Actually under an atheistic view, our inherent morality changes all the time! The nazis believed what they did in the camps was good, while others thought it was evil. It's all relative.
First of all, i'm not an atheist.
second of all
"Iraq is Gods War" - Sarah Palin
"God told me to invade iraq" - George Bush
"We think the price is worth it" - Madeleine Albright when questioned on the Child deaths in Iraq.
All of the above are Christians. Clearly the belief in ancient texts and a supernatural being does not justifiy their view of morality.
Imagine if neanderthals did not die out, and they evolved differently than us. Suppose they evolved with a completely different morality. Saying our morality is "superior" is speciesism.
re-read what i said.
I didn't say our morality was superior, I said our minds are far superior.
What if I respect the the natural rights of Gentiles but not Jews?
Then you don't understand or respect the concept of individual human rights, just gentiles. Sounds like something that is pretty common amongst many organized religions :o
no offense, but not even close.
under a naturalist view, rights are a matter of preference; of taste.
I would prefer not to be killed, therefore i wont kill others due to my preference to have my own rights respected. If i go around killing others, i deserve to get killed. Let's see if this quote rings a bell. "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" - Jesus.
Rights are inherent in our nature. George Bush invading Iraq was no more justified than Hitler invading poland. One is a Christian, one is an atheist. Who gives a shit? neither of them respect individual rights of man, which is all that really matters. Not the belief in a supernatural lord, that can't be proven or disproven. It's an irrelevant point to the discussion of rights.
They evolved to believe that rape is not immoral.
Than they don't respect the individual rights of their own race.
Rape:
"sexual intercourse
forced on a person" - Merriam-Websters
Whoever is getting raped, is not voluntarily offering their body for sex, therefore it's immoral.
Many humans used to believe slavery is not immoral, and was just the way of life, but we're learning.
If that alien race visited planet earth--and these aliens were as superior to us, as we are to pigs (or wolves)--and proceeded to rape humans, or harvest them for food, we would have no justification in saying that this was wrong.
You would have justification, you just can't do anything about it.
It's like my wolf example. IF you're naked in the woods with no technology, those hungry wolves are going to eat your ass. Do you still have rights? yes, but the wolves won't respect them.
I would fight to the death, to defend individual humans from an invading alien force, because my morality comes from the natural rights of man, not the unprovable supernatural rights of a supreme being. I'm also willing to respect the natural rights of an alien force, if they respect mine. I would be more than happy to interact and converse with them, so long as they are not forceful upon me.
We would say that is evil, they would say it's good, and neither would be right.
It sounds like we would essentially be farmed. This is no different than fighting off an invasion from a foreign nation.
Humans would have to fight for their rights, if some kind of force has the intent to take them away. Evil is subjective to your nature (evil is generally viewed as the violation of natural rights), so clearly the aliens would be evil to the humans, if they are raping and killing. Obviously, the aliens must be gods creatures too if he created everything, therefore why would God create something that can destroy the human race and is clearly superior in terms of intelligence?
That's cool, but I personally don't have any morality. I like torturing animals, and sadism, and cruelty.
That's because you don't understand natural rights, you understand the fantasy of supernatural rights from an unprovable source. My source is my nature.
If I really felt this way, there would be no objective difference between you and me.
That's retarded. I respect the natural rights of animals, i just don't give them priority over humans.
Morality is subjective to your nature, not objective. Wolves have a totally different sense of morality than you do, because they have a very different nature. They don't respect human morality, just as you likely don't respect Wolf morality. Morality is not objective or universal, it is subjective to your nature.
It would be the same as preferring McDonald's instead of Burger King.
Doesn't even make sense.
Your misunderstanding my argument.
And i don't think you're even grasping mine.
I argue that objective and absolute morality does exist, and their is an absolute truth regardless of what differing religions say.
Right, because your religion is the correct one, and the other methods of supernatural worship, are wrong.
Morality is subjective to your nature. Cows probably don't find the mass slaughters very moral, because it's not very respectful to their nature. Humans don't find oppression moral, because it's not respectful to their nature.
You are born with a right to life. You have a right to it, and so do all forms of life. If morality was truly objective, than it would not be limited to humans. I accept individual human morality as it is subjective to my human nature, not a universal objective morality for everything.
An atheist can't make that claim. To him, morality is relative to how we evolved, to each culture, and each person.
I'm not an atheist, so your point is moot. I think atheists tend to be just as wrong a Christians when they talk about how certain they are about "no god". I just don't accept the certainty behind such an unprovable concept. I believe the concept of natural individual rights is independent from your "theory of life" or religion, or a mystical being.
I reject the certainty of a supernatural being in charge of everything, not the possibility of one. Rights are natural and inherent in our nature,