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Re: Every Ethical System Subject to Relativist Problems



Well, I guess it all depends on what the definition of the word "is" is.

John Harrell


--- Ted Moffett <ted_moffett@hotmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Visionaries:
> 
> There are some who have exaggerated and misstated what I said about human 
> feelings and common sense ethics.  Let me explain in some detail what I mean 
> about human feelings in the context of this debate on ethics and relativism 
> vs absolutism, and expand more on why I think relativism effects all ethical 
> systems.
> 
> To start with the latter issue first,
> I clearly stated that I am aware of the difficulties in proving ultimate 
> right and wrong in ANY ETHICAL SYSTEM!  You have similar logical problems 
> (relativism among them) with proving your ethical system is absolute and 
> true as anyone does, no matter what they claim is the source of their 
> ethical system, be it the Bible, the US Constitution, or guidelines based on 
> human feelings.  Let me explain.
> 
> Consider the issue of the death penalty.  There is major disagreement within 
> the range of views expressed by Christians on this issue.  Some Christians 
> are nearly pacifists in applying the teachings of Christ and the Commandment 
> "Thou Shall Not Kill" to the death penalty!  They ABSOLUTELY regard it as 
> wrong.  Other Christians support the death penalty and will quote other 
> principles of ethics from the Christian tradition to support the death 
> penalty.  They ABSOLUTELY regard it as right.  WHAT IS YOUR STANDARD?  Prove 
> to me that you have the ultimate answer to the quandary Christians find 
> themselves in regarding the death penalty, and why YOUR STANDARD SHOULD BE 
> BINDING?  If you pick the wrong ethical action and it is against God's will 
> your standard will be false and is not therefore not binding, according to 
> your assumptions.
> 
> These are some questions asked by some in this debate to stymie the 
> "relativists," but ironically they apply just as well to those asking the 
> questions.  This same relativistic problem exists among Christians on 
> homosexuality.  You can find Christian churches that do not condemn 
> homosexuals as sinners.  They have one interpretation of Christian ethics.  
> You know with what fervor other Christians condemn homosexuality as a major 
> sin.  Again we have a relativistic debate WITHIN CHRISTIANITY ITSELF.  Why 
> should I believe that one side or the other has the ultimate answer on this 
> issue of homosexuality?  WHAT IS YOUR STANDARD AND WHY SHOULD IT BE BINDING 
> ON ME?
> 
> And of course there is the problem of proving one Religion to be more true 
> and absolute than another.  Usually the claim is made that what makes one 
> religion absolute and another not is the theory of "revelation."  God's word 
> is revealed truly to the true prophet or representative of God, and falsely 
> to the false prophet.  This is how religious absolutists "PROVE" there is no 
> ethical relativism in their system.
> 
> How do you prove who is or is not a true divine revealer of God's word?
> WHAT IS YOUR STANDARD?  You are using circular logic when you use 
> Christianities principles and beliefs to prove itself absolute.  Muhammad 
> was a false prophet?  How can you prove this? If I am a believer in Muhammad 
> as a divine prophet, why should your standard that the religion Islam based 
> on his teachings is false be BINDING ON ANYONE?  Can you prove that Muhammad 
> was not divinely inspired?  You can put two scholars of Religion from Islam 
> and Christianity in a room and the debate on the divine revelation of the 
> Koran vs the Bible etc. will rage on and on.  Belief in the "proof" provided 
> will certainly be dependent on previous decisions of faith!  Doug W. did not 
> respond to this problem in his reply to my vision2020 posts on these issues.
> 
> Now regarding the "common sense ethics" issue,
> what is the problem with pointing out that for the vast majority of people 
> friendship and love are preferable to killing and hatred?  Do you think this 
> is a false statement?  This statement given as a basis for "common sense 
> ethics" is not as "provincial," as Doug W. suggests.  In cultures all over 
> the world representing many religions there are laws against murder.  Are 
> you against letting people determine their own ethical standards at the 
> ballot box rather than from some imposed "overarching authority?"  Are you 
> afraid that if we determined laws to govern society by the vote, that people 
> would vote for killing, rape, lying, stealing, fraud and general mayhem as a 
> good basis for society?  I think perhaps you have a lack of faith in the 
> good sense of average people.  Not a comforting point of view for someone 
> living in a Democracy.  The fact that there are mass murderers in the world 
> does not prove that common sense ethics are totally worthless, as Doug W. 
> suggests, anymore than witch burning and the Inquisition proves that 
> Christian based ethics are worthless.
> 
> No one is determining that MY common sense ethic is the one everyone should 
> follow.  I did not write a single law currently on the books in the USA.  
> But you can be assured that some of the laws on the books were written by 
> the "common sense ethics" of some legislator or judge somewhere!  You must 
> admit this is true in some cases!  In reality right now for both of us what 
> is determining the laws we live by is a complex web of religious and 
> governmental traditions, the US Constitution and amendments etc., court, 
> legislative and executive decisions, and law enforcement actions, many of 
> which are contradictory and controversial.  Most people find some laws to be 
> against their values.  Welcome to the real world of democracy where 
> compromise and disagreement both work hand in hand to attempt to come up 
> with a system that tries to make the most people happy but ends up not 
> completely pleasing anyone.  This system has taken human beings thousands of 
> years to develop, and many people think it is the best approach to 
> organizing society, with all the conflicts and disagreements among human 
> beings that are unavoidable.
> 
> The claim that there is an absolute ethical standard that is without 
> contradiction or cases involving relative issues is a grand dream which as 
> far as I can see is just that: A DREAM, NOT REALITY.
> 
> But back to human feelings.....  As a matter of fact, I am completely 
> correct in my statement about human feelings being the basis for many human 
> actions, not some "overarching authority!"  There are people who will help 
> others (for example, pull them out of a burning house, or jump in a river to 
> save someone drowning) in moments of need who are not compelled to do so in 
> their own minds by any law or ethical rule or fear of consequences in this 
> life or any other you care to imagine.  Why do they do this?  Because of 
> human feelings of empathy and compassion!  They don't sit back and calculate 
> how their actions are compelled by some ultimate overarching ethical 
> authority.  They act directly and quickly based on a feeling to help.  These 
> cases are well documented.  Does this mean you can build an ethical system 
> dealing with all cases on just people responding to their feelings at the 
> moment?  Of course not!  It is clear that there are cases, no matter what 
> your ethical principles, when the right ethical choice will mean going 
> against the impulses of emotion or feeling.
> 
> Ted
> 
> >From: Brian Gibbs <canorder@moscow.com>
> >To: "Ted Moffett" <ted_moffett@hotmail.com>
> >Subject: Re: Every Ethical System Subject to Relativist Problems!
> >Date: Fri, 02 Aug 2002 08:48:04 -0700
> >
> >Hi Ted,
> >
> >It never ceases to amaze me that the folks that want to criticize 
> >Christians for having an absolute standard, refuse to acknowledge that 
> >their own standards of "ethical conduct [be] based on human feelings" 
> >allows ANYONE to do WHATEVER they want. Just because they "feel" like it. 
> >You are doing just what you accuse the Christians of doing. You can't say 
> >that a person has to be nice. You are basing your standards on feelings. 
> >Everyone has different feelings. If your standard is always what YOU feel, 
> >who's to stop ANYONE (let's say a man in this case) who thinks it's okay to 
> >walk up down in the Palouse Mall without any clothes on, from doing so? Or 
> >from lynching blacks, reds, greens, or whites? After all, "It is what they 
> >feel, not what they think, not rules imposed by some overarching 
> >authority!" And who determines that your "common sense ethic" is the one 
> >ALL of us should follow? As soon as you say we are going to with this one 
> >and not that one, you have set up a standard. And so if MY standard is 
> >different than yours, who are you to say that we have to go with yours and 
> >not mine? As Douglas asked in his post..."But if you have a fixed standard, 
> >then please tell us what it is, and why it is binding on the rest of us?"
> >
> >Brian
> >
> >At 11:47 PM 8/1/02 +0000, you wrote:
> >
> >>Douglas et. al.
> >>
> >>Round and round we go...
> >>
> >>Douglas's ethical absolutes have no more logical and factual basis for 
> >>being true "absolutes" than his faith that they are!  In fact the 
> >>Christian standards of ethical conduct are also relative to your 
> >>interpretation of the Bible and whatever theological assumptions related 
> >>to Christianity you happen to believe in.  You can find numerous sects of 
> >>Christianity, now and throughout history, with significantly differing 
> >>ethical standards, that will argue or have argued vehemently that they are 
> >>the true representatives of Christianity, and the other Christian sects 
> >>are not.  There are Christian groups who advocate extreme racist or sexist 
> >>views, are there not?  And they claim they have the absolute truth, do 
> >>they not?
> >>
> >>How do you decide which group has the correct view?  We are back to 
> >>"gumby" relativism, though the true believers will say they have a hotline 
> >>to God that makes their particular view the "true" one.  The claim of 
> >>revelation from God is the lynch pin that guarantees the absolutes of 
> >>Christianity.
> >>But there are numerous claims, Christian and non-Christian, to have the 
> >>true revealed standards of God, and these standards differ.  With this 
> >>logic I can claim to have a hotline to God and ethical "absolutes," and 
> >>justify anything I want to do, any kind of "holy" war or campaign of 
> >>salvation against the unbelievers, which has happened numerous times in 
> >>the history of Christianity.
> >>
> >>No, Douglas, the US Constitution is no more subject to the criticism that 
> >>it is hopelessly relativistic than your own so called "absolute" documents 
> >>you refer to for your "absolute" values.  Your claim that the US 
> >>Constitution could evolve to where lynching blacks becomes a civic duty is 
> >>way over the top and not reasonably defensible.  And on the other side of 
> >>this issue, there are many statements in the Bible that lead to some 
> >>rather fantastic and disturbing ethical consequences!  And Christians use 
> >>these statements to justify extreme views!
> >>
> >>We are all in the same quandary, I am afraid, insofar as no one can PROVE 
> >>their ethical standards are absolute and unchallengeable.  But what is 
> >>wrong with a common sense ethics that simply points out that for the vast 
> >>majority of people, friendship and love are preferable to killing and 
> >>hatred, that honesty leads to a better society than one based on everyone 
> >>lying, that respecting the feelings of others leads to a higher quality of 
> >>relationship that one based on domination and exploitation?  And can't 
> >>these notions of ethical conduct be based on human feelings rather than 
> >>abstract principles derived from documents?  Anyways, this is just a 
> >>suggestion regarding what really keeps people from being ugly and nasty!  
> >>It is what they feel, not what they think, not rules imposed by some 
> >>overarching authority!
> >>
> >>Ted
> >>
> >>>From: Douglas <dougwils@moscow.com>
> >>>To: vision2020@moscow.com
> >>>Subject: Catching up
> >>>Date: Wed, 31 Jul 2002 12:56:46 -0700
> 
=== message truncated ===


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