Hitchens' moral challenge

Also, troll-boy fails to realize that the point of Hitchens' challenge was not to undermine the morals of another (though he does undermine the morals of various faiths, and rightfully so; he just doesn't do so here), but to demonstrate that any moral statement made by a person of faith can also be made by a person not of faith. In other words, he's saying morals are not dictated by, nor do they require, religion.

And I should not have to mention that, by questioning Hitchens' moral objections to certain ethical statements, Troll House Cookies is guilty of the same thing he's criticizing Hitchens for. (Of course I know the idea that it is immoral to challenge someone's morality is utter nonsense, but it's fun to point out when trolls contradict themselves.)
 
Didn't you hear? It is immoral for anyone to ever question anyone else's chosen account of the basis of morality, apparently by definition. Or so we're trolled...

I didn't say "question". Please offer ANY reasonable argument that would make discouraging ethical behavior to itself be ethical. Is it ethical for a believer to claim a non-believer to be immoral because they do not believe in a god?

So you're saying that every time a believer asserts a supernatural basis for ethics (within earshot of a non-believer), they are engaged in an unethical action?

So you still, even on your own stilted terms, haven't managed to construct an ethical action that is available to believers, but not to non-believers. You've simply stated an oblivious, arrogant double-standard, and then trollishly demanded that atheists come and fight you over it. None of which recommends the morals of believers particularly highly.

A believer very well could discourage the ethical behavior of a non-believer by asserting a solely divine basis for morality to the exclusion of a pragmatic ethics. The challenge is not about what may or may not be done, only about what can or cannot be done. The difference, if you bothered to read the OP, is that a believer is capable of honestly agreeing with the reasons for a non-believers pragmatic ethics, while the reverse is not true.
 
And again he fails to answer the challenge!

What's the over/under for quality posts out of the 175 he has so far (under this screen name, at any rate)? I'm going to go with 1 1/2 and take the under.

Also, troll-face, nobody is undermining ethical behavior. This is just one more of your infamous straw men.
 
And after all that, he still hasn't answered the challenge.

Also, troll-boy fails to realize that the point of Hitchens' challenge was not to undermine the morals of another (though he does undermine the morals of various faiths, and rightfully so; he just doesn't do so here), but to demonstrate that any moral statement made by a person of faith can also be made by a person not of faith. In other words, he's saying morals are not dictated by, nor do they require, religion.

And I should not have to mention that, by questioning Hitchens' moral objections to certain ethical statements, Troll House Cookies is guilty of the same thing he's criticizing Hitchens for. (Of course I know the idea that it is immoral to challenge someone's morality is utter nonsense, but it's fun to point out when trolls contradict themselves.)

Like I've said before, your accusations of trolling are obviously projection.

Who said anything about the point of the challenge, itself, having anything to do with undermining morals?! I sure didn't, so this is just a straw man on your part. The point to the challenge doesn't matter. I have demonstrated an action that a believer could possibly take that a non-believer could not, by definition, and it is an action that would be considered ethical under any given standard of ethics, as it is the affirmation of ethics themselves.

And yet another straw man from this troll who has claimed to be ignoring me. I haven't questioned any of Hitchens' objections to answers which he doesn't recognize as morally imperative. Quite the contrary, I think it is completely fair to demand an answer that is generically true.

And yet again, again, another straw man. I didn't say anything about "challenging" someone's morality. You could easily challenge the details of anyone's morality without ever undermining the overall basis for that person having any morality at all.
 
Like I've said before, your accusations of trolling are obviously projection.

Who said anything about the point of the challenge, itself, having anything to do with undermining morals?! I sure didn't, so this is just a straw man on your part. The point to the challenge doesn't matter. I have demonstrated an action that a believer could possibly take that a non-believer could not, by definition, and it is an action that would be considered ethical under any given standard of ethics, as it is the affirmation of ethics themselves.

And yet another straw man from this troll who has claimed to be ignoring me. I haven't questioned any of Hitchens' objections to answers which he doesn't recognize as morally imperative. Quite the contrary, I think it is completely fair to demand an answer that is generically true.

And yet again, again, another straw man. I didn't say anything about "challenging" someone's morality. You could easily challenge the details of anyone's morality without ever undermining the overall basis for that person having any morality at all.

Your language is so stilted, and your grammar so poor, it is often difficult to parse the meaning from your posts. An example: "This one is completely by definition." :shrug:

Perhaps you could explain your position to someone who speaks Troll as a second language, and they could translate it to English for us?

I do not know what you mean by "A non-believer could not honestly affirm the moral basis of anyone who believes morality to be revealed by a god." What do you mean by affirm? What do you mean by moral basis?

What is the point of your comment about undermining someone's morality? Do you mean to say it is immoral to accuse someone of being immoral? I ask because you aren't using the word "undermine" properly. And either way, no one is challenging, questioning, undermining, or inhibiting anyone's morality (how would one go about inhibiting someone else's morality, exactly? Your Word of the Day vocabulary is only exposing your ignorance, troll). This challenge is not to point and say "That's not moral," it is to prove morality is not confined to religion.
 
Is it ethical for a believer to claim a non-believer to be immoral because they do not believe in a god?

That will depend on the circumstances in which such a statement is uttered.

If such a statement is part of a doctrinal text or in a private conversation between believers, then it is probably not immoral.

In interpersonal interactions, however, when a believer asserts the non-believer's inferiority and the believer's superiority, there is room for unethical behavior that is otherwise not possible in believers-only settings.


This discernment goes back to the basic principle that a believer should never use his doctrines against others, whether those others are believers or not.
This is because by using the doctrine for himself and against others, the believer would make the doctrine subservient to himself - and this is unethical, by the standards of believers.
 
“Name me an ethical statement made or an action performed by a believer that could not have been made or performed by a non-believer.”

From what I recall, this was another recent mention of a similar challenge:

But it is true, religious people are not morally superior. Name a moral statement or action from a religious person that could not be produced without religion.

http://www.sciforums.com/showpost.php?p=2898673&postcount=150

My reply from that thread is this:

Gratitude for everything that we have.
It is a simple act of basic decency to acknowledge one's indebtedness.



A non-believer's gratitude is limited to the sources he acknowledges; but eventually, a non-believer acknowledges that he has a debt that the instances he can express gratitude to do not provide for. As such, the non-believer remains indebted and his gratitude is incomplete.

A believer maintains that God provides everything - and that as such, God is the one to be thanked for everything. In that sense, a believer's gratitude is even; he acknowledges the source of everything he has and expresses gratitude to said source. A believer's gratitude is complete and he is not indebted.
This is something a believer can do, but a non-believer can't.


Of course, the basis of this line of reasoning is that it is immoral to steal or take things for granted. This is something both believers and non-believers agree on.
 
"It is immoral to undermine the basis of someone's existing morality, thus encouraging immorality."

I realize that many answers have been proposed which Hitchens wouldn't have acknowledged as valid. This one is completely by definition. This challenge assumes that a non-believer subscribes to some morality or ethical conduct. By any definition of these, undermining the grounds of another person's ethics is, itself, unethical.
(Highlighting by me).

Please can you provide the source of your definition for morality or ethics where it is stated that undermining the basis of an existing morality is in itself immoral?
You saying it is so does not make it so, and I am not aware of such a definition, but perhaps your source will shine a light on that for me?

And perhaps you can explain how removing the basis of a morality actually encourages immorality, since your argument is dependent upon this as well as the definitions you are claiming?

So far you have merely said that to do so is immoral / unethical... but you don't actually explain why... other than to say it is through definition... which you haven't provided.

I'm looking for a bit more than that.

Thanks.
 
Gratitude for everything that we have.
It is a simple act of basic decency to acknowledge one's indebtedness.

...
This is something a believer can do, but a non-believer can't.
There are two ways to counter your example.

The first is simply to say that "Yes they can."
I am thankful to the universe (everything), to the physical laws (that govern everything), that I exist, that I am conscious and can experience.

There is nothing to be gained by replacing those things with a singular "God".


The second is to say that there is simply no such grand indebtedness that does not arise from the belief... i.e. it is not an objective indebtedness... it is only one that believers see and thus has no meaning for the non-believer.

It does not make one morally/ethically superior to acknowledge that which only exists within one's own moral code.
 
There is a difference between belief and truth: a beleiver may step off a cliff believing they can walk on air, when they may fall.
 
The original post quoted Hitchens saying this:

"Name me an ethical statement made or an action performed by a believer that could not have been made or performed by a non-believer."​

I replied:

"I think that there are many kinds of ethical statements that might be expected from believers that one wouldn't expect to hear from non-believers."​

Hitchens refused to accept an ethical statement specific to a certain morality

There are countless ethical statements that a religious believer might make that one wouldn't expect to hear from a religious non-believer. Positive ethical statements containing the phrase "God's will" for example. Buddhist statements about "meritorious acts" (where 'merit' is understood in the Buddhist sense), and so on.

The point being that people will often conceptualize morality differently and express it in different language, depending on part on their culture and on their religious tradition.

So arguably, the first clause in Hitchens' challenge is trivial and easily met. Whether or not he accepts it is a matter for him, not for me.

Turning to the second clause in the Hitchens quote, to the question:

"Name me... an action performed by a believer that could not have been made or performed by a non-believer.​

Now we are talking about actions as opposed to statements. (Of course when somebody makes a statement, he or she is performing an action.)

If we accept the idea of inner actions (and I do), then somebody might want to ask Hitchens whether an atheist can truly worship God. A theist might consider that to be the prototypical ethical action. A Buddhist prostrating himself before a statue of the Buddha is performing a very different inner action than a non-Buddhist would be performing if he or she simply performed the bodily motions of prostration before the same statue while feeling silly.

So from the inner-action perspective, Hitchens' challenge has again been met. Hitchens no doubt would strenuously object that a Buddhist prostrating himself before a statue isn't truly an ethical action and doesn't count. But the Buddhist would respond that doing such things aids in overcoming one's fixation on self, and in the Buddhist scheme that's absolutely fundamental to ethical motivation.

In my last post, I wrote:

Having said that, I don't believe that in their real-world behavior, religious believers are any more moral on average than non-believers.​

The point that I was making there, is that in their daily secular lives, when they are at work, shopping or walking down the street, performing acts that aren't specifically religious in nature, I don't think that on average, religious and non-religious people differ a whole lot ethically. Unless people are wearing distinctive dress or performing specifically religious acts, it's hard to determine an individual's religious adherence, or lack of it, just from watching their everyday behavior.

The fundamental issue in this secular external-action context isn't whether or not a religious-believer is capable of performing a kind of moral act that's unique only to religious believers. That's kind of a straw-man question. Following Hitchens, we are now excluding specifically religious acts from consideration.

At this point the deeper question has become whether or not religious believers are more or less apt to perform exactly the same kind of moral acts that all of us recognize in our daily lives. Are they compassionate? Are they courageous? Are they fair?

Everyone is capable of doing those kind of things. The real question is whether they are motivated to do them.
 
Syne

ANY undermining of a person's current morality is immoral, by definition.

So when I finnally convinced a friend of mine that the White Supremist group he was involved in had no godly basis for their hatreds of gay, blacks, immigrants, liberals, women who don't know their proper place, the gummint..., that I was the one who was morally wrong? Your Black and White thinking will not serve you well in a world full of Gray, it is where many theists make their central mistake.

Grumpy:cool:
 
ANY undermining of a person's current morality is immoral, by definition. All else is merely justification for unethical behavior. Just as Hitchens wouldn't have accepted any answer that would require a specific morality, especially one he didn't recognize, so can you not exclude this answer based solely on a specific morality.

But you aren't undermining their morality as such, only the false basis of it. It's not like if I could prove their religion wrong, they would start killing and raping.
 
...

If you don't understand that, then I can only assume that you hold a completely deterministic world view, which necessarily is without ethical value judgments.

Determinism doesn't preclude an ethical worldview.
 
“Name me an ethical statement made or an action performed by a believer that could not have been made or performed by a non-believer.”

Believe it or not, I hadn't come across this until JDawg and Arioch recently posed it to me. Since neither has bothered to respond to my answer of this challenge, I decided I'd post it for others to comment on and critique. Here's my answer:

"A non-believer could not honestly affirm the moral basis of anyone who believes morality to be revealed by a god. All an unbeliever can do is to assert that the believer has no "real" basis for such morality, whereas the believer can affirm the morality of a non-believer, based as it is on reasoning they could honestly agree with.

It is immoral to undermine the basis of someone's existing morality, thus encouraging immorality."

I realize that many answers have been proposed which Hitchens wouldn't have acknowledged as valid. This one is completely by definition. This challenge assumes that a non-believer subscribes to some morality or ethical conduct. By any definition of these, undermining the grounds of another person's ethics is, itself, unethical.

Interesting point but I see the comment as a statement of ethical equality of non-theists with theists. It's a forthright challenge, but I don't think it carries the weight of assumptions you attach to it.

Hitchens' message springs from the attacks that atheism and atheists suffer under: the accusation of immorality. Some of these accusations can result in fairly dire consequences. Now, if you personally see Hitchens' challenge as confrontation in result, so be it. Both theists and atheists must bear the slings and arrows of the other, so long as they be not actually harmed, the viciousness shown to Kashgari being as clear a case of a worldview that has gone quite off the deep end via the propagation of paranoia and/or a persecution complex. I don't believe Hitchens actually intended it at the extent you derive it.
 
From what I recall, this was another recent mention of a similar challenge:



My reply from that thread is this:

Gratitude for everything that we have.
It is a simple act of basic decency to acknowledge one's indebtedness.



A non-believer's gratitude is limited to the sources he acknowledges; but eventually, a non-believer acknowledges that he has a debt that the instances he can express gratitude to do not provide for. As such, the non-believer remains indebted and his gratitude is incomplete.

A believer maintains that God provides everything - and that as such, God is the one to be thanked for everything. In that sense, a believer's gratitude is even; he acknowledges the source of everything he has and expresses gratitude to said source. A believer's gratitude is complete and he is not indebted.
This is something a believer can do, but a non-believer can't.


Of course, the basis of this line of reasoning is that it is immoral to steal or take things for granted. This is something both believers and non-believers agree on.

If there is no personal agent responsible for everything, then the very idea of gratitude is an error.
 
The original post quoted Hitchens saying this:

"Name me an ethical statement made or an action performed by a believer that could not have been made or performed by a non-believer."​

I replied:

"I think that there are many kinds of ethical statements that might be expected from believers that one wouldn't expect to hear from non-believers."​



There are countless ethical statements that a religious believer might make that one wouldn't expect to hear from a religious non-believer. Positive ethical statements containing the phrase "God's will" for example. Buddhist statements about "meritorious acts" (where 'merit' is understood in the Buddhist sense), and so on.

But this was not the challenge. You're talking semantics, Hitchens is talking actions. Not having the phrase "God's will" or "meritorious acts" in the language of the non-believer does not exclude them from doing or saying the action that the believer considers to be "God's will" or a "meritorious act." Language is not important here; only the moral itself is.

So arguably, the first clause in Hitchens' challenge is trivial and easily met. Whether or not he accepts it is a matter for him, not for me.

You certainly have not met it. You've only failed to understand it.

Turning to the second clause in the Hitchens quote, to the question:

"Name me... an action performed by a believer that could not have been made or performed by a non-believer.​

Now we are talking about actions as opposed to statements. (Of course when somebody makes a statement, he or she is performing an action.)

If we accept the idea of inner actions (and I do), then somebody might want to ask Hitchens whether an atheist can truly worship God. A theist might consider that to be the prototypical ethical action. A Buddhist prostrating himself before a statue of the Buddha is performing a very different inner action than a non-Buddhist would be performing if he or she simply performed the bodily motions of prostration before the same statue while feeling silly.

So from the inner-action perspective, Hitchens' challenge has again been met. Hitchens no doubt would strenuously object that a Buddhist prostrating himself before a statue isn't truly an ethical action and doesn't count. But the Buddhist would respond that doing such things aids in overcoming one's fixation on self, and in the Buddhist scheme that's absolutely fundamental to ethical motivation.

Again, prostration is not moral or ethical, so you still fail to meet the challenge. Of course, I also think you are mistaken in believing that prayer is considered a moral or ethical concept even by those who practice it.

In my last post, I wrote:

Having said that, I don't believe that in their real-world behavior, religious believers are any more moral on average than non-believers.​

The point that I was making there, is that in their daily secular lives, when they are at work, shopping or walking down the street, performing acts that aren't specifically religious in nature, I don't think that on average, religious and non-religious people differ a whole lot ethically. Unless people are wearing distinctive dress or performing specifically religious acts, it's hard to determine an individual's religious adherence, or lack of it, just from watching their everyday behavior.

The fundamental issue in this secular external-action context isn't whether or not a religious-believer is capable of performing a kind of moral act that's unique only to religious believers. That's kind of a straw-man question. Following Hitchens, we are now excluding specifically religious acts from consideration.

It has nothing to do with excluding religious acts, it has to do with excluding acts that are not within the realm of morality. Genuflecting is not a moral or immoral act; confession is not a moral or immoral act. We're talking about actual morality--the concept of what is right and good.

You are correct in that the challenge was rhetorical. He posed it in full knowledge that there is no moral act beyond the reach of a non-believer, and that all attempts at answering it--this thread, for example--are easily beaten back. The point of it was to show, as I've said now half a dozen times, to demonstrate that our morals do not come from religion, and that we do not require faith to be good, moral people.

At this point the deeper question has become whether or not religious believers are more or less apt to perform exactly the same kind of moral acts that all of us recognize in our daily lives. Are they compassionate? Are they courageous? Are they fair?

Everyone is capable of doing those kind of things. The real question is whether they are motivated to do them.

This has nothing to do with the challenge, but it is a good question.
 
Your language is so stilted, and your grammar so poor, it is often difficult to parse the meaning from your posts. An example: "This one is completely by definition." :shrug:

Perhaps you could explain your position to someone who speaks Troll as a second language, and they could translate it to English for us?

I do not know what you mean by "A non-believer could not honestly affirm the moral basis of anyone who believes morality to be revealed by a god." What do you mean by affirm? What do you mean by moral basis?

What is the point of your comment about undermining someone's morality? Do you mean to say it is immoral to accuse someone of being immoral? I ask because you aren't using the word "undermine" properly. And either way, no one is challenging, questioning, undermining, or inhibiting anyone's morality (how would one go about inhibiting someone else's morality, exactly? Your Word of the Day vocabulary is only exposing your ignorance, troll). This challenge is not to point and say "That's not moral," it is to prove morality is not confined to religion.

Yeah, I get it that my vocabulary may be beyond you (thus seem stilted) and that you may not be familiar enough with philosophy to be knowledgeably posting in a philosophy forum (thus not understanding common philosophical phrases).

Something is tautological when it is true "by definition". Thus my answers is true "by definition", as a non-believer definitively cannot honestly agree with any divine source of morals.

affirm - a : validate, confirm b : to state positively

moral - 1a : of or relating to principles of right and wrong in behavior : ethical
c : conforming to a standard of right behavior

basis - 1: the bottom of something considered as its foundation
2: the principal component of something
3 a : something on which something else is established or based
b : an underlying condition or state of affairs

You do know what a dictionary is, don't you? Apparently not...

undermine - 3: to subvert or weaken insidiously or secretly
4: to weaken or ruin by degrees

So you can see that your accusations about word usage, grammar, etc. are only your erroneous trolling. If you had any intent to do anything but blindly gainsay and attempt to inflame, you would probably have taken the very small step of looking up these simple words for yourself. But here it is anyway, just for your education. Apparently you still need more.

subvert - 2: to pervert or corrupt by an undermining of morals, allegiance, or faith

In what way is subverting or undermining not inhibiting?

My supposed "Word of the Day vocabulary" is an indictment of your own severely limited vocabulary, nothing else. You know, you really should know some vocabulary if you intend to be pedantic about it. Otherwise you just look like a foolish troll.

Quite simply, if faced with the choice to either subvert a believer's morality or honestly validate it, a non-believer has no choice and thus cannot do otherwise than to "pervert or corrupt by an undermining of morals".
 
But you aren't undermining their morality as such, only the false basis of it.

False according to whom?

The moment you declare yourself to be the judge over other people
is the moment you attempt to usurp God's status.

It's what a totalitarian, tyrannical regime does.
 
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