blackshoe, on 2012-February-17, 11:08, said:
No.
I made no such claim.
Be careful, Mike. You're heading into a morass. Don't get yourself stuck.
How can you be sure it doesn't?
Where I come from, it is the person who claims that an affirmative proposition is true who ought to be pointing to evidence in support of it. However, I appreciate that religious believers reject that idea...they have to, else their belief structure becomes exposed for what it is.
As for the morass, neither of us are heading there.......you don't assert that you know what absolute morality is, and not even whether it exists, so you aren't guilty of the claim to superiority that would be inherent in claiming either. Since I have never claimed special knowledge, I don't see how I am heading for any intellectual morass. My credo, when it comes to matters in respect of which no evidence exists, is not that I 'know' the answer....it is that there is currently no basis upon which to accept that a particular affirmative answer exists.
In the absence of evidence for a proposition, I prefer, on a tentative basis, to assume that the proposition is not true. But, should evidence in support of the proposition become available, I will rethink my position, and may change it if the evidence is persuasive.
That is, as others have suggested, one and perhaps 'the' difference between religious thought and evidence-based reasoning.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari