I'll try and sum this up as quick as I can because I have to leave soon. Forgive me if it's a little rough:Forlorn Drifter wrote:No, but then again, who is to say what is moral if we don't have something to base it on? At some point, we know someone decided murder was wrong, and practically everyone has agreed ever since. But in nature, murder happens at time for various reasons, so who isn't to argue that we should be allowed to murder if its our natural response in that scenario?AppleQueso wrote: Are you seriously trying to claim that "murder is wrong" is a uniquely Christian principle?
Humans are empathetic and social.
Every situation has a finite set of possible actions. Some of those actions are demonstrably more harmful overall than others. We decide what is and isn't "harmful" based on empathy and reason.
That right there is an objective standard of morality, and all of us use it every day whether we realize it or not. Nobody needed to declare this for us to understand it, it's something inherent to us that we do naturally.
Our understanding of what is and isn't harmful evolves and changes as we understand more about ourselves and about the world around us.
Yes, there are dillemmas where the best possible action is unclear, and yes, different people and different cultures will come to different conclusions about what is or isn't universally "moral." Different people and different cultures also have disagreements on what is or isn't "healthy," but that doesn't make health any less an objective standard. They can be wrong about these things.
Religion was a big focal point in both cases. One was a war in which we deliberately were trying to assert that we were different from the "godless communists," and another was a high profile terrorist attack from a religiously motivated extremist group.Jmustang1968 wrote:Is it actually invoked more during these periods? Or is it just recorded more because of the abundance of information and media that has been more readily available in the last 50-60 years as opposed to years prior?dsheinem wrote:
I don't have the time and energy to pick this apart, but suffice to say the place of religion in American politics from the founding to today has historically been quite varied and, often, contextual (e.g. "God" gets invoked a lot more during the Cold War or in the years immediately after 9/11).
The fact that "God" was invoked more with relation to those events makes sense.