"The Matthew Shepard case is a landmark case that paved a lot of ground for hate crime legislation. With what is going on in the world, homophobia at the Sochi Olympics, Kill-the-Gays Bill in Uganda, it is extremely inappropriate to publish such material regardless of whether or not it is true, especially if you yourself identify as a "gay man." In this case, assuming that what this author claims is true, the "lie" is much much more beneficial to society than the "truth." "
Uria Salvatore
Monday, November 25, 2013
Sunday, November 17, 2013
The Tolerance Buzzsaw
"Gay marriage, like all civil rights, isn’t really something you can have an opinion on. The only opinion you can morally, legitimately have, is whether or not you want to have a gay marriage. Your opinion on whether gay people should be allowed to get married isn’t so much an opinion on a two-sided question, as it is a determining factor in whether you are a bigoted person."
Jeremy Deeks
Jeremy Deeks
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Remembrance Day 2013
O valiant hearts who to
your glory came
Through dust of conflict and through battle flame;
Tranquil you lie, your knightly virtue proved,
Your memory hallowed in the land you loved.
Through dust of conflict and through battle flame;
Tranquil you lie, your knightly virtue proved,
Your memory hallowed in the land you loved.
Splendid you passed, the
great surrender made;
Into the light that nevermore shall fade;
Deep your contentment in that blest abode,
Who wait the last clear trumpet call of God.
Into the light that nevermore shall fade;
Deep your contentment in that blest abode,
Who wait the last clear trumpet call of God.
Long years ago, as earth
lay dark and still,
Rose a loud cry upon a lonely hill,
While in the frailty of our human clay,
Christ, our Redeemer, passed the self same way.
Still stands His Cross from that dread hour to this,
Like some bright star above the dark abyss;
Still, through the veil, the Victors pitying eyes
Look down to bless our lesser Calvaries.
O Risen Lord, O Shepherd of our dead,
Whose cross has bought them and Whose staff has led,
In glorious hope their proud and sorrowing land
Commits her children to Thy gracious hand.
Rose a loud cry upon a lonely hill,
While in the frailty of our human clay,
Christ, our Redeemer, passed the self same way.
Still stands His Cross from that dread hour to this,
Like some bright star above the dark abyss;
Still, through the veil, the Victors pitying eyes
Look down to bless our lesser Calvaries.
O Risen Lord, O Shepherd of our dead,
Whose cross has bought them and Whose staff has led,
In glorious hope their proud and sorrowing land
Commits her children to Thy gracious hand.
Friday, October 25, 2013
Hitchens on "The Immorality of the Offer of Vicarious Redemption"
In the Christianity Today Panel Debate Christopher Hitchens said the following:
“I couldn’t be brought to believe that there’s such a thing as vicarious redemption, which I think is an immoral doctrine. I could pay your debt, Douglas [Wilson], I’d happily do it. Some people would even be willing to serve other people’s terms in prison. But I can’t say “I’ll take your sins on me”. I can’t say “You can throw your responsibilities on me”.
Concerning the atonement, J.I. Packer wrote:
“Anselm’s Cur Deus Homo?, which largely determined the mediaeval development, saw Christ’s satisfactio for our sins as the offering of compensation or damages for dishonour done, but the Reformers saw it as the undergoing of vicarious punishment (poena) to meet the claims on us of God’s holy law and wrath (i.e. his punitive justice).”
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
ID, Miracles and Mechanism.
One common objection to ID is that the only proposed mechanism by which the designer could act through is a miracle. Is this true, though?
Consider ID proponent Michael Behe’s description of what he
calls “finely tuned events”:
“Suppose the
laboratory of Pope Mary’s physicist is next to a huge warehouse in which is
stored a colossal number of little shiny spheres. Each sphere encloses the
complete history of a separate, self-contained, possible universe, waiting to
be activated. (In other words, the warehouse can be considered a vast
multiverse of possible universes, but none of them have yet been made real.) One
enormous section of the warehouse contains all the universes that, if
activated, would fail to produce life. They would develop into universes
consisting of just one big black hole, universes without stars, universes
without atoms, or other abysmal failures. In a small wing of the huge warehouse
are stored possible universes that have the right general laws and constants of
nature for life. Almost all of them, however, fall into the category of “close,
but no cigar.” For example, in one possible universe the Mars-sized body would
hit the nascent earth at the wrong angle and life would never commence. In one
small room of the small wing are those universes that would develop life.
Almost all of the, however, would not develop intelligent life. In one small closet
of the small room of the small wing are placed possible universes that would
actually develop intelligent life. One afternoon the überphysicist walks from
his lab to the warehouse, passes by the huge collection of possible dead
universes, strolls into the small wing, over to the small room, opens the small
closet, and selects one of the extremely rare universes that is set up to lead
to intelligent life. Then he “adds water” to activate it. In that case the
now-active universe is fine-tuned to the very great degree of detail required,
yet it is activated in a “single creative act”.
...There are myriad
Powerball-winning events, but they aren’t due to chance. They were foreseen,
and chosen from all the possible universes.”
The Edge of Evolution, 231-232
So, given that finely-tuned events would warrant an
inference to design, but involve an unbroken sequence of secondary causation, the
objection fails. As Behe remarks
“... the assumption
that design unavoidably requires “interference” rests mostly on a lack of
imagination.”
Interestingly enough, John Wilkins and Michael Ruse, both stalwart
foes of ID, have actually spoken favourably of the scientific legitimacy of
“guided mutation” with reference to multiverse scenarios.
Also, there is similarity between Behe’s “finely-tuned
events” and Eugene Koonin’s proposal of an “anthropically selected event”. Koonin’s proposal is that the event of abiogenesis may have
been anthropically selected from a set of possible histories. That is to say,
only a universe in which abiogenesis occurs at least once can support
observers, and, given the large number of possible histories available on
certain physical theories, we happen to find ourselves by chance in a universe
in which abiogenesis has indeed taken place. One might even find oneself living
in a universe where, given experimental data, abiogenesis looks too improbable to
have occurred even once, but nevertheless has occurred. As far as I can see, such an event would be empirically
identical to Behe’s “finely-tuned event” scenario.
Further reading:
Michael Behe 2007 “The Edge of
Evolution: The Search for the Limits of Darwinism”
Eugene Koonin 2007 “The
cosmological model of inflation and the transition from chance to biological
evolution in the history of life” Biology
Direct
John Wilkins 2012 “Could God create
Darwinian accidents?” Zygon vol. 47
no. 1.
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Papalinton's ethical challenge.
This is a comment which I originally posted on Victor Reppert's blog "Dangerous Idea"
I'm reposting the challenge here in the hopes that papalinton might respond to it.
First, consider the idea of a “vomitorium”, in which the patrons go through a cycle of eating then regurgitating. (Apparently, contrary to popular belief, vomitoriums as such didn’t actually exist in ancient Rome.)
I could well imagine that for some people, (provided they protected themselves from the damage to the teeth and throat which comes with repeated exposure to stomach acid), a vomitorium could indeed maximise their pleasure.
But, surely the pleasure that we get from eating is coupled to the good of nutrition. There’s nothing wrong with enjoying the pleasure which comes with eating, but when the pleasure itself becomes the end and is completely decoupled from the good, then we get this perverse behaviour.
Also, we can refer here to the proper use of the body. Surely it’s a *misuse* of one’s facility of vomiting to deliberately regurgitate healthy food like that?
Consider another example, this time in the sexual sphere. It may indeed be the case that a number of people have the potential to climax sexually via necrophiliac acts. On a utilitarian framework, there would be no harm involved and significant pleasure. But, surely such acts are a profoundly ugly and depraved *misuse* of the human body, and a person who has such urges is ethically obliged to resist temptation.
Do you agree that ethics must include some reference to the proper use of the body?
It seems to me that you have three options:
1. Deny that the two acts I’ve described are actually immoral.
2. Expound an ethical theory which plausibly explains the immorality of these acts, but doesn’t refer to teleology.
3. Concede that there are examples of teleology which aren't a psychological illusion but, rather, a true perception of an independently existing reality.
.
I'm reposting the challenge here in the hopes that papalinton might respond to it.
First, consider the idea of a “vomitorium”, in which the patrons go through a cycle of eating then regurgitating. (Apparently, contrary to popular belief, vomitoriums as such didn’t actually exist in ancient Rome.)
I could well imagine that for some people, (provided they protected themselves from the damage to the teeth and throat which comes with repeated exposure to stomach acid), a vomitorium could indeed maximise their pleasure.
But, surely the pleasure that we get from eating is coupled to the good of nutrition. There’s nothing wrong with enjoying the pleasure which comes with eating, but when the pleasure itself becomes the end and is completely decoupled from the good, then we get this perverse behaviour.
Also, we can refer here to the proper use of the body. Surely it’s a *misuse* of one’s facility of vomiting to deliberately regurgitate healthy food like that?
Consider another example, this time in the sexual sphere. It may indeed be the case that a number of people have the potential to climax sexually via necrophiliac acts. On a utilitarian framework, there would be no harm involved and significant pleasure. But, surely such acts are a profoundly ugly and depraved *misuse* of the human body, and a person who has such urges is ethically obliged to resist temptation.
Do you agree that ethics must include some reference to the proper use of the body?
It seems to me that you have three options:
1. Deny that the two acts I’ve described are actually immoral.
2. Expound an ethical theory which plausibly explains the immorality of these acts, but doesn’t refer to teleology.
3. Concede that there are examples of teleology which aren't a psychological illusion but, rather, a true perception of an independently existing reality.
.
War on Women
Here’s a comment I recently read online:
“let me assure you, at some point your contraception WILL
FAIL. So the choice is to not have sex at all, which I cannot imagine anyone
would recommend as a viable option or even an ideal for which to strive, or to
deal with unplanned pregnancy.”
Consider the following four statements:
1. Women ought to have the right to not have children, for
example, to continue their career or education.
2. Two consenting adults can never be counselled to refrain
from sexual behaviour.
3. Contraception often fails.
4. Therefore, abortion should be made available.
I suspect that some of the rhetoric from the pro-choice side
stems from the intuition that the pro-life position involves the rejection of
either 1. or 2. And, of course, no rational person could ever seriously even
think about denying 2, right? Thus, the REAL motivation for the primitive
woman-hating pro-lifers must be their denial of 1.
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Quote: N.T. Wright on Gnosticism.
"Neo-Gnosticism is the philosophy that invites you to search deep inside yourself and discover some exciting things by which you must then live. It is the philosophy which declares that the only real moral imperative is that you should then be true to what you find when you engage in that deep inward search. But this is not a religion of redemption. It is not at all a Jewish vision of the covenant God who sets free the helpless slaves. It appeals, on the contrary, to the pride that says “I’m really quite an exciting person, deep down, whatever I may look like outwardly” - the theme of half the cheap movies and novels in today’s world. It appeals to the stimulus of that ever-deeper navel-gazing (“finding out who I really am”) which is the subject of a million self-help books, and the home-made validation of a thousand ethical confusions. It corresponds, in other words, to what a great many people in our world want to believe and want to do, rather than to the hard and bracing challenge of the very Jewish gospel of Jesus. It appears to legitimate precisely that sort of religion which a large swathe of America and a fair chunk of Europe yearns for: a free-for-all, do-it-yourself spirituality, with a strong though ineffective agenda of social protest against the powers that be, and an I'm-OK-you're-OK attitude on all matters religious and ethical. At least, with one exception: You can have any sort of spirituality you like (Zen, labyrinths, Tai Chi) as long as it isn’t orthodox Christianity."
N.T. Wright
N.T. Wright
Quote: JPII on sloth.
"The fact is that attaining or realizing a higher value demands a greater effort of will. So in order to spare ourselves the effort, to excuse our failure to obtain this value, we minimize its significance, deny it the respect which it deserves, even see it as in some way evil, even though objectivity requires us to recognize that it is good. Resentment possesses as you see the distinctive characteristics of the cardinal sin called sloth. St Thomas defines sloth (acedia) as ‘a sadness arising from the fact that the good is difficult’."
John Paul II, Love and Responsibility
John Paul II, Love and Responsibility
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