Gabriella,
I am pretty sure you are not trying to argue that tax exemptions lead to acts of mass murder? If you are, looking forward to seeing you explain the chain of causation.
That’s a misrepresentation of Vladistic proportions. Of course I wasn’t. I was merely explaining that, in general, private members' clubs can do as they please, whereas organisations that are effectively part tax-funded should not in my view have exemptions from equality legislation that affects us all.
Criminal acts based on faith are problematic - but you have not demonstrated them to be any more problematic than criminal acts based on non-religious belief.
Nor do I need to. What you’re doing here is known as “whataboutism”, and it just distracts from the issue on the table.
As has been demonstrated, it is possible for people of faith to argue that flying planes into buildings is not pleasing god or to argue that fighting for your country is or is not pleasing god. It's no different from arguments for or against based on non-religious moral beliefs.
But the point rather was that, “but that’s my faith” can be used to argue for
anything. Literally. The only rational response to it then is, “so what?”
Your belief that faith is problematic could itself be problematic, based on your argument. How do you argue against someone who also holds your belief from locking up or killing religious people because they believe religious faith is especially dangerous or problematic?
I suggest no such thing. Regardless of my opinion, such people would only be locked up if they committed
crimes. The point rather is that, if they do commit crimes and use “but that’s my faith” as their defence, then that defence must fail.
How would you argue against someone holding the belief that race is a biological category from burning down churches because they believe black people are an inferior race?
Easily. I’d “argue” that they’d committed a crime, and that whatever faith they happened to have is evidentially irrelevant.
How do you argue against someone holding a belief that nation states are necessary from imposing sanctions on other nations that cause immense suffering, invading countries and killing people because they believe their nation faces an existential threat?
See above. Either an act is lawful or it’s unlawful. The point though is that, while you can argue for anything at all if you call that your “faith”, faith is evidentially (as well as epistemically) worthless.
Presumably you are not suggesting that we do away with any privilege that protects the government or politicians or political parties because the privilege might validate a problematic political belief that could lead to wars?
Why would I suggest any such thing? “Privilege” is fine, but not as a defence against breaking the law.
Well, the belief is actually more like testing our faith as well as patience but ok. Yup I agree. That's the belief that some people hold - presumably because it works for them in some way. That it doesn't work for you is not a problem is it?
Not for me, no – unless that is such people use their faith to validate, say, driving vehicles into pedestrians.
We're talking about an A&E story here, not ourselves, so accepting that A&E understood the concept of wrong just goes with the story, along with accepting the tree is not your ordinary run of the mill tree - it's part of the story.
Yes I know, but you can’t “accept” that and at the same time accept that they “knew only good”. Doesn’t bother me – it’s just a daft myth from our earliest and crudest attempts to explain the world – but it seem inherently contradictory to me.
Agreed. Lots of assumptions. Some people want to make those assumptions - it works for them to adopt that perspective.
Yes, and “those people” include I’d have though anyone who thinks there’s a caring god able to stop bad things happening to good people but who doesn’t do that.
The tree of knowledge is a Christian concept - in the Quran story it doesn't describe the tree - but anyway, BHS, I get what you are saying, I really do, but I just don't agree with it, though I did when I was an atheist, so no doubt lots of other people do agree with you.
You see God asking A&E to deny their desire and obey commands as being a character flaw and I don't. I think you are perfectly entitled to think it a character flaw - the story just doesn't generate that view in me.
I think you just have to accept that people have different views of what they regard as character flaws or what they like and dislike, and it's unlikely that someone can talk them out of it. There are traits in my husband that some people dislike but I like him for it and I am sure people dislike things in me that he likes.
I’m not sure whether you’d describe policemen who entrap people who otherwise wouldn’t commit a crime into committing a crime as having “a character flaw” exactly, but they’d still be doing wrong.
It might seem like entrapment to you, but telling A&E to control their desires and obey the command to not approach the tree does not seem like entrapment to me. You think it unreasonable or impossible to expect A&E to exercise self-control, I don't.
It would seem like entrapment to a court of law too. See my reply to Vlad for details.
Except I was talking about what I would do, not A&E's situation. In the story A&E seem to be in communication with God and have been given a clear instruction to stay away from a tree - they did not have to guess the instruction or guess the consequence of disobeying, which was that they would be committing a wrong.
Just out of interest do you tell your daughters just to follow orders on trust, or to be curious, skeptical, enquiring?
In my case - examples of easy instructions - stay away from alcohol and pork; eat only halal - there is absolutely no consequence to eating non-halal but i just comply; pray; fast. I could feel sleepy and not want to get up at dawn to pray, I could feel hungry or thirsty and not fast, I could really fancy some dish with pork in it or non-halal meat. They are all just exercises in self-discipline as to whether you follow the instructions or not.
But would you do any of these things if you understood – really understood – that the consequence would be risking horrible outcomes for your descendants for all time?
That’s the analogy here.
Instructions where I would think of the consequences before deciding whether to comply tend to be where complying risks hurting other people.
And presumably that’s a risk you could weigh up. How would you do that though if you had no concept of what a bad outcome would even be?