Re: Sins are just man-made agreements! Do you agree?
Posted: January 26th, 2022, 3:48 am
Sins are just man-made agreements. Wow, that's original ...
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Sushan wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2021, 3:08 pmAre sins merely man-made laws?No, and for several reasons. Sin is not a law, it is the breaking of a law. The question then is whether sin is the breaking of a man-made law. Everyone knows that sin is the breaking of a divine law, not a man-made law. If divine law does not exist, then sin does not exist. If divine law does exist, and we can transgress it, then sin exists.
Leontiskos wrote: ↑January 31st, 2022, 7:23 pm Sin is not a law, it is the breaking of a law. The question then is whether sin is the breaking of a man-made law. Everyone knows that sin is the breaking of a divine law, not a man-made law. If divine law does not exist, then sin does not exist.Very good. I think you've shown that the proposition as stated is false by definition, from the everyday meaning of the words.
If divine law does exist, and we can transgress it, then sin exists.
Good_Egg wrote: ↑February 1st, 2022, 9:33 amThank you. I think that's right.Leontiskos wrote: ↑January 31st, 2022, 7:23 pm Sin is not a law, it is the breaking of a law. The question then is whether sin is the breaking of a man-made law. Everyone knows that sin is the breaking of a divine law, not a man-made law. If divine law does not exist, then sin does not exist.Very good. I think you've shown that the proposition as stated is false by definition, from the everyday meaning of the words.
If divine law does exist, and we can transgress it, then sin exists.
If it is permissible to speculate, I suspect that the intended underlying proposition is "divine law does not exist".I also agree with this.
And the argument for that proposition goes something like:Yes, that is a cogent argument. To be clear, the idea is that the religious person has mistaken an experience of mundane wrongdoing for sin, because they have mistaken a man-made law for a divine law.
The feelings that we associate with the concept of sin - guilt, shame, moral disapproval of the actions of others - are adequately explained by the human social dynamics around man-made law. We know that man-made law exists, and that many believe that it carries moral weight - that we have a moral obligation to obey the laws of our society. So it is unnecessary to postulate divine law in order to explain our experience of sin. So by Occam's razor we should assume that divine law does not exist.
Slavedevice wrote: ↑February 2nd, 2022, 3:09 pm Sin is unique to Abrahamic religion! Eastern and Pagan religions have no such concept as SIN.I would have thought that most religions involve some moral "rules", and hold certain actions (theft, murder etc) to be morally wrong.
Sushan wrote: ↑April 3rd, 2021, 3:08 pm The author argues that we, humans, are not superior than any other animals. We too have basic needs like sex, food and shelter like them. But we have made agreements and laws among us making polygamy, killing others for foods, etc, sins. So the point that the author is trying to prove is that sins are not defined by divine laws, but only by mere agreements among humans. Do you agree with this point of view? Are sins merely man-made laws?By us human beings saying and agreeing that sins are objective & absolute instead of being man-made agreements, we paradoxically make it so that they are man-made. Because this information was stated by ourselves.
GrayArea wrote: ↑February 3rd, 2022, 5:09 amDon't follow the logic here. If I state that gravity objectively exists, does that turn it into a man-made agreement ?
By us human beings saying and agreeing that sins are objective & absolute instead of being man-made agreements, we paradoxically make it so that they are man-made. Because this information was stated by ourselves.
Good_Egg wrote: ↑February 4th, 2022, 4:03 amYes. Even though it is true objectively AND physically, it is still a man-made agreement. However, the important thing to know is that before gravity is agreed as true by humans, it is first agreed as true by the universe. In fact, the reason why it is agreed as true by humans is because it is agreed as true by the universe / laws of physics.GrayArea wrote: ↑February 3rd, 2022, 5:09 amDon't follow the logic here. If I state that gravity objectively exists, does that turn it into a man-made agreement ?
By us human beings saying and agreeing that sins are objective & absolute instead of being man-made agreements, we paradoxically make it so that they are man-made. Because this information was stated by ourselves.
GrayArea wrote: ↑February 4th, 2022, 4:15 amThat's fair enough. It becomes a socially-agreed cultural truth as well as an objective physical truth when enough people in the culture believe it.Good_Egg wrote: ↑February 4th, 2022, 4:03 am If I state that gravity objectively exists, does that turn it into a man-made agreement ?Yes. Even though it is true objectively AND physically, it is still a man-made agreement. However, the important thing to know is that before gravity is agreed as true by humans, it is first agreed as true by the universe. In fact, the reason why it is agreed as true by humans is because it is agreed as true by the universe / laws of physics.
But unlike this aspect of laws of physics, sins are only a man-made agreement that is not agreed as true by the universe. And it is only agreed as true by humans because we want it that way, not the Universe.There's a difference between saying water cannot flow uphill and saying water should not flow uphill.
(As in, there is nothing in the Universe that physically makes it impossible to sin like how it is physically impossible to go against the laws of physics. It only tries to restrain us using human logic, where we have a choice to either succumb to it or ignore it.)
The difference between the laws of physics and human morals is that the first one cannot be ignored even though it is a man-made agreement, but the second one can be.
Good_Egg wrote: ↑February 7th, 2022, 7:38 pmThe prohibition of the act of sinning is a man-made agreement, whereas the sin or the result itself that is committed through an act of sinning is objective. But this is only from a human perspective. From the "Universe's" perspective, it does not matter if a lifeform lives or dies. The Universe is still itself. In fact, its existence is directly defined little by little, through these individual events themselves.GrayArea wrote: ↑February 4th, 2022, 4:15 amThat's fair enough. It becomes a socially-agreed cultural truth as well as an objective physical truth when enough people in the culture believe it.Good_Egg wrote: ↑February 4th, 2022, 4:03 am If I state that gravity objectively exists, does that turn it into a man-made agreement ?Yes. Even though it is true objectively AND physically, it is still a man-made agreement. However, the important thing to know is that before gravity is agreed as true by humans, it is first agreed as true by the universe. In fact, the reason why it is agreed as true by humans is because it is agreed as true by the universe / laws of physics.
But unlike this aspect of laws of physics, sins are only a man-made agreement that is not agreed as true by the universe. And it is only agreed as true by humans because we want it that way, not the Universe.There's a difference between saying water cannot flow uphill and saying water should not flow uphill.
(As in, there is nothing in the Universe that physically makes it impossible to sin like how it is physically impossible to go against the laws of physics. It only tries to restrain us using human logic, where we have a choice to either succumb to it or ignore it.)
The difference between the laws of physics and human morals is that the first one cannot be ignored even though it is a man-made agreement, but the second one can be.
Yes there is nothing in the Universe that makes it physically impossible to commit murder (to take one example of an act that most of us would, as part of our man-made agreement, agree was a sin). But that was never what morality claimed. Morality claims that we should not murder.
You're right - the question is how much of an objective reality that agreement reflects. Is there some sort of truth of the universe that murder is bad, to which that human agreement is a response ? Or is it merely an arbitrary social convention ?
Could we all turn around and agree that we're all fine with murder now ? Or would we run into consequences that we could not ignore ? Consequences not at the level of physics but at the level of recognisable badness ?
If the only level of objective reality you will accept is physics then you've chosen to define away any possibility of objective morality.
Whereas Kant has it that if you can will it to be a universal rule that people may murder each other at will then the act isn't sinful. Again, with a sense of "can" that is weaker than physical impossibility. Because lying to oneself is possible...