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Are you qualifying lawbooks as sufficient moral guides?
I believe that law-books are appropriate guides for living in a society. Sufficient? In an ever evolving society I would have to say no.
So, I can safely and morally decide right from wrong with lawbooks, right? Is that what you're saying?
And if they are not sufficient, where else can I go to establish right from wrong, either in a moral sense, or from the standpoint of society?
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Can you cite someone who is/was exempt from evil?
I'm not sure what this means? I know that sociopaths are individuals who have have little to no regard for the feeling and welfare of others. They only know right and wrong as it is told them by society. Right and wrong does not spring from within. So, based on my initial reading of your question I would have to say that socio-paths are exempt from what you and I would consider immoral. They are by definition amoral.
Yet you have problems with a person like Mother Teresa.
Do you equate her with sociopaths?
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For the same reason they have different diets, habits, understandings, educations, etc.
They are different in environment, history, politics, etc.
I agree 100%. This raises some question, why should we see morals as absolute?
Yet you seem to demand absolutes. Since there are cases of warfare, murder, captital punishment, etc in the Bible, you feel justified in condemning the collection as a whole, even though others see the New Testament as a basic guide on morals or values.
So which is it? Do you want absolutes, or not?
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Yet we all have laws, don't we?
Yes, because humans are a social animal. We understand the need for laws from an evolutionary stand point. If we take this view point it makes sense that laws are somewhat arbitrary.
So, therefore, morals are the same. They vary among people and societies.
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We can no more expect laws to be universal among humanity than we can expect religion, politics, diet, etc. to be universal.
So your opinion of the Bible is yours, and my opinion is mine.
Which is why morals of personal behavior should be left up to the individual and laws should be based on community standards and legal philosophy.
Okay then. The morals of my personal behavior is mine to decide, yours are yours to decide, and we both are subject to communal law.
Correct?
Therefore, you have no right or standing to call me amoral, and vice versa, because that's a personal thing?
I'm simply stating the definition. What is moral to me is that which is right to me.
But not necessarily to me. Correct?
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Are you now stating that your morality (that which is "right") is what the rest of us must conform to?
Of course not. On the contrary that is 180 degrees from my view point.
I just don't want to conform to what others view as right and wrong unless it is in regards to compelling societal interest which is another tricky thing altogether but at least in a democracy I have some say so.
Gee. I feel the same way.
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Non-responsive does mean "didn't respond."
It really doesn't but I hardly see the need to argue over a term. Isn't what important what I meant? I meant that you did not substantively respond.
I'm often taken to task on this forum for "semantics." I've learned to be very careful. Correct use of the language is a basic survival skill here.
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Obviously, those passages/books shouldn't be viewed as a moral guide. They should be viewed as historical accounts.
Obviously we must first decide what is right and wrong before we decide to use it as a guide. Do you honestly not see the problem inherent in such a proposition?
Obviously, as you have posted above, we must do so on an individual basis. Further, when one arrives at an answer, one might be interested enough to see why the moral/amoral action occurred.
Of course, one can decide an action was amoral, disregard the fact that it was a legal action, or an action of warfare, then throw the entire collection of different books in the fire, labelling the entire affair "immoral."
But I don't have to do so.
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Sort of like blue sky vrs. hunger, right?
I don't understand?
Non responsive.
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Sort of like calling a history book a moral guide?
You've lost me. Do you believe the bible to be an appropriate moral guide?
I believe portions of it to be, yes.