morals and money
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- Boss Lovin' DR
- 14312 posts since 15 Mar, 2002 from the grimness of yorkshire
Hmm, just brushing up on me Kant...... 
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Karbon L. Forms Karbon L. Forms https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=29033
- KVRian
- 1412 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Inverness, Scotland
Done. Sorry about that. It annoys me as well.Sh@ne S@nders wrote:@Karbon L. Forms
Please put some line breaks in that string of E's. It has broken the formatting of the page. Thanks.
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"Hell is other People" J.P.Sartre
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"Hell is other People" J.P.Sartre
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Karbon L. Forms Karbon L. Forms https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=29033
- KVRian
- 1412 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Inverness, Scotland
Come on the existentialists! Kant, Sartre, Camut, Heidegger (cant spell it sorry), Kierkegard, Forms and now the mighty Tugger?donkey tugger wrote:Hmm, just brushing up on me Kant......
... it amounts to the same. Absolutly nothing...
The Cure. Killing an Arab. Inspired by Albert Camut's "The Stranger"
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"Hell is other People" J.P.Sartre
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"Hell is other People" J.P.Sartre
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- Banned
- 6127 posts since 1 Apr, 2004 from Et in Arcadia Ego
The only people deluded enough to consider the abstraction of a universal moral law are the same ones that try & ram thier god down everyone's throat. But I'll not be so easily baited, rather let me ask you this:
Ignoring humans, where does universal morality come into play in the realm of the animal kingdom? Lioness is starving on the Sarangheti & needs to feed her cubs or they'll die. Zebra has as much right to life as the cubs do, so who has more of a right to live?
There is NO morality in the animal world. You pretty much take what you need & nothing else. It's streamlined to perfection (before our intervention rather..), & life has happily evolved over the last few billion years.
Abstract human thought brought with it curiousity of higher power & calling possibly, but in the beginning, they mostly prayed to the heavens for a bountiful harvest, from a lack of agricultural understanding. They didn't implore the heavens to show them the path of moral high ground, they just wanted food
Ignoring humans, where does universal morality come into play in the realm of the animal kingdom? Lioness is starving on the Sarangheti & needs to feed her cubs or they'll die. Zebra has as much right to life as the cubs do, so who has more of a right to live?
There is NO morality in the animal world. You pretty much take what you need & nothing else. It's streamlined to perfection (before our intervention rather..), & life has happily evolved over the last few billion years.
Abstract human thought brought with it curiousity of higher power & calling possibly, but in the beginning, they mostly prayed to the heavens for a bountiful harvest, from a lack of agricultural understanding. They didn't implore the heavens to show them the path of moral high ground, they just wanted food
- KVRAF
- 4180 posts since 10 Oct, 2002 from Nashville, TN USA
Actually, it's not a moral law at all, but merely one person applying a localized preference to himself. Right?Wopelka wrote:if i didn't believe in anything other than me and a material universe, i could still say:Sh@ne S@nders wrote:Just as a quick challenge, demonstrate for me how a true moral law exists if the universe is only material (atoms, particles, whatever)? Good luck!
good: what is good for me
bad: what is bad for me
now the question remains: how do i know what is good or bad for me?
i'd have to think, which is a good thing.
sure, that's more demanding than following precepts and rules, but that's more interesting, too.
is that a true moral law from a christian point of view? i guess no.
but that's a real moral law, anyway.
Here's the rub. A material-only universe cannot give rise to morality or universal moral laws. If it can, the burden of proof is on the challenger to prove that the universe is ONLY material. But I can disprove that in a few sentences: A perfect cube is a concept; it exists outside of my mind whether I contemplate it or not. Where is this perfect cube? What realm does it occupy? One thing is for certain, it's not in the material world. So, right off the bat, we know that our universe is both material and non-material. This is our first big clue as to where morality might also be located.
In a material-only universe, concepts cannot logically exist. They are outside the categories of materialism. This is one of the chief philosophical problems of existence, right?
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- KVRian
- 920 posts since 30 Nov, 2002 from NE Japan
Fantastic thread.
Morality over cash, eh?:!:
Good for you, vurt
Morality over cash, eh?:!:
Good for you, vurt
https://miroj.bandcamp.com/
toujours humectez la mouture. toujours.
toujours humectez la mouture. toujours.
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- Boss Lovin' DR
- 14312 posts since 15 Mar, 2002 from the grimness of yorkshire
Err, actually, I was thinking of Kant more in the Peter Cook and Dudley Moore way.......as in, 'you facking kant'Karbon L. Forms wrote:Come on the existentialists! Kant, Sartre, Camut, Heidegger (cant spell it sorry), Kierkegard, Forms and now the mighty Tugger?donkey tugger wrote:Hmm, just brushing up on me Kant......
... it amounts to the same. Absolutly nothing...
The Cure. Killing an Arab. Inspired by Albert Camut's "The Stranger"
- KVRAF
- 4180 posts since 10 Oct, 2002 from Nashville, TN USA
Ever the jester!donkey tugger wrote:Err, actually, I was thinking of Kant more in the Peter Cook and Dudley Moore way.......as in, 'you facking kant'Karbon L. Forms wrote:Come on the existentialists! Kant, Sartre, Camut, Heidegger (cant spell it sorry), Kierkegard, Forms and now the mighty Tugger?donkey tugger wrote:Hmm, just brushing up on me Kant......
... it amounts to the same. Absolutly nothing...
The Cure. Killing an Arab. Inspired by Albert Camut's "The Stranger"
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Karbon L. Forms Karbon L. Forms https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=29033
- KVRian
- 1412 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Inverness, Scotland
A concept is just a pattern of electrons in our heads. There will never be perfect cube, just our imagination of one.Sh@ne S@nders wrote:Actually, it's not a moral law at all, but merely one person applying a localized preference to himself. Right?Wopelka wrote:if i didn't believe in anything other than me and a material universe, i could still say:Sh@ne S@nders wrote:Just as a quick challenge, demonstrate for me how a true moral law exists if the universe is only material (atoms, particles, whatever)? Good luck!
good: what is good for me
bad: what is bad for me
now the question remains: how do i know what is good or bad for me?
i'd have to think, which is a good thing.
sure, that's more demanding than following precepts and rules, but that's more interesting, too.
is that a true moral law from a christian point of view? i guess no.
but that's a real moral law, anyway.
Here's the rub. A material-only universe cannot give rise to morality or universal moral laws. If it can, the burden of proof is on the challenger to prove that the universe is ONLY material. But I can disprove that in a few sentences: A perfect cube is a concept; it exists outside of my mind whether I contemplate it or not. Where is this perfect cube? What realm does it occupy? One thing is for certain, it's not in the material world. So, right off the bat, we know that our universe is both material and non-material. This is our first big clue as to where morality might also be located.
In a material-only universe, concepts cannot logically exist. They are outside the categories of materialism. This is one of the chief philosophical problems of existence, right?
.................................
"Hell is other People" J.P.Sartre
.................................
"Hell is other People" J.P.Sartre
.................................
- KVRAF
- 4180 posts since 10 Oct, 2002 from Nashville, TN USA
Your point here is lost on me. If there are objective moral values, then humans are in a different category than other animals BECAUSE of the moral laws.sickle666 wrote:The only people deluded enough to consider the abstraction of a universal moral law are the same ones that try & ram thier god down everyone's throat. But I'll not be so easily baited, rather let me ask you this:
Ignoring humans, where does universal morality come into play in the realm of the animal kingdom? Lioness is starving on the Sarangheti & needs to feed her cubs or they'll die. Zebra has as much right to life as the cubs do, so who has more of a right to live?
There is NO morality in the animal world. You pretty much take what you need & nothing else. It's streamlined to perfection (before our intervention rather..), & life has happily evolved over the last few billion years.
Abstract human thought brought with it curiousity of higher power & calling possibly, but in the beginning, they mostly prayed to the heavens for a bountiful harvest, from a lack of agricultural understanding. They didn't implore the heavens to show them the path of moral high ground, they just wanted food
btw, By declaring that people who contemplate abstract moral laws are deluded, you yourself made an abstraction based upon an implied universal. Surely you see the hypocrisy of this? You cannot clobber words with words, my friend. Peace.
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- KVRAF
- 3139 posts since 6 Sep, 2002 from United Kingdom & Opinions Will Travel :O)
This is one topic I cannot win in - I ' don't have the facts real or otherwise to prove it or not.
It's all in your head
Best regards,
Spe3d
:O)
It's all in your head
Best regards,
Spe3d
:O)
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- Banned
- 6127 posts since 1 Apr, 2004 from Et in Arcadia Ego
You're all figments of my over-active imagination after having a meatball sub too close to bedtime

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- KVRAF
- 3139 posts since 6 Sep, 2002 from United Kingdom & Opinions Will Travel :O)
I’m at risk of being materialistic I reckon – even if I don’t want to admit it or even think it.
Best regards,
Spe3d
:O)
Best regards,
Spe3d
:O)
- KVRAF
- 4180 posts since 10 Oct, 2002 from Nashville, TN USA
No. no. no.Karbon L. Forms wrote:
A concept is just a pattern of electrons in our heads. There will never be perfect cube, just our imagination of one.
- KVRAF
- 4180 posts since 10 Oct, 2002 from Nashville, TN USA
