pgm1985 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 18, 2024 2:34 pm
Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Thu Jul 18, 2024 5:04 am
There’s your false consciousness at work. The passages themselves do not “imply” any thing. You are inferring conclusions based on the text. That makes your conclusion subjective, not objective. The second you interpret the text, you forfeit any claim to “objective” morality.
So the commandment not to murder doesn’t actually mean not to murder? Here’s your line of argument as I understand it:
Any interpretation is subjective.
Subjectivity cannot be applied objectively.
So why do we have a constitutional government or enforce laws? Enforcement is based on an interpretation of law. How can you apply any type of moral judgement to anyone beside yourself? The fact you disagree with me violates this premise because you are interpreting my words and expecting me to value your interpretation.
Yes. Any interpretation is subjective.
Constitutions and laws are the rules of the road that allow people to function in groups without killing each other. Do you want anybody who has more guns than you to be able to take your property? Me neither. Do you want to be able to for a walk without fear of being kidnapped and tortured? Me too. Every individual has conflicting desires for both autonomy and security. Laws are how a society mediates that contradiction by creating rules that provide some mix of autonomy and security. No objective morality required. Just a negotiation based on rational or irrational self interest.
That doesn’t mean that morality is irrelevant to law. People will appeal to morality as a basis for enacting or not enacting any given law. But that doesn’t that mean that objective morality is a necessary condition for enacting laws.
I’m not claiming that murder is not murder. I’m saying that the word murder is just marks on a page until you give it meaning. And, as soon as you do that, you’ve moved into subjectivity. Now, we may have widespread agreement on some application of the word murder to real life situations, but agreement does not mean objective.
Can you quote me the definition of murder from the Bible that will allow me, without any need to interpret the language, to apply the world in all cases and reach a result that we would agree is moral?
Which premise of my argument are you claiming that our disagreement violates?