibly claim that instigating harm, deception or coercion is "intrinsically wrong" when there are clearly circumstances in which such actions are morally justifiable?
The thing is if you decide that something is not intrinsically wrong then it means there is no objective standard by which to measure if it is 'morally justifiable'. Everyone's standard of what is 'morally justifiable' is then subjectively right.

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Originally posted by Fetchmyjunk
Everyone's standard of what is 'morally justifiable' is then subjectively right.
Your choice of and reference to ancient Hebrew mythology and your unilateral declaration that your own views constitute "universal truths" are entirely subjective, you shouldn't kid yourself.

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Originally posted by Fetchmyjunk
The thing is if you decide that something is not intrinsically wrong then it means there is no objective standard by which to measure if it is 'morally justifiable'.
Exercising your personal preference for a particular set of superstitions and folk tales from a particular religion and then reserving the right to interpret its texts as you see fit, does not establish an "objective standard" no matter how many times you insist that it does.

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Originally posted by FMF
You can think of no circumstances whatsoever in which it would be morally justifiable to deceive someone?
If no objective standard for right and wrong exists, the term 'morally justifiable' is just a cute synonym for 'personal preference'. And by the way you cannot say the holocaust was objectively bad.

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Originally posted by Fetchmyjunk
And by the way you cannot say the holocaust was objectively bad.
6,000,000 innocent people were murdered using a kind of industrialized methodology on account of their ethnicity. Taken as one event, or even as 6,000,000 events, it represents the greatest moral atrocity of the C20th. I've told you that I believe that doing people harm is morally unsound. You don't think the Holocaust qualifies?

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Originally posted by Fetchmyjunk
If no objective standard for right and wrong exists, the term 'morally justifiable' is just a cute synonym for 'personal preference'.
You have plucked stuff out of some ancient religious texts and you insist that a supernatural being has communicated his wishes to you, and you have taken it upon yourself to insist that all this stuff is "universally true" and applies to everyone. This is not an "objective standard"; it is about as subjective as one can get and it is entirely a matter of your "personal preference".

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Originally posted by FMF
So you are saying that the god in your religion and the moral demands he supposedly made of the Hebrews are depicted as being unchanging over the course of the OT and NT?
What moral demands are you talking about?

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Originally posted by FMF
6,000,000 innocent people were murdered using a kind of industrialized methodology on account of their ethnicity. Taken as one event, or even as 6,000,000 events, it represents the greatest moral atrocity of the C20th. I've told you that I believe that doing people harm is morally unsound. You don't think the Holocaust qualifies?
Do you believe that an objective moral standard for right and wrong exists?
Yes or No?

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Originally posted by FMF
You have plucked stuff out of some ancient religious texts and you insist that a supernatural being has communicated his wishes to you, and you have taken it upon yourself to insist that all this stuff is "universally true" and applies to everyone. This is not an "objective standard"; it is about as subjective as one can get and it is entirely a matter of your "personal preference".
So you are basically saying that no objective standard for right and wrong exists? Is that correct?

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Originally posted by FMF
So you are hereby declaring your belief that your own beliefs constitute "universal truth", is that right? And you are also declaring that this declaration is "objective"?
I assume that universal truth does exist, it seems you don't. Something can only be deemed to be objectively true if it is a universal truth,

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Originally posted by FMF
So if you declare rape to be morally unsound it makes sense (because of your religious beliefs) but if I declare rape to be morally unsound "it makes no logical sense" (because I don't share your religious beliefs), have I understood you right? If you lost your religious beliefs, do you believe your moral condemnation of rape would go from making logical sense to not making logical sense, as a result?
Saying that rape is objectively wrong follows logically from my assumptions about morality. I can't say the same about your assumptions.

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Originally posted by Fetchmyjunk
Do you believe that an objective moral standard for right and wrong exists?
Yes or No?
I have never described the moral sensibilities that I have derived or been inculcated with by way of nature and nurture as "objective". I think it'd be nonsense for me to do so; just as I think it's abject nonsense when you try to describe your moral sensibilities as "objective" and "universal".

You have derived or been inculcated with your moral sensibilities in essentially the same way as I have ~ your misanthropic religious zealotry being part and parcel of "nurture" ~ but during your nurture process you have been filled with pretentious nonsense about how your opinions are somehow not "subjective" while those of people - who are not superstitious in the way you are - make no logical sense.

Do I believe that an objective moral standard for right and wrong exists? Even a cursory knowledge of the diversity and change of human condition down through history makes you look foolish, I'm afraid, when you declare your own pet theories and opinions, along with your credulous hopes and fears about supernatural things, to be "an objective moral standard". Sheer nonsense.

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