NS,
No, my charge of double standards is not about you not attacking other people but allowing faith to determine your values on one thing, in this case politics, and attacking others for doing it in religion.
Then you’re still wrong about that. If you take, say, my “political” view that citizens being healthy and well fed is to be preferred to the contrary, then that’s my opinion on the matter. If pressed I could probably rationalise why I intuit it - that would be to do with it being in my self-interest because on balance societies made of healthy and well fed people are more harmonious than those that are not, and that’s the kind of society that suits me best.
What I
don’t do though is to claim that my opinion is factually “true” either by asserting divine instruction (clerics) or at the point of a gun (dictators).
That’s a qualitative difference because it’s a different type of standard (opinion vs fact) rather than a double standard about the same category of belief
type.
Indeed I am going nuclear, that's because I am a relativist and don't mind the option. The Laws argument only properly works for those touting absolutism but appealing to relativist approaches.
Yes, but claiming factual truths
is a kind of absolutism. And you can’t be relativist about that - or at least not practically if you want to apply those facts by, for example, jumping out of the window rather than taking the lift.
Which is lovely, we're it not you ignoring that lots of those religious people you want to point at and go 'Woo, You're like ISIS, you are' are not absolutist in that way either. And if they aren't and yet are somehow justifying absolutists, then your political approach justifies political absolutist approaches
The political approach I’ve dealt with. And your straw man here is, 'Woo, You're like ISIS, you are' (something Vlad tries a lot too by the way). What I actually say is, “the
argument on which you rely for your claims of fact – “faith” – is the same, albeit that the outputs from it vary hugely”.
That’s the point – not that the content of the beliefs is the same, but rather that the process by which they think themselves to be factually correct is the same.
argumentum ad populum to justify your faith.
Flat wrong. The
argumentum ad populum entails claiming something to be
true because lots of people think it’s true. I do no such thing – rather I merely observe that lots of people tend to cohere around common positions (co-operation good/murder bad etc), which demonstrably is the case. I also note that by and large those positions are ones I like too. What I
don’t do though is to suggest that any of those positions are “true” or “factual” in any empirical sense, either because lots of people think that way or indeed for any other reason.
We are personalising it because your statements apply to people. Religion and politics don't exist outside them so it is automatically personalised. If you justify your politics by your belief in what should happen, how do you justify to someone who murders your family because they believe they are justified by what should hapoen?
I meant “personal” as in “about one person”. And again, I don’t “justify” my politics at all. I’ll say things like, "this it the type of society in which I’d prefer to live” but I make no claim whatever to being objectively right about that – either because my “faith” tells me so or because my tanks tell you so.
is the Dear Leader doing politics wrong? How do you know that or argue for it?
(BTW I think the major flaw in your approach is as ever booking down a person to their religion and indeed representing religion as simplistically as you do - that's where the link between you and Dear Leader breaks down, but that's the same place where the link between my mother and ISIS breaks too.
See above – the clerics/Dear Leader connection is the insistence on being factually correct, or true albeit using different methods to get there (faith and violence respectively or, if you prefer, violence in the next life and violence in this life respectively).
As I make no such claim to fact or truth though, your comparison of me with the religious believer/Dear Leader fails.
And it’s not “simplistic” – it’s just simple: either you think that religious faith is a reliable guide to truths or you don’t. And if you do then you have no basis to deny the same approach to anyone else, regardless of what they think
their truths to be.
I don't think everything is superstition, and that isn't implied in anything I wrote. I think that values are subjective, based on faith, held more strongly in some than others. And that they don't have a methodology to justify them
This isn’t about “values” though. You may or may not find your values to be informed by your faith or indeed by anything else. What it is about is factual
certainty obtained from faith – certainty that “God” is real, that homosexuality is wrong, that a woman in shorts is promiscuous and deserves to be punished for it – all these things being as factually true as nose on your face.
That’s the issue.