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Dee Dee Warren
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I will get into that more in my substantive post.
NEVER APOLOGIZE FOR SARCASM! I love it.
We all know that we must try to have the character of God. We also know that "God...does not lie," Titus 1:2. No matter what your definition of lying is, we know that GOD CANNOT LIE, so your definition better take that into account, or else give up the Bible as authoritative.
The Bible tells us to obey those placed in authority over us (Ecclesiastes 8:2; Romans 13). These texts do not give any “escape clause,” for all intents and purposes, in a superficial “low context” reading of the text, it is an unbreakable absolute. Yet not only is this highly counter-intuitive, it would cause a contradiction in the text, for in
Acts 5:29, we are told to obey God rather than man. Why didn’t Paul mention this condition?? Because in the “high context” Biblical structure and culture, it was obvious.
Ahh, ok, the Romans 13 "escape clause." I gotcha now. The problem is that you are taking a single text. The Bible interprets the Bible, does it not? If you work canonically, you will see that "we must obey God rather than men." Romans 13 does not supercede Acts 5:29.
Relativism teaches that morals are relative to the person. In any given identical situation, what is moral for you to do, may not be moral for me to do. There is no absolute rule by which to objectively measure our actions. That is not at all what I have advocated here. I am applying an ABSOLUTE hierarchy of morals which would be applied ABSOLUTELY CONSISTENTLY. As Koukl has put it, “Moral relativism doesn’t have to do with relative circumstances, it has to do with relative people,” and this distinction makes a world of difference, i.e. the difference between Biblical and unbiblical moral functioning. Biblical morality upholds a standard that is outside of and binding upon all persons.
Dee Dee by saying this you are saying that no matter what action you want to consider, you can find a worse action. Therefore you can justify anything if you can just describe something worse. This reminds me of the battle between Knight and Zak where Knight kept using an example that was what everyone would have thought was immoral. Zak just thought up a more immoral reason for why he was forced into doing the immoral action and Knight cried foul as if this didn’t apply for some reason. And if that can be done, then nothing is absolutely immoral because it can be caused by something even more immoral. In other words, it’s all relative.
That is a statement that means very little without further clarification. Let’s say I want a new pair of shoes which (despite the opinion of some men) is a very good goal. I go into the store and steal them. I achieve a good goal, but the means that I use is not justified by that, for the means, as judged by the external standards of morality that the Bible puts upon us in light of the specific moral scenario, was immoral. I can only determine that this action was immoral if I have an absolute outside standard which must be then applied to each moral situation.You have never answered my question so I’ll ask again. Do you believe that the end justifies the means?
First off, lying would not include intended deception, such as during war or during a game, as intentionally misleading someone in those circumstances is EXPECTED….. Thus, expectation would be part of the definition of lying.
Telling someone a truth which is not what they meant, though fulfills the question is not lying, such as the little girl telling the Nazis that the Jews were under her table, meaning under the floor, but the Nazis misunderstood. She told the truth, the other people misunderstood. Thus, understanding does not have to do with lying.
The last sticky issue is "half-truths," or statements given as true with the intention to mislead….. This concept of misleading would be the sticky issue. The intent is to not convey what the other person is looking for, but yet truth is still issued. Can a truth ever be a lie?
I would define a lie as something false that was said in order to deceive. Hence, using the truth to confuse is not a lie, as it is the truth.
I have not maintained deception as sinful, only the telling of untruth. You say that the telling of untruth is ok. THAT is the disagreement.
Notice it is a FALSEHOOD that must be spoken, whereas deception DOES NOT HAVE TO BE FALSE according to the definitions you laid out.1. A false statement deliberately presented as being true; a falsehood.
You only showed that I did not define relativism like your limited definition of relativism you would like to use. I’m not sure who defines the standard definition but I am arguing that your definition allows for no absolute immorality.Now first, I want to point out that Hank’s original accusation towards me is that what I was advocating was the definition of relativism. I disproved that and showed that Hank did not really understand what relativism was, at least by standard definition today.
I don’t know how I am gored by my own argument since I believe there is an outside absolute standard for morality and have never argued against that. You are the one that’s arguing that lying is sometimes immoral and sometime moral depending on when and how it is used.I thought he would then concede that error, but he did not. Instead he sets a straw man ablaze. In fact, Hank is gored on his own argument, for if one can propose something that is more immoral, that means there is an outside absolute standard for morality by which we are measuring the morality of the choices within the situation with which we are faced.
There is no moral dilemma when you believe in absolute morality. You have a standard to live too. If something is immoral, then it is immoral all the time, not just compared to something else.However, though, the premise of his entire argument is flawed in the real world outside of hypotheticals. The “control” scenario or the “worse” option is not something that we choose, rather it is inherent to the moral dilemma with which we are faced.
Sorry Dee Dee, this is again a good working definition of relative morality whether you want to accept it or not. Nothing is absolute, it’s just measured against something worse as you stated.The only thing we are morally constrained to choose is the something “better” as measured in light of the something “worse” that is forced upon us.
I understand what you are arguing and what you have argued from the very beginning. That almost any immoral act is justified to save a life. I am arguing that God has a plan for our lives and for the world in general. When we act immorally for any reason we are basically saying that we do not believe God can enact his plan unless we act immorally to “help” him out. I believe that to be false.For example, the external circumstance that the midwives were faced with was the immoral command to murder the Hebrew baby boys and the implicit threat to their own lives. They chose the greater good of using moral deception to save lives.
Hank then asked:
quote:
You have never answered my question so I’ll ask again. Do you believe that the end justifies the means?
That is a statement that means very little without further clarification.
Let’s say I want a new pair of shoes which (despite the opinion of some men) is a very good goal. I go into the store and steal them. I achieve a good goal, but the means that I use is not justified by that, for the means, as judged by the external standards of morality that the Bible puts upon us in light of the specific moral scenario, was immoral. I can only determine that this action was immoral if I have an absolute outside standard which must be then applied to each moral situation.
The ends justifies the means in EVERY situation.
Say, I was cold and needed a fire. I could light up a stack of money (for I am so filthy rich that money means nothing to me) or I could light some firewood. It would be immoral for me to light up the money when it could be used for much more righteous purposes. If you need to go to the store, you could drive your car, or you could frivolously rent a stretch limousine. The intended goal would justify or illegitimize the means you use to reach it, that is true for every situation.
So you say, but have yet to prove, or even interact meaningfully with my main thrusts. ( ß- does that remind you of anyone)Ahh, Dee Dee, your fallacies are all over the place.
First off, YOU defined Lying as deception.
There is a world of different between telling a falsehood and deceiving, for one can deceive with the truth as well.
My point, and your definitions back me up quite well, is that the lying condemned in the Bible is telling falsehoods in order to deceive. Telling truth in order to deceive is nowhere condemned.
Let me quote a definition back at you:
quote:
1. A false statement deliberately presented as being true; a falsehood.
Notice it is a FALSEHOOD that must be spoken, whereas deception DOES NOT HAVE TO BE FALSE according to the definitions you laid out.
How is this, AN UNTRUTH CAN NEVER BE JUSTIFIED OR CONSIDERED PRAISEWORTHY BY GOD.
You only showed that I did not define relativism like your limited definition of relativism you would like to use. I’m not sure who defines the standard definition but I am arguing that your definition allows for no absolute immorality.
I don’t know how I am gored by my own argument since I believe there is an outside absolute standard for morality and have never argued against that. You are the one that’s arguing that lying is sometimes immoral and sometime moral depending on when and how it is used.
There is no moral dilemma when you believe in absolute morality. You have a standard to live too. If something is immoral, then it is immoral all the time, not just compared to something else.
Sorry Dee Dee, this is again a good working definition of relative morality whether you want to accept it or not. Nothing is absolute, it’s just measured against something worse as you stated.
I understand what you are arguing and what you have argued from the very beginning. That almost any immoral act is justified to save a life. I am arguing that God has a plan for our lives and for the world in general. When we act immorally for any reason we are basically saying that we do not believe God can enact his plan unless we act immorally to “help” him out. I believe that to be false.
Almost everyone understands what this means and it’s very simple. Are immoral acts justified if the accomplishment is something you think is better than the immoral act.
And what if you steal a pair of shoes because you don’t have any and need some. Does the end then justify the means.
I’m assuming that you mean you take every action and judge it against what will be the immediate results. Then if the immediate results somehow outweighs (and how do you determine this?) the immoral act the it is moral. Did I read you wrong?
How about sacrificing 10 innocent lives because it would probably save 20 innocent lives? How would you weigh that?
Well, since I would only advocate going into business with a believer, I would not be able to deceive them. You, on the other hand, seem to think that lying can be rightouess in the first place, leaving you no room to talk.“Dee Dee, I mailed out the checks to them this morning.” All the while knowing that the checks would bounce. Well you did tell a falsehood now did you?? You did mail the checks, it was just that pesky little bit of information that you withheld from me that the mailed checks were worthless. But hey, according to you, this would not be immoral or a lie.
I am not frothing at the mouth or anything, just wishing some clarification about whether you agree or not.
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