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Originally posted by IamBoon
Smarter than me for sure.
Originally posted by IamBoon
"He wrote "If there is no god , then everything is permitted."
My task for you is to critique the phrase and examine whether or not it is a valid argument or not.
I am of the personally opinion that it is not valid and is quite insulting. I will share my reasons why later after a few have posted.
I do not want this turning into a quarrel about religious preference please. Stick to the quote and your views and rationally debate others.
This thread is about knowledge not about proving anyone's religion wrong. Thanks in advance!
Originally posted by IamBoon
reply to post by ChickenPie
THx for your reply but I think yeahright and I got to the bottom of this statement .
The question is, what would they be anchored to? Subjective expediency of the moment? Anything is potentially permissible?
It's okay to eat your children, if that's the prevailing sentiment.
You have no rights other than those granted to you by another person. None. Not to breathe. Not to live.
Originally posted by Annie Mossity
reply to post by ChickenPie
YSM? That you?
If only government was that transparent ... read like book, even.
Originally posted by eight bits
No kidding. And what was your interpretation of what happens in capital punishment? Twelve people decide you should die, and you are toast. That's the law. In many states of the United States, you are "twelve people thinking it's a swell idea" away from being killed, every moment of your life.
Surely you knew that, or perhaps you are lucky enough to live somewhere without capital punishment, and so don't need to think about it.
I'm personally against capital punishment for the reasons you cite.
It wasn't all that long ago in the grand scheme, that men were throwing virgins into a volcano, or vivisecting people for ritual sacrifice.
However, if we can't have at least a percentage of people willing to insist that there are basic inalienable human rights that aren't granted by other people but instead are endowed by (nature, god, a creator, a higher power, the Deists weren't specific about source or doctrine), that's a dangerous and extremely slippery slope to navigate.
I'll go back to the original statement and restate it slightly: If there is no higher power to endow basic rights, what prevents anything from being potentially justifiably permissible? The answer, and the consequences, are obvious.
There are no easy answers. You can bring up any number of scenarios...
... that would seem to conflict with the concept of inalienable rights. I don't believe that example does conflict with the concept.
Killing to save, absent an alternative, isn't in conflict. Executing absent an immediate danger, is. In my opinion.