Originally posted by: yllus
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
You've asked a very interesting question, but I'd like to amplify on it because IMO to provide an answer it must be broken down a bit.
1) What is absolute, objective good and evil?
2) How is that knowledge accessible to human minds with the certainty of being correct
I'll stop there for a moment.
I maintain that outside of a matter of faith these are by nature unanswerable.
If someone can provide proof that my statement is incorrect, please do because no one has yet done so in the history of humanity.
That leaves us with moral relativism. Yes, everything is morally relative. That does not mean I don't believe in right or wrong, but it does mean that what I believe is directly influenced by the society and times I live in. My right and wrong is what was taught to me. It is a BELIEF. Again show me absolutes and how the're written in the "stuff" of spacetime.
Now does that require me to accept everything? No, because I accept what I believe being valid. I have no desire to start thinking that every act of charity should be punished or that people should be murdered.
So we have female circumcision. It's an accepted practice, and in many cultures it's not the men, but the women who drive it. Odd, but true. Do I have to accept and respect it? No, because my culture tells me it's wrong. I think it's wrong.
Is there an ABSOLUTE standard that says I am right and they are wrong? No, unless there is a Creator who sets the standard. That would bring up the question of what makes Him right.
Hurray, it only took about 100 replies for someone to address the real issue. It's a new P&N record!
😛 Facetiousness aside, I believe I can put forth an argument against your statement that those questions are unanswerable.
Simply stated, an objective good and evil exists in nature. This is demonstrable through an examination of how human societies have evolved over thousands of years.
One man alone stands a small chance of survival in the hard, cold world.
Two men together instantly nearly double their chances of survival because they can now pool their skills for that purpose.
Ten men. Fifty. One hundred. One thousand. As the grouping grows and the pool of skills gets deeper, we increase the chance of this group's survival astronomically - but now we also introduce the issue of interpersonal conflict. Not everyone will always get along.
So what do we do? We set up rules for the group to live by. No killing each other (decimates the talent pool). No stealing (introduces chaos leading to violence which can maim/kill talent). As we start relying less on brute physical strength to keep the group alive, the equality of women naturally surfaces - putting that 51% of the population to work is an obvious way to add to the talent pool at no cost. Same with the equality of races: As each race has intelligent people, don't artificially limit the group from harnessing those minds by assigning all people of skin colour X to menial labour. Each rule found in the UN charter coincides with this logical goal.
"Good" are the things that propagate the survival of the group. "Evil" is the opposite, that which harms the group's chances. No need for religion or abstract ideas to enter into the equation.
Does female circumcision help the propagation of that group which encourages the practice? Making sex unpleasurable would seem to be the opposite of the natural goals of the species.
There's a couple of straw men that people can put up here to pretend an argument against what I've stated. One way is to say that as human beings we are concerned with more than mere survival. This is actually quite contradictory to the argument: What we're trying to do is establish the bedrock of good rule-making. Keeping some people alive to have the argument in the first place is the most basic rule I can imagine.
The second straw man is to throw forward a practice such as some form of fascism as a societal model that would best for the stated goal by, say, keeping the smartest amongst us working hard 24/7 for the sake of the species. This contradicts human nature and thus also rules itself out, as humanity has clearly shown that this type of government encourages chaos, not order.