Originally posted by: cquark
Originally posted by: cwjerome
I agree that the 10 Commandments are not the foundation of American law. But they are an integral part of a complex set of values, principles, and beliefs that make up Western Civilization and particularly the American System.
Many pieces of the puzzle from Aristotle to Locke culminated in America's founding thinking and documents. I believe the 10 Commandments were a fairly early yet important step in the basic Judeo-Christian culture that was part of those aspects surrounding the creation of the United States.
Why do you believe that?
Modern Western law came from Roman law, with some admixtures of German laws after the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century CE. It's absurd to argue that the 10 commandments were on the path to Roman law, since not only was there no known contact between Romans and Jews at the time Roman law was developed, Roman law was written down in 450BCE before the Penteteuch (the first 5 books of what Christians call the OT which contain the 10 commandments), which was written 400BCE.
Others argue that the influence of the 10 commandments came later from Christianity. However, Christianity formed less of the population and had less influence than Islam does of America today until Constantine made it the official religion in the 4th century CE, many centuries after the founding of Roman law. At that time, the Romans had had a legal system capable of dealing with an empire of a 100 million people for centuries. Banning theft and murder were not novelties to them; however, the religious intolerance common to the Abrahamic monotheisms was.
The first four commandments banning other religions were the only aspect of the 10 commandments that contributed to Western law. That wasn't a positive contribution. It took us about 1400 years to escape those prejudices and once again enshrine religious freedom in Western law again. The US Constitution and Bill of Rights are great counters to the dangers of the 10 commandments. Let's not enshrine intolerance at the expense of our truly American documents and freedoms.
Let's also not revert to our intolerant and warlike religioust past. Ironically, Constantine thought one religion would unifty the Empire, but instead warring different factions of Christianity--the Arians versus the Athanasians at first--weakened the Empire and greatly contributed to its fall in the West to the Germans and in the Middle East to Islam.