OK, I think it is a valid question to put to people, but let's go your way for a bit. Would that part of a person's motivation which is to do it for fun be morally wrong if they were torturing a child to death?
I've pretty much answered this already. I can't think of a realistic situation where I'd believe it was right, but that's not to say there can never be one and that I think it's always wrong.
You can't apply one rule to others and a different one for yourself. You state, and I agree, that to say something is always right/wrong is to state that it is right/wrong even if nobody was alive to believe it so - no matter what, till the end of time, forever and ever amen etc. If, however, you're leaving yourself open to the possibility that it could be the opposite, even if you currently can't even begin to conceive of a situation where it would be, then you are contradicting your belief that it is always wrong. To stay consistent and to not contradict yourself, I'd say that to the best of your knowledge, you don't know of any situation where it would be right. This keeps you away from a claim of absolute certainty as you factor in your fallibility and limitations of knowledge.
I disagree. All I am doing is acknowledging that I may be wrong about something. I might be wrong about the speed of light in vacuo, but that does not thereby make the speed of light in vacuo subjective.
I do agree, however, that I "don't know of any situation where it (TACTDJFF) would be right". However, I am of the opinion that there are no situations where it would be morally right, particularly since I have defined the situation, i.e. (just) for fun.
Again, I think you are contradicting yourself by acknowledging that you may be wrong about it while also being of the opinion that there are no situations where it would be right. I'm all for agreeing with the former, but the latter is an assertion that I don't see how you can back up. Perhaps I am being pedantic, but normally I would expect you to be specific, and perhaps state something along the lines of "being of the opinion that there are no situations that you can currently conceive of where it would be morally right".
However, the above is again spreading only one factor, (or a few) to cover a multitude of different scenarios, instead of attempting to take into account any and all factors that can have an influence.
Yes, we all seem to have mixed motives in just about everything we do, but if one of our motives in torturing a child to death is that of doing it for fun, would you not agree that that motive is morally wrong.
I think this has been answered enough times now.
When I mention factors, I'm not limiting that to motives. I'm talking about anything and everything, from motives to external influences beyond the control of the subjects.
There's also one big elephant in the room here that's yet to have been mentioned this time around (although I have in the past), and that's free will. You believe it and I don't, but for the sake of the hypothetical, if there is no free will, are they at fault for being motivated by fun and are they still morally wrong?
I sincerely hope you would and would expect all our regular contributors here to agree (if they were not in a discussion on the Christian Topic message board and aware of where agreeing that objective morality existing might lead them).
You need to stop trying to appeal to emotion. This is why I often change it from your TACTD(J)FF to simply X in order to cover this in general terms because the scenario and it's emotional appeal is irrelevant if we are trying to look at this objectively.
Now that the "just" has been dropped, I put it out there to anyone to try and come up with a situation where you believe it is right to torture a child to death for fun.
Excellent. Good luck with that. Shall we supply a list of names and see who comes up with one? I suggest:
horsethorn
NearlySane
Gordon
BeRational
JeremyP
Edited: I'll have a think today. I think you may be right in seeing a need to drop the "just" bit in TACTD(J)FF.
No, no list of names. I said this is for
anyone. That's me, you, the list of people you mentioned and everyone else missed off. This isn't a game of who can piss the furthest.
The ironic thing is, the person (or people) I did expect an answer from was you. Now I've said I can't think of a situation where I would believe it is right, but I thought you would be able to.
Set the scene - we have a person who wants to torture a child to death for fun, but they feel reluctant to do so because as far as they understand, they are taking a young life when they feel they don't deserve it. If only this person could get a 100% guarantee that they should torture this child to death for fun because it is the morally right thing to do. God then informs them that it is the morally right thing to do...