Aizle wrote:
Rafael wrote:
Why should one be so opposed to Socratic learning or having his "argument picked apart"? All that means is your argument had some sort of flaw and you are afraid of being wrong. If you are not wrong, you have a defensible position and should therefore have no hesitation to engage anyone in any arena.
Because it's pedantic and insulting when you're trying to have a conversation and share opinions on things. It's especially annoying because of the tendency for several posters here to use it as a dodge in actually forwarding their own views and opinions on things. In general it's used here as a method to try and appear smart, and I'm done with humoring anyone with it.
It is one way to establish one's own point as a matter of fact. It does so by discarding the negatives which cannot be true. Where you find disagreement you establish logical faults by pointing out that negating one point does not necessary negate others generally by association fallacy or equivocation.
Rafael wrote:
How can you say that man makes rights yet express disgust over so labeled apalling acts such as slavery, oppression, poverty, etc? If it is law, it is defined as a right since we are assuming man makes rights and does so through law (might). And what of that law itself? If I break your neck, the law didn't stop me from doing so and therefore it must not actually delineate a right by definition. I took the right to do what I pleased through my own law (rights/might) and the laws (other rights/might) be damned. Revolution would be the ultimate incarnation of this position. It is the resolution of which rights are Right.
Essentially, Aizle, your position amounts to "there are no rights except those which you take unto yourself."
You're confusing "rights" with "morality" the two are not the same. People absolutely can decide to create and support immoral rights. A perfect example would be the Taliban where men had the right to beat women for not wearing a burka or any number of other stupid things. They created that "right", however I still find it morally reprehensable. We're also as a larger world community working to try and influence their decision to change and revoke those kinds of "rights".[/quote]
People cannot decide to create and support immoral rights if rights are defined by man. That makes no sense. If people create a right, they do so around a moral framework. If you perceive something to immoral, you do so because you perceive it violates what you think to be a right. In this case, the right of women not to be beat for an apparently arbitrary reason. Yet, such an action is just an expression of ones rights. Rights constructed in accordance with ones own moral framework. What you are saying is "immoral" through the lens of your own perspective and opinion.
The ridiculous video posted about moral objectivity and science made the erroneous statement. In fact, the speaker admitted that moral objectivity could not be understood by man, yet posited because such a framework existed, we had no business not trying to construct our culture around it.