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Someone who is on fire, starving, has multiple broken bones, or a debilitating disease such as Alzheimers or other chronic illnesses SUFFERS just like anyone else who has that condition imposed upon them.
PAIN is PAIN.
The review I posted even mentioned that Harris's "style" was quite different from Craig's.
Craig is a debater, Harris is a lecturer. You can see that, plainly, in their approaches to the subject.
Not always.
Congenital insensitivity to pain
You know better than that!!
All I'm saying is that there are people who can't feel pain, so "worst possible misery" can't be related to pain, and that extends to anything you or Harris can offer.
adjensen
reply to post by wildtimes
Someone who is on fire, starving, has multiple broken bones, or a debilitating disease such as Alzheimers or other chronic illnesses SUFFERS just like anyone else who has that condition imposed upon them.
PAIN is PAIN.
Not always.
Congenital insensitivity to pain
Different people suffer in different ways, and there is no objective thing called "worst possible misery", so it cannot be the basis for objective morality.
wildtimes
reply to post by gadfire
Thanks! I wondered if maybe it was a physical symptom of a malady. I appreciate you adding that info - I hand't gone so far as to look it up yet.
"Worst possible misery" is related to 'suffering pain'....whether physical or emotional is beside the point.
If Harris and Craig use universal suffering as a basis for argument, then both miss out on the fundamental nature of suffering to begin with and where suffering arises from. That means that both of them have a subjective morality when it comes to the conditions that cause suffering.
Craig does not make this argument, he believes that objective morality is rooted in God. Since Harris is an atheist, and he is desperate to find a basis for objective morality (contrasted with most atheists, who say there is no such thing,) he's come up with this "worst possible misery" hypothesis, paired it with dualism, and, on the surface, viola! objective morality without God. However, as you so clearly demonstrate with your post, suffering is subjective, so he's not solved his problem.
10. Any restatement or quotation of an opponent’s argument should be accurate. A speaker who misconstrues an argument unintentionally should not be penalized more than the time wasted. If it is intentional, the debater
should, in addition, forfeit the argument.
4. Appropriate evidence to support arguments should be presented.
5. The negative should attack both the values in the resolution and the affirmative’s interpretation and defense of the resolution.
6. The negative may present a different value or values to act as a criterion or criteria of judgment, showing how his/her value(s) go beyond those of the affirmative or are superior to those of the affirmative.
2. The attitudes of both the questioner and the witness should appear to be reasonable, cooperative, and eager to please. Neither one should practice unpalatable sarcasm, obvious “stalling,” or brow-beating of the opponent.