Anonymous wrote:My humanity commands how I live my life. Treating people how I want to be treated.
I'm not looking for any reward. I'm not looking for "blessings," or heaven, or anything self-serving.
I do good, because my humanity is enough - even if I don't get anything in return. To me, if you really need some book to tell you how to be a decent human being, then your ethics must be very flimsy - because you're basically admitting that being decent is not innate within you.
Anonymous wrote:dispute the premise. The vast majority of people do not live their life governed by religion or any other principle. We are all mostly just getting by and reacting to the daily challenges life throws our way. Economics, culture, personality, and family history have much more to do with how we make choices. And the big choices where we might call on religion (or lack of it, or any other set of principles) are very few and far between. Even for those choices (eg unwanted pregnancy, end of life care) people almost always revert to the individual circumstances of their lives, not an abstract belief system.
Disagree. At least for myself, I definitely know there is a God. I see proof of it every day.
Anonymous wrote:I dispute the premise. The vast majority of people do not live their life governed by religion or any other principle. We are all mostly just getting by and reacting to the daily challenges life throws our way. Economics, culture, personality, and family history have much more to do with how we make choices. And the big choices where we might call on religion (or lack of it, or any other set of principles) are very few and far between. Even for those choices (eg unwanted pregnancy, end of life care) people almost always revert to the individual circumstances of their lives, not an abstract belief system.
dispute the premise. The vast majority of people do not live their life governed by religion or any other principle. We are all mostly just getting by and reacting to the daily challenges life throws our way. Economics, culture, personality, and family history have much more to do with how we make choices. And the big choices where we might call on religion (or lack of it, or any other set of principles) are very few and far between. Even for those choices (eg unwanted pregnancy, end of life care) people almost always revert to the individual circumstances of their lives, not an abstract belief system.
Anonymous wrote:In case the OP is still around, this is an incredible article written by a born and bred atheist who converted to Catholicism, based on the problem of morality. It addresses, head-on, several of the weak arguments given in this thread:
http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/features/2013/05/23/the-atheist-orthodoxy-that-drove-me-to-faith/