Gaza ~ What would YOU do?

Perhaps you didn't read parts of the book I linked, so I'll summarize it for you: many Palestinian families measure their devotion to the Palestinian cause by the number of children they have.

In short, a part of the Palestinian ethos is to "outbreed" the Jews. That's no obscure hypothesis, there is enough evidence for it. Palestinian themselves are not denying it. The last Census finds Palestinian population up by 30% in just 10 years.

I say we need to STOP sending any aid to Gaza. They need a reality check.
Except the reality is:
This tactic works.
That's why you're so adamant it must be stopped after all.

That is unlike negotiations, which have now been ongoing, sort of, for a couple of decades, but have given the Palestinians precisely squat. So it's perfectly logical, well in tune with the reality of the situation. It's just that the situation is surreal when demographic shifts, ordinarily considered a slow and cumbersome process in human politics, is regarded as a reasonable basis for a specific course of action. Speaks volume about exactly how gridlocked the situation that it's even contemplated. Movement here is not yet geological, not even glacial, but at least demographic...

The uselessness of negotiating with Israel, from a present Palestinian perspective, is obviously also The reason why an increasing percentage consider it a waste of time, and that Hamas has a better idea - though gauging by the flurry of Palestinian interview-voices I've heard, what they really want is for Hassan Nasrallah and the Hezbollah to run the show against Israel.

The violent approach has its drawback though, as amply demonstrated recently. Just settling down and raising big families is peaceful, slower, but surer.

It's the same thing tried by the Israeli religious right-wing settlers too, except the Palestinians have better prospects of winning that "race". The ones who might really become marginalised here are the Israeli secular moderates.
 
The uselessness of negotiating with Israel, from a present Palestinian perspective, is obviously also The reason why an increasing percentage consider it a waste of time.
You mean it is useless to negotiate with someone if you are on a non-negotiable position that the other side must dissolve itself but are yourself badly losing in a comparison of "war capacity"? Or something else?
 
This is quite a thread derailment. So briefly back on topic: there can be no long-term agreement between a faction which holds that all of Palestine is an Islamic waqf, and a faction which believes it has a god-given right to the territory. Either both sides continue to assert this and eventually one faction is destroyed (which can realistically only be Hamas and the groups which take its place), or at least one side backs down. The ideal solution would be one secular state. This however would require Israel to give up its farcical claims to the land and stop parading the star of David on its flag, and peacefully join with the Palestinians whose leadership give up their desire to unify the region under Islam and to 'destroy Israel'. If Palestinian objection to Israel was expressed as a reasoned distaste for the claims for and very concept of a state under one religion (in this case Judaism) - and in no way blind hatred of Jews - while recognising that secular coexistence is desirable, then progress can be made..

Dealing with the first claim, why be moral? For any possible action, one can ask the question of why it should be done. Why should morality be taken as something to believe without logic? It's as irrational as blind faith.

I behave in a moral way because I don't enjoy inflicting suffering upon others and wouldn't want the suffering to be inflicted upon me (that's moral universality, I think). That's all I can say without any specific examples of moral or immoral acts. I don't agree that such a stance is comparable with blind faith. For example I don't kill because I wouldn't like to be killed, is that not logical? It has nothing to do with blind faith positions such as belief in the soul or belief in the afterlife or belief in a god-given right to territory.

Whether or not morality is absolute depends on how it is defined. The will of God is presumably absolute, but human opinions change over time- including their views of morality. It is an empirically demonstrable fact that such is the case.

Whilst there is an easy "out" clause in the Bible for an effectively arbitrary morality (Jesus said that God had only permitted divorce for necessities of the time, or something like that- I am willing to admit I don't remember the bible that well), I would argue that, unless there is some good reason (e.g- the moral opinions of a saint who actually performs a miracle, or a great theologian demonstrating his view from the evidence), one should assume that God's morality is as laid out.

I dispute that the will of god exists, and seeing as you later ask for my evidence for certain points I would be justified here in asking for evidence that there is a god and that it has a will, but that is not demonstrable, so the will of god can be safely disregarded. Incidentally I am yet to hear of a great theologian who demonstrates his view from the use of evidence and who also does not work from the prior assumption of a god. Also, a saint's word isn't worth the clay tablet it's written on.

Laying out one's own morality is the epitomy of arbitrarity in such a field- why should one choose one thing, and not another? Why shouldn't I assume it immoral not to believe pigs can fly? In such a model of morality, even society's opinions are merely agreed ones imposed by historical circumstances- it could, given the right turns in history, believe slavery morally mandatory.

The intricacies of morality and the construction of extraordinarily contrived thought experiments (in an attempt to 'bin' one's morality) is left for philosophers. I just assert that morality has nothing to do with divine instruction, or divine judgement. Remember, I began this discussion only by taking the bait on your question "How can there be a rational morality in a world where there is no God?"

As for the holy texts themselves, I presume you have evidence for this? As said, I have not made up my mind- I would like to see the evidence if you have it.

Evidence for what, do you mean? If you mean evidence for the fact that there are horrible stories in the holy texts then you can easily google that, and similarly for the primitive understanding of agriculture.

In conclusion on this point, you assert empathy must be the root of morality. Not only do many amoral people have empathy (in the sense of understanding others willl act), but empathy as the root of the morality inevitably leads to arbitrary decisions based on emotion alone.

Did you not state above that laying out one's morality is indeed arbitrary? Anyway I just mean that unless you accept that you wouldn't do to others what you wouldn't want done to yourself, then you cannot possibly have an input on morality.

You may be right on the primitive agricultural attitudes, but I would like to see the evidence. As I understand it, in the classical world historians are forced to rely to documents decades or further after the events- therefore why should the Gospel of Mark (at least) not be included?

I just mean that you shouldn't take the gospels as gospel. They cannot agree on several things (example: Matthew and Luke disagree on the flight into Egypt and the virgin birth, the latter of which is so prevalent in all kinds of mythology and simultaneously so farcical that I don't understand why anyone would take the gospels as gospel).

Why would a religion form around a fictional figure, as opposed to one who actually existed? Why would Paul appeal to witnesses that did not exist? His letters, and Josephus, count as evidence for the existence of Jesus, at least.

Why form a religion at all? I am not asserting that Jesus didn't exist, just that there's a lack of non-biblical evidence. There were many deranged 'prophets' roaming that corner of the globe at the time, and it's highly likely that there was at least one son of a carpenter who etc etc. I don't claim to understand the motives or mind of Paul, but I do think that even if we assume Jesus existed and was actually a nice guy, Paul was the one who subverted it all into a church, which of course Jesus never stated he wanted.

Anyway, I am comparing Christianity to rivals other then athiesm and agnosticism. Compared to Islam (Mohammed never did a miracle), Buddhism (They can be very disciplined, but they don't have evidence to lay on the table for their beliefs), and pagan faiths (no evidence), it fares rather well, I would contend.

Mohammad never performing a miracle (I am taking your word for that) is not an argument in favour of Christianity! I don't assume that Jesus ever performed any miracles either, but in terms of evidence at least we know that Mohammad existed and he has/had a lineage (claims to which can be bought for the right price from your local Imam). Of course I am not an Islamic apologist: the claims of Islam are in considerable part stolen from the old and new testaments and worthy of the same examination and ridicule as any other document which is claimed to be the word of god.

I dispute that Christianity fairs any better than the other major faiths when you are considering likelihood of truth seeing as it has its fair share of supernatural claims for which there is no evidence, and I wouldn't consider the claims to Jesus performing miracles to be in any way supportive of an argument for Christianity's 'correctness'.
 
If people would like to shift their theological discussions to a more appropriate thread, maybe we could get back to the question at hand.:(
 
If people would like to shift their theological discussions to a more appropriate thread, maybe we could get back to the question at hand.:(

If Munch is willing, I'm willing to switch threads. I'll send my reply when he's stated where he wants to continue the argument.
 
If Munch is willing, I'm willing to switch threads. I'll send my reply when he's stated where he wants to continue the argument.

Yes of course, if there's anything left to say on the matter perhaps a dedicated 'can you be moral without god' thread would be apt.
 
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