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Tuesday, April 13, 2004 - 8:31amSanction this postReply
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The only people that I have face to face contact with are theists and I receive this question - as I am sure many of you do - probably the most frequently. I wrote this as a kind of response to their question.

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What I find ironic is books like "The purpose Driven Life" by Rick Warren. If God gives people purpose and meaning why does a Christian have to write about what purpose and meaning means and how it applies? This seems like a evidence that Christians don't feel that religion gives them the purpose and meaning they claim they receive - especially since the book has been flying off the shelves. A few questions nag at me about this - why does it take someone to rationalize purpose and meaning from religious texts? Where is the Holy Spirit and why is He not defining, giving meaning, or somehow showing purpose to Christians? If Christians are able to rationalize their purpose and meaning why are atheistic rationalizations or logical inductive/deductive chains of thought any less valid?

Perhaps what Christians mean is that unless God is sanctioning actions of the believer then they have no merit or significance attached to them. Does that mean that Hindus cannot find meaning and purpose in their lives? What about Muslims? Does this mean that purpose and meaning that non-Christians find is only false purpose and meaning? Or maybe a non-Christians purpose and meaning is "valid" but not "real" purpose and meaning like a Christians?

Purpose and meaning can only find their epistemic roots in the process of obtaining values. This means that one must obtain those things which are relevant to one's life and which sustain it. The process of obtaining values gives life purpose and meaning. Christians cannot logically obtain values because they have been told by their own Messiah that in order to gain the meaningless value of eternal life they must forfeit their pursuit of values. This act strips an individual from any possibility of obtaining purpose and meaning in this life. By embracing a meaningless concept the Christian is the one who is without purpose and meaning in the world - who knows if they will actually obtain their eternal value.

But even the Christian must lay down his value of eternal life and attempt to obtain real values. This act creates a gnawing dichotomy which constantly hounds him or her. It is the Christians duty to only live for his or her God and realize that all that is obtained is not something he or she earned. The result of this is the lowering of self-esteem and self-worth. It takes someone like Rick Warren to ferret out nuggets of life-affirming and self-building insights to help the Christian regain their purpose and meaning.

From the Back Cover
"Another Landmark Book by Rick Warren

You are not an accident. Even before the universe was created, God had you in mind, and he planned you for his purposes. These purposes will extend far beyond the few years you will spend on earth. You were made to last forever!

Self-help books often suggest that you try to discover the meaning and purpose of your life by looking within yourself, but Rick Warren says that is the wrong place to start. You must begin with God, your Creator, and his reasons..."

I could go on to ask how God actually obtains values and call into question his "purposes" - by doing this the whole argument for God creating and planning people for his purposes would then break down causing the Christian to not only be without his/her own purposes but also lose God's purposes for him/her as well. Just whose life is without meaning and purpose?


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Wednesday, October 18, 2006 - 7:05amSanction this postReply
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I've returned...but probably only temporarily.  The tension between the via activa and the via contemplativa continues to eat away at my time.  Yet this does not concern me--why?  Well, I see my life as undergirded by some sort of divine purpose. 
First, responses: 
 If God gives people purpose and meaning why does a Christian have to write about what purpose and meaning means and how it applies?
Perhaps because people constitute a medium through which God's purpose(s) is (are) revealed. 
This seems like a evidence that Christians don't feel that religion gives them the purpose and meaning they claim they receive - especially since the book has been flying off the shelves.
Many Christians, I fear, carry the designation 'Christian' nominally, i.e. their 'belief' extends this far:  should they receive governmental surveys, they would mark 'Christian' under 'Religious Preference.'  Doesn't it seem plausible that such persons of very tentative and unconcious faith-adherence saw the book as attractive in that it gave them a deeper appreciation and understanding of the faith to which they outwardly gave assent, but inwardly failed to appropriate in any meaningful way?
A few questions nag at me about this - why does it take someone to rationalize purpose and meaning from religious texts? Where is the Holy Spirit and why is He not defining, giving meaning, or somehow showing purpose to Christians?    
I'm not sure if the word 'rationalize' is entirely appropriate here.  Perhaps 'glean'?  Perhaps 'interpret and re-present'?  Anyway, these questions, it seems to me, essentially ask why it is that God does not communicate his meaning/purposes directly to people.  Well, I would contend that God does, in fact, do this; indeed, it seems that a great many saints attribute their spiritual vibrancy and the singular and holy activities of their lives to highly personal and direct relationships to the divine.  Other persons, however, though they persevere in charity and though they pray, never seem to achieve a similar level of spiritual relationship with and direction from God.  To offer spiritual direction to these less mystically-inclined persons, I would assume the Holy Spirit uses other communicative means, i.e. prayer groups, clergy, the religious, the laity, and all people, religious or not.       
Perhaps what Christians mean is that unless God is sanctioning actions of the believer then they have no merit or significance attached to them. Does that mean that Hindus cannot find meaning and purpose in their lives? What about Muslims? Does this mean that purpose and meaning that non-Christians find is only false purpose and meaning? Or maybe a non-Christians purpose and meaning is "valid" but not "real" purpose and meaning like a Christians?

It seems that all persons are motivated toward attaining happiness (or what Aristotle calls eudaimondia).  Human nature, it appears, is motivated toward happiness as its true end, and the process of life is simply the process of trying to reach this end.  Now it is my opinion (as a Christian) that Christianity is the religion which offers the best means of attaining this goal--both in the here and in the hereafter, and it is my opinion (as a Catholic Christian) that the Catholic Church provides the best spiritual and sacramental milieu for giving one the opportunity to attain this goal.  I would think that many Christians believe something similar.
This means that one must obtain those things which are relevant to one's life and which sustain it. The process of obtaining values gives life purpose and meaning.  
I struggle with the Nietzschean tone of these statements.  To say that the purpose of life is mere value attainment is just to say, in my opinion, that the purpose of life is mere license to act in whatever way one sees fit.  Do you not see a danger here?  Do you not see a certain belittling of man to the status of animal?

I'd love to carry on this post further, but I must go.  I'm looking forward to reading your comments.         


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Wednesday, October 18, 2006 - 9:32amSanction this postReply
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Ahh - but man IS an animal, just one which has capacity to making his/her own purpose in life, and which recognises that humans, like all other living organisms, have their specific nature, and that it is following to that nature which legitimately gives the purpose, not the straw-dog of licensiousness.....

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Wednesday, October 18, 2006 - 9:43amSanction this postReply
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Wilhelm, you write:
It seems that all persons are motivated toward attaining happiness (or what Aristotle calls eudaimondia). Human nature, it appears, is motivated toward happiness as its true end, and the process of life is simply the process of trying to reach this end. Now it is my opinion (as a Christian) that Christianity is the religion which offers the best means of attaining this goal--both in the here and in the hereafter, and it is my opinion (as a Catholic Christian) that the Catholic Church provides the best spiritual and sacramental milieu for giving one the opportunity to attain this goal. I would think that many Christians believe something similar.
You then quote Tim Scobey -- "This means that one must obtain those things which are relevant to one's life and which sustain it. The process of obtaining values gives life purpose and meaning." -- and remark:
I struggle with the Nietzschean tone of these statements. To say that the purpose of life is mere value attainment is just to say, in my opinion, that the purpose of life is mere license to act in whatever way one sees fit. Do you not see a danger here? Do you not see a certain belittling of man to the status of animal?
Not at all, for as Rand observes, "Man cannot survive, like an animal, by acting on the range of the moment." (Virtue of Selfishness, p. 24)

But aren't you contradicting yourself? On the one hand, you say that "all persons are motivated toward attaining happiness" and that "the process of life is simply the process of trying to reach this end." On the other hand, you say that if "the purpose of life is mere value attainment," then it is a "mere license to act in whatever way one sees fit."

Isn't the pursuit of happiness the pursuit of value attainment? And if it is, then how does this imply a mere license to act in whatever way one sees fit -- as if whatever action one chooses will lead to happiness? As Rand points out, one's happiness cannot be achieved in the pursuit of mindless whims, but depends on very specific actions, which satisfy one's needs as a certain kind of living organism, namely a rational animal. For further details, see her essay, "The Objectivist Ethics," in The Virtue of Selfishness.

As for the Catholic Church providing the best milieu for attaining happiness, I'd respectfully disagree, and cite as evidence Rand's essay "Of Living Death" in The Voice of Reason: Essays in Objectivist Thought..

- Bill

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Wednesday, October 18, 2006 - 7:09pmSanction this postReply
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God's Purposes are His Own

Wilhelm,

You said: "Perhaps because people constitute a medium through which God's purpose(s) is (are) revealed."

To whom is God's purpose being revealed? To God? To us? There's got to be some other rationalization that you could offer better than this! It's as bad as those fundamentalists who say that God created fossils (which are indeed conclusive proof of evolution) to test our faith.

Even if there were a personal God, why should we care what his purposes might be? If God were to condemn us to hell for finding our own purpose in life through observation, introspection, and reason, after providing us no means to divine his purpose other than faith in either a priesthood or a text, why should we respect him or his wishes? That kind of God is called a demon in my book. Better to smile in hell than to frown in Heaven.

As for the notion that without God either there is no purpose, or that all is permitted, this is the psychology of a child who wishes to replace his father's commandments for his own judgments.

Ted Keer

BTW, You sure got a down-smacking in Matthew Stewart's The Courtier and the Heretic: Leibniz, Spinoza, and the Fate of God in the Modern World. Hope you're not aching too badly. :)


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Thursday, October 19, 2006 - 11:05amSanction this postReply
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Ahh - but man IS an animal, just one which has capacity to making his/her own purpose in life, and which recognises that humans, like all other living organisms, have their specific nature, and that it is following to that nature which legitimately gives the purpose, not the straw-dog of licensiousness.....

Aristotle defines man as a rational animal, which is, I think, a good description.  It is just this rationality of man which permits him to construct purposes for his life and calculate his ends in accordance with his nature.  The difficulty is that the essence of man's nature is something of an ambiguity, an ambiguity proven in human practice:  persons allegedly "following to" their nature often carry out lives of remarkably dissimilar content, e.g. Mother Theresa and Adolf Hitler.  Moreover, it seems as though man is the only animal that needs to reflect upon his nature-- that needs to realize (or, at least to assert) his natural place in the cosmos-- in order to act with any kind of consistency.  Man thinks about his actions; he is not, like other animals, bound to the strict instructions of instrinct.  It thus makes sense that, for some (certain existentialists come to mind, for whom human nature is the mere capacity to choose), licensiousness is a nature-sanctioned raison d'etre.    

I wrote:
I struggle with the Nietzschean tone of these statements. To say that the purpose of life is mere value attainment is just to say, in my opinion, that the purpose of life is mere license to act in whatever way one sees fit. Do you not see a danger here? Do you not see a certain belittling of man to the status of animal?
William responded:
Not at all, for as Rand observes, "Man cannot survive, like an animal, by acting on the range of the moment." (Virtue of Selfishness, p. 24)

I find the response misdirected.  When I said that a life-philosophy whose goal is mere value attainment might belittle man to the status of animal, I was referring to the Nietzschean notion of the human animal, for whom 
there is no "being" behind doing, effecting, becoming; "the doer" is merely a fiction added to the deed—the deed is everything. (On the Genealogy of Morals). 
According to this notion, man becomes an animal, as his nature is identical to his will, just as other animals, by instinct, reveal their nature entirely in their action.  It is because man lacks transcendent purpose that he has license to create his own; unlike other animals, his instincts do not determine his purpose for him.  Man is not, however, reduced to an animal in the sense that he acts only "on the range of the moment."  Rather, man is unique among animals in that he is naturally endowed with an active "memory of the will," which enables him to create purposes for himself, to
...separate necessary events from chance ones, to think causally, to see and anticipate what is distant as if it were present, to set out what is ends and what is means, in general to be able to reckon and calculate... (On the Genealogy of Morals).
think causally, to see and anticipate what is distant as if it were present, to set out what is ends and what is means, in general to be able to reckon and calculateIt seems, therefore, that William misunderstood my meaning when I wrote that value attainment as a goal for life reduces man to the status of animal, which explains his misdirected response. 

William later wrote:    

But aren't you contradicting yourself? On the one hand, you say that "all persons are motivated toward attaining happiness" and that "the process of life is simply the process of trying to reach this end." On the other hand, you say that if "the purpose of life is mere value attainment," then it is a "mere license to act in whatever way one sees fit."
A contradiction would only be present if I had written that "the purpose of life is simply the process of trying to reach this end." 
Isn't the pursuit of happiness the pursuit of value attainment?
Yes.
then how does this imply a mere license to act in whatever way one sees fit -- as if whatever action one chooses will lead to happiness?
Because to act so as to attain what one values is to act in whatever way one sees fit.  The action that one deems fit to execute is that which one believes will lead to happiness; it is not as though whatever action one chooses will in fact lead to happiness. 
As for the Catholic Church providing the best milieu for attaining happiness, I'd respectfully disagree, and cite as evidence Rand's essay "Of Living Death" in The Voice of Reason: Essays in Objectivist Thought.
I'll take a look at it, thanks.
You said: "Perhaps because people constitute a medium through which God's purpose(s) is (are) revealed."

To whom is God's purpose being revealed? To God? To us?
What I meant is that God's purposes are perhaps revealed communally and indirectly, as opposed to individually and directly.  That is, perhaps we realize God's purposes through our relationships with others, past and present.  By reading the book of Romans, for instance, I enter into relationship with the person who gave me the Bible in which I'm reading it, the persons who printed this particular Bible, the persons who translated the Bible from its original Greek, the persons who preserved the text, and finally St. Paul, who composed (we're not sure if it was written or dictated) the text.  The vast majority of people (I would venture) are not prophets or mystics, to whom God communicates individually and directly. 

Even if there were a personal God, why should we care what his purposes might be?
Because his purposes might be the best ones for us. 
If God were to condemn us to hell for finding our own purpose in life through observation, introspection, and reason, after providing us no means to divine his purpose other than faith in either a priesthood or a text, why should we respect him or his wishes? That kind of God is called a demon in my book. Better to smile in hell than to frown in Heaven.
I wouldn't say that a priesthood or a text is the only means by which we are able to divine God's purposes.  In fact, I think that a person who strives with pure conscience to live in accordance with God's will (or purpose), even though he never actually learns God's specific will, lives according to God's purpose. 
BTW, You sure got a down-smacking in Matthew Stewart's The Courtier and the Heretic: Leibniz, Spinoza, and the Fate of God in the Modern World. Hope you're not aching too badly. :)
I did?  Unfortunately, Matthew Stewart completely caricatures my person and provides an account of my philosophy more skewed than Voltaire does in Candide.  Please read this review:  http://www.ephilosopher.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=PNAmazon&file=index2&asin=0393058980 , whose main thesis is that:
What "Amadeus" did for Salieri, Stewart's book does for Leibniz. If Spinoza and Leibniz were in the midst of a bitter divorce, this is precisely the sort of book Spinoza's attorney would come up with.
In short, Stewart's book is drivel.  Question:  Have you read my Theodicy, Monadology, or various correspondences?  Read these, then get back to me.  Thanks! 

Warm regards,
Gottfried

[Edited to remove weird formatting error]
(Edited by Joseph Rowlands on 2/16, 12:41pm)


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Thursday, October 19, 2006 - 1:54pmSanction this postReply
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Wilhelm wrote,
It is because man lacks transcendent purpose that he has license to create his own; unlike other animals, his instincts do not determine his purpose for him.
Man doesn't "create" his ultimate purpose, because his ultimate purpose or ultimate goal in life is simply what is supremely valuable to him, which is determined by his nature as a particular kind of living organism. What is supremely valuable to him -- namely, the achievement of his own happiness -- is set by his nature. It is not ordained by a supernatural being, for whom there is no credible scientific evidence.

Isn't the pursuit of happiness the pursuit of value attainment?
Yes.
Then how does this imply a mere license to act in whatever way one sees fit -- as if whatever action one chooses will lead to happiness?
Because to act so as to attain what one values is to act in whatever way one sees fit. The action that one deems fit to execute is that which one believes will lead to happiness; it is not as though whatever action one chooses will in fact lead to happiness.
When you said "license" to act in whatever way one sees fit, I took you to mean "moral justification." But by "license," you evidently meant the "right" or "freedom" to act in whatever way one sees fit. Fair enough, but wouldn't that be true for any moral end or goal, secular or religious? Suppose one values obedience to God as one's ultimate end or goal. Wouldn't that also imply a "license" to act in whatever way one sees fit, insofar as "the action one deems fit to execute" is that which one believes will satisfy God's wishes? It appears that by "license" you're simply referring to the right or freedom to act on one's judgment, which would apply just as much to the practice of a religious morality as it does to the practice of a secular one.

- Bill





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Thursday, October 19, 2006 - 5:55pmSanction this postReply
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Gottfried,

I can't carry on a discussion on the basis of revelation, so I won't try. My reference to Stewart's very readable book was more of a friendly jab than an actual challenge, given that I assume the real Leibniz is roasting in hell right now. I happen to be a Spinoza partisan myself, in so far as a Spinoza partisan would be something that Spinoza himself would countenance. But I have indeed forced myself through that most unpleasant chore of slogging through the Monadology. It didn't leave me eager to attack any of the other works. Congrats on the Calculus though.

Ted

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Friday, October 20, 2006 - 6:18pmSanction this postReply
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The title of this thread - "Without God there is no purpose" -- reminds me of a book by Ludwig von Mises entitled Planning for Freedom, in which Mises points out that there is nothing wrong with economic planning as such; the only question is: who is doing the planning, the State or the individual. Collectivists make an assumption similar to Gottfried's: Without the State there is no planning.

In both cases, the assumption is that the any plans or purposes must come from outside the individual actor -- either from God or from the State. In both cases, the individual is simply a pawn of some greater power whose dictates he or she must obey. Not a very enobling picture, is it?! But that's the legacy of theism and statism. The point can be summed up succinctly in Rand's timeless essay: "Faith and Force: Destroyers of the Modern World."

- Bill

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Monday, October 23, 2006 - 3:41amSanction this postReply
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Bill wrote:

Man doesn't "create" his ultimate purpose, because his ultimate purpose or ultimate goal in life is simply what is supremely valuable to him, which is determined by his nature as a particular kind of living organism.
Is what is supremely valuable to man determined by his genetic composition in combination with uncontrollable environmental factors, or determined by his choice?  You can't have it both ways, I'm afraid.  Either the metaphysical substance "man" has a choice in what he values or that choice is made for him by factors outside of his control, i.e. the conditions and time of his conception and his environment. 
What is supremely valuable to him -- namely, the achievement of his own happiness -- is set by his nature.
To what extent is it "set by his nature"? 
It is not ordained by a supernatural being, for whom there is no credible scientific evidence.
Since when is scientific evidence the sole arbiter of truth?  If you've kept up to date with epistemology, you should be fully aware that scientific evidence only provides approximations to truth, that the truth that science provides is upheld by numerous epistemic suppositions, and that the sort of truth science can render us with the help of analysis is still quite limited in scope. 
When you said "license" to act in whatever way one sees fit, I took you to mean "moral justification." But by "license," you evidently meant the "right" or "freedom" to act in whatever way one sees fit.
I did.
Fair enough, but wouldn't that be true for any moral end or goal, secular or religious? Suppose one values obedience to God as one's ultimate end or goal. Wouldn't that also imply a "license" to act in whatever way one sees fit, insofar as "the action one deems fit to execute" is that which one believes will satisfy God's wishes?
No, a religious goal or end, e.g. obedience to God, wouldn't necessary imply a license to act in whatever way one sees fit insofar as the action deemed fit to execute is that which one believes will satisfy God's wishes.  Within my religion at least (Catholicism), there are boundaries within which one's obedience to God must remain.  For instance, a Catholic may believe (hypothetically, of course) that God's wishes would be satisfied if he/she were to torture and kill an innocent child.  That is, this person may deem such an action fit to execute on account of of its alleged fulfillment of God's wishes.  His/her deeming it as a fulfillment of God's wishes does not, however, mean that his/her action is in fact a fulfillment of God's wishes.  On the contrary, the rational application of the doctrine of my religion would incontrovertibly demonstrate that the action could not possibly fulfill God's wishes.  Hence, it is not true that all religious goals provide one with personal license to act in whatever way one sees fit, under pretense that what one sees fit is in compliance with what God wishes.  This is so because certain religions, e.g. Catholicism, not only provide ends for persons ("Thou shalt love the Lord thy God"), but also provide a moral framework in which to pursue such ends (the 10 commandments, for instance).
It appears that by "license" you're simply referring to the right or freedom to act on one's judgment, which would apply just as much to the practice of a religious morality as it does to the practice of a secular one.
For reasons just given, it wouldn't. 
But I have indeed forced myself through that most unpleasant chore of slogging through the Monadology. It didn't leave me eager to attack any of the other works.
The Monadology cannot really be appreciated in isolation from Leibniz's other works.  I would recommend reading the New Essays on Human Understanding and the Theodicy-- works broader in philosophical scope and more thoroughly argued. 
Congrats on the Calculus though.
It was nothing, really.  :)
In both cases, the assumption is that the any plans or purposes must come from outside the individual actor -- either from God or from the State. In both cases, the individual is simply a pawn of some greater power whose dictates he or she must obey. Not a very enobling picture, is it?!
Not a very ennobling analogy either.  God's having intentions for each and every person on the earth does not entail that these persons are obligated to follow them.   


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Friday, October 27, 2006 - 1:01amSanction this postReply
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[Bill:] Man doesn't "create" his ultimate purpose, because his ultimate purpose or ultimate goal in life is simply what is supremely valuable to him, which is determined by his nature as a particular kind of living organism.

[Gottfried:] Is what is supremely valuable to man determined by his genetic composition in combination with uncontrollable environmental factors, or determined by his choice? You can't have it both ways, I'm afraid. Either the metaphysical substance "man" has a choice in what he values or that choice is made for him by factors outside of his control, i.e. the conditions and time of his conception and his environment.

What is supremely valuable to man is not determined by his choice, but by his nature. He has no choice about whether or not he will value pleasure or disvalue pain -- value happiness or disvalue suffering. These values and disvalues are determined by his nature as a sentient organism. His only choice is over how to gain and/or keep his ultimate values -- i.e., what means he must take to achieve his ends.

What is supremely valuable to him -- namely, the achievement of his own happiness -- is set by his nature.

To what extent is it "set by his nature"?

His valuing pleasure and happiness and disvaluing pain and suffering is inherent in his nature. It is not something he chooses.

It is not ordained by a supernatural being, for whom there is no credible scientific evidence.

Since when is scientific evidence the sole arbiter of truth? If you've kept up to date with epistemology, you should be fully aware that scientific evidence only provides approximations to truth, that the truth that science provides is upheld by numerous epistemic suppositions, and that the sort of truth science can render us with the help of analysis is still quite limited in scope.

Let me cut to the chase by rephrasing my statement: "It is not ordained by a supernatural being, for whom there is no rational evidence."

When you said "license" to act in whatever way one sees fit, I took you to mean "moral justification." But by "license," you evidently meant the "right" or "freedom" to act in whatever way one sees fit.

I did.

Fair enough, but wouldn't that be true for any moral end or goal, secular or religious? Suppose one values obedience to God as one's ultimate end or goal. Wouldn't that also imply a "license" to act in whatever way one sees fit, insofar as "the action one deems fit to execute" is that which one believes will satisfy God's wishes?

No, a religious goal or end, e.g. obedience to God, wouldn't necessary imply a license to act in whatever way one sees fit insofar as the action deemed fit to execute is that which one believes will satisfy God's wishes. Within my religion at least (Catholicism), there are boundaries within which one's obedience to God must remain. For instance, a Catholic may believe (hypothetically, of course) that God's wishes would be satisfied if he/she were to torture and kill an innocent child. That is, this person may deem such an action fit to execute on account of of its alleged fulfillment of God's wishes. His/her deeming it as a fulfillment of God's wishes does not, however, mean that his/her action is in fact a fulfillment of God's wishes.

Gottfried, my good man, you're being disingenuous -- engaging in a bate-and-switch tactic. Once again, what you're saying about religious ends could just as well be said about the pursuit of happiness. Just because one deems a particular action as leading to happiness does not mean that it does in fact lead to happiness.

On the contrary, the rational application of the doctrine of my religion would incontrovertibly demonstrate that the action could not possibly fulfill God's wishes.

The same could be said for an ethics of self-interest. The rational application of the doctrine of egoism would incontrovertibly demonstrate that an action (like drug use) that turns out to be harmful could not possibly fulfill one's self-interest, even if one thought that it would.

Hence, it is not true that all religious goals provide one with personal license to act in whatever way one sees fit, under pretense that what one sees fit is in compliance with what God wishes.

Here you are using "personal license to act in whatever way one sees fit" in an entirely different sense. Hence, the bait and switch. Taking your latest meaning, it would then be true that, by the same token, neither does an ethics of egoism provide one with personal license to act in whatever way one sees fit, under pretense that what one sees fit is (necessarily) in compliance with the requirements of one's own happiness.

This is so because certain religions, e.g. Catholicism, not only provide ends for persons ("Thou shalt love the Lord thy God"), but also provide a moral framework in which to pursue such ends (the 10 commandments, for instance).

And so does the Objectivist ethics provide a means to the achievement of one's ends, viz, the seven Objectivist virtues.

It appears that by "license" you're simply referring to the right or freedom to act on one's judgment, which would apply just as much to the practice of a religious morality as it does to the practice of a secular one.

For reasons just given, it wouldn't.

Not true, since you switched your meaning. Given your original meaning, it would.

In both cases, the assumption is that the any plans or purposes must come from outside the individual actor -- either from God or from the State. In both cases, the individual is simply a pawn of some greater power whose dictates he or she must obey. Not a very enobling picture, is it?!

Not a very ennobling analogy either. God's having intentions for each and every person on the earth does not entail that these persons are obligated to follow them.

Huh? I thought that God's intentions or purposes were the basis of your morality. What do you mean -- you're not obligated to follow them?

- Bill




Post 11

Saturday, October 28, 2006 - 6:43amSanction this postReply
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What is supremely valuable to man is not determined by his choice, but by his nature. He has no choice about whether or not he will value pleasure or disvalue pain -- value happiness or disvalue suffering. These values and disvalues are determined by his nature as a sentient organism. His only choice is over how to gain and/or keep his ultimate values -- i.e., what means he must take to achieve his ends.
I agree that what is supremely valuable to man is determined by his nature, not by his choice, when what is supremely valuable to man is understood as the achievement of his own happiness.  I also agree that man's only choice is over how to attain and retain his ultimate values. 
What is supremely valuable to him -- namely, the achievement of his own happiness -- is set by his nature.
This is where I misunderstood you.  I interpreted the sentence to mean:  "What is supremely valuable to him (each person)--namely, the achievement of his own happiness (each individual's own happiness)-- is set by his nature (each particular individual's nature).  Let me explain why.  When you say "him" in the first part of the sentence, you obviously refer to "man" as in "mankind" (e.g. in the sense "Man is a rational animal"); I understood you here.  But when you later say "his own happiness," though you intend to mean "man's own" in a sense consistent with the earlier usage (e.g. in the sense "Man's own happiness contra God's, or man's own happiness contra any other animate being's), I took you to mean "each individual man's own happiness"-- and rightfully so, since what you intended to say could have been more easily and clearly stated as "What is supremely valuable to him-- namely, the achievement of happiness-- is set by his nature." The use of "his own" is, with regard to your intended meaning, an entirely unnecessary and confusing modifier of "happiness."  Hence, I misunderstood you, and believed you to be saying that the achievement of each individual man's happiness is determined by each individual man's respective nature, and that the actual form of happiness man tries to achieve (whether being elected as President of the United States or being a popular porn-star) is set by his nature. 
His valuing pleasure and happiness and disvaluing pain and suffering is inherent in his nature. It is not something he chooses.
I agree.

Let me cut to the chase by rephrasing my statement: "It is not ordained by a supernatural being, for whom there is no rational evidence."
This is personal opinion.  To see how traditional arguments for God's existence can constitute, taken collectively, probabilistic rational evidence for God's existence, please see Richard Swinburne's The Existence of God.
Gottfried, my good man, you're being disingenuous -- engaging in a bate-and-switch tactic.
Hardly. 
Once again, what you're saying about religious ends could just as well be said about the pursuit of happiness. Just because one deems a particular action as leading to happiness does not mean that it does in fact lead to happiness.

     There are religious ends which include specific means by which to attain them, and there are secular ends which include specific means by which to attain them.  You said:
But by "license," you evidently meant the "right" or "freedom" to act in whatever way one sees fit.  Fair enough, but wouldn't that be true for any moral end or goal, secular or religious?
And I said, no, it wouldn't be true for any moral end or goal, secular or religious, and gave an example of a specific religious goal to support my denial.  I never, however, denied that secular goals could also have specific means by which to attain them.  Instead, my original point, which eventually led to your question, was that the idea that one may act based on whatever one values (i.e. based on whatever one believes will fulfill one's own happiness) is dangerous because it doesn't necessarily have certain restrictions of means-- whether these means be secular or religious.   
The rational application of the doctrine of egoism would incontrovertibly demonstrate that an action (like drug use) that turns out to be harmful could not possibly fulfill one's self-interest, even if one thought that it would.
Obviously you're referring to a specific "doctrine of egoism."  OK... 

I said: 
Hence, it is not true that all religious goals provide one with personal license to act in whatever way one sees fit, under pretense that what one sees fit is in compliance with what God wishes.
You replied:
Here you are using "personal license to act in whatever way one sees fit" in an entirely different sense.
No, I'm not. 
Taking your latest meaning, it would then be true that, by the same token, neither does an ethics of egoism provide one with personal license to act in whatever way one sees fit, under pretense that what one sees fit is (necessarily) in compliance with the requirements of one's own happiness.
Exactly.  But an ethics of egoism (whatever Randian dogma that is) provides a means to attain happiness and, thereby restricts what may be understood as happiness.  For instance, I'm sure that a person practicing the ethics of egoism (in Rand's sense) could not have a conception of happiness which entailed torturing and killing innocent children (I hope). 
It appears that by "license" you're simply referring to the right or freedom to act on one's judgment, which would apply just as much to the practice of a religious morality as it does to the practice of a secular one.

For reasons just given, it wouldn't.

Not true, since you switched your meaning. Given your original meaning, it would.
What I meant is that "it wouldn't apply just as much to the practice of a religious morality as it does to the practice of a secular one"-- where "just as much" meant "categorically," since you said: 
But by "license," you evidently meant the "right" or "freedom" to act in whatever way one sees fit. Fair enough, but wouldn't that be true for any moral end or goal, secular or religious?
No, it wouldn't be true for any moral end, secular or religious, though it could be true for some.  I can now see that you would agree, but based on your above statement, I took you to be asserting something different. 
Huh? I thought that God's intentions or purposes were the basis of your morality. What do you mean -- you're not obligated to follow them?

I mean you aren't forced to follow them.  And because you aren't forced to follow them, the individual is not "simply a pawn of some greater power whose dictates he or she must obey," contrary to your assertion.   


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Post 12

Saturday, October 28, 2006 - 10:58amSanction this postReply
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Gottfried, what is supremely valuable to a person (meaning what will actually make him or her happy) is determined by his or her nature, as an individual. So, for example, if you don't have the talent to be a successful musician, then choosing that career will not make you happy, because it will lead to frustration and failure. If you want to achieve happiness in your career, then you need to choose one that is commensurate with your talents and interests. To be sure, there are certain basic needs that everyone must satisfy, qua human being, as a precondition for happiness; but there are other needs that everyone must satisfy, qua individual. So when I said "his own happiness," I meant precisely what I said.

I wrote, "I thought that God's intentions or purposes were the basis of your morality. What do you mean -- you're not obligated to follow them?" You replied,
I mean you aren't forced to follow them. And because you aren't forced to follow them, the individual is not "simply a pawn of some greater power whose dictates he or she must obey," contrary to your assertion.
But God's intentions and purposes are revealed in his commandments, which one must obey under threat of punishment. How is this any different from the government's forcing you to pay half your income in taxes under threat of fines or imprisonment? You wouldn't say that you aren't forced to pay your taxes, would you? And if not, then how can you say that you aren't forced to obey God's commandments?

Moreover, as Rand observes, " a 'moral commandment' is a contradiction in terms. The moral is the chosen, not the forced; the understood, not the obeyed. The moral is the rational, and reason accepts no commandments." (Atlas Shrugged, p. 1018) So, a morality that is based solely on someone else's dictates -- whether man's or God's -- and is backed by threat of punishment is no morality at all; it is simply a condition of amoral subservience.

Finally, to say, as the title of this thread does, that "without God, there is no purpose," is false. All rational being's have purposes and goals, and these goals are the satisfaction of their needs as living organisms. If God were to exist, then he would have only one alternative with respect to man's values and goals: either to respect them or to demand their betrayal. If he respects them, then his purposes are consistent with man's nature and are irrelevant. If he demands their betrayal, then his purposes are inconsistent with man's nature and are morally perverse. So, even assuming that God exists and has divine purposes, they deserve to be ignored.

- Bill

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Post 13

Sunday, October 29, 2006 - 2:22amSanction this postReply
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First, can you even prove there is a God? If no, then why worry about its revelation(s) to us because you can't prove it has a purpose for us by that lack of verification. For all we know, if you claim God wants us to be happy, it could be a false statement and has to be taken on faith, to which my response would be, "horse puckey!"

Second, if you can't fulfill the first point, then to discuss an external originate for purpose is pointless, thus our choice for purpose is self-determined.

Third, if the first and second points follow, then it follows humans live purposeful lives if and only if they choose to do so, not because of a God being's wishes. Whatever this God wishes would be for its purposes, not ours, thus be a matter for God and not man.

Frankly, I find the argument for God via purpose to be well... stupid, just on the three points I made. Now, maybe I'm just being so 'close minded', but if you really take the time to consider it all. Why would an Almighty God really care about you or anything that is its subordinate? We would be like tiny specks of dust in the sunbeam, visable, but useless to such a being. So, our purpose is, again, self-determined, not externally determined.

-- Bridget
(Edited by Bridget Armozel
on 10/29, 2:22am)


Post 14

Sunday, October 29, 2006 - 6:27amSanction this postReply
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Gottfried, what is supremely valuable to a person (meaning what will actually make him or her happy) is determined by his or her nature, as an individual.
Is this nature static or dynamic?  Does an individual's nature change through time, or is it concretized in the womb?  Do not an individual's priorites change with maturity?  In short, what do you mean by "nature"? 
But God's intentions and purposes are revealed in his commandments, which one must obey under threat of punishment.
One must obey God because union with, and love of, God is the final end of man.  To be united with God in love is to be truly happy, and God's intentions and purposes are designed to draw us toward this union.  Hence, one must obey God in order to achieve this union.  The refusal to love God amounts to the relinquishment of man's final end and true happiness.  Men punish themselves by freely choosing to reject the love of God, since it is only in the love of God that man can attain true happiness. 
a 'moral commandment' is a contradiction in terms.
OK, Rand is here trampling on the etymological meaning of the word. 
The moral is the chosen, not the forced
No, the moral is what motivates the choice. 
the understood, not the obeyed
So you're not even obliged to obey the dictates of reason, then. 
The moral is the rational, and reason accepts no commandments
The moral is the rational, yes.  Reason accepts no commandments, agreed:  since God is Infinite Reason, his commands are eo ipso the commands of reason.  
Finally, to say, as the title of this thread does, that "without God, there is no purpose," is false. All rational being's have purposes and goals, and these goals are the satisfaction of their needs as living organisms.
Of course all rational beings have purposes and goals; the whole point is that these goals may not be the ideal goals to have, and that God, being omniscient, may know and want us to pursue our ideal goals.  Furthermore, the goals of all rational beings are attempts, and not necessarily successful attempts, to satisfy their needs as living organisms.    
If God were to exist, then he would have only one alternative with respect to man's values and goals: either to respect them or to demand their betrayal.
OK. 
If he respects them, then his purposes are consistent with man's nature and are irrelevant.
That assumes that man's purposes are consistent with his nature.  If man's nature were designed such that it would only reach its fulfillment in the love of God, then God would certainly not respect the purposes (or at least would want to influence the purposes otherwise) of those whose purposes were inconsistent with their nature.        
If he demands their betrayal, then his purposes are inconsistent with man's nature and are morally perverse.
False conditional.  See above. 
So, even assuming that God exists and has divine purposes, they deserve to be ignored.
False conclusion.  See above.   


Post 15

Sunday, October 29, 2006 - 10:07amSanction this postReply
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Bridget wrote: 
First, can you even prove there is a God?
No.  
If no, then why worry about its revelation(s) to us because you can't prove it has a purpose for us by that lack of verification.
It is fitting for those who believe in God to believe God also has purposes for them. 
For all we know, if you claim God wants us to be happy, it could be a false statement and has to be taken on faith, to which my response would be, "horse puckey!"
Faith can denote either a belief without proof or a belief without evidence.  Believing without evidence is foolish, but believing without proof is rationally acceptable, and is something we humans do 99.9% of the time.
Why would an Almighty God really care about you or anything that is its subordinate?
An Almighty God would presumably choose not to create at all if it did not care about its creation.  Following Aquinas, I maintain that God was not obligated to create, rather "He wills that the good of the universe be because it befits His goodness." (Summa Contra Gentiles)                  


Post 16

Sunday, October 29, 2006 - 6:35pmSanction this postReply
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I wrote, "Gottfried, what is supremely valuable to a person (meaning what will actually make him or her happy) is determined by his or her nature, as an individual."

He replied,
Is this nature static or dynamic? Does an individual's nature change through time, or is it concretized in the womb? Do not an individual's priorites change with maturity? In short, what do you mean by "nature"?
By "nature," I simply mean the kind of person one is. Thus, a person's nature can be static in some respects but dynamic in others. For example, a person will always be a human being, but he or she may change from an engineer to an architect. Or, a person will always be of a certain race, but his or her priorities may change in response to education.

I wrote, "But God's intentions and purposes are revealed in his commandments, which one must obey under threat of punishment." Gottfried replied,
One must obey God because union with, and love of, God is the final end of man.
Not true. The final end of man is the achievement of his own happiness, which is realized through the satisfaction of his survival requirements.
To be united with God in love is to be truly happy, and God's intentions and purposes are designed to draw us toward this union. Hence, one must obey God in order to achieve this union. The refusal to love God amounts to the relinquishment of man's final end and true happiness. Men punish themselves by freely choosing to reject the love of God, since it is only in the love of God that man can attain true happiness.
You might as well argue that men punish themselves by refusing to obey a dictator. Bear in mind that God controls all of this. He sets the terms, by telling us to obey him or else. There is no difference between God's dictates and those of an authoritarian ruler.

I quoted Rand that "a 'moral commandment' is a contradiction in terms." Gottfried replied,
"OK, Rand is here trampling on the etymological meaning of the word."
Even assuming that what you say is true, I have no idea what relevance etymology has in this context. Rand is certainly not trampling on the actual meaning of the word. Webster defines "commandment" as "something that is commanded," and "command" as "to order," "to exercise a dominating influence over," or "to demand as one's due." Continuing with the Rand quote, "The moral is the chosen, not the forced..."
No, the moral is what motivates the choice.
It may indeed be what motivates the choice, but that doesn't negate the truth of Rand's statement. The moral is the chosen, not the forced, because morality pertains to actions that are chosen; a forced action is neither moral nor immoral, because the actor is not responsible for it. Continuing, "...the understood, not the obeyed."
So you're not even obliged to obey the dictates of reason, then.
You're ignoring the context. "Obey" in this context means to follow another agent's orders or commands; it doesn't mean to follow one's own judgment as to what is rational.

"The moral is the rational, and reason accepts no commandments."
The moral is the rational, yes. Reason accepts no commandments, agreed: since God is Infinite Reason, his commands are eo ipso the commands of reason.
I don't follow you. First, you agree that reason accepts no commandments; then you say that God's commands are the commands of reason. Aren't you contradicting yourself? Regardless of whether or not you think they are rational, they are still commands. They still amount to an order, "Do this, or I'll see to it that you're punished."

I wrote, "Finally, to say, as the title of this thread does, that "without God, there is no purpose," is false. All rational being's have purposes and goals, and these goals are the satisfaction of their needs as living organisms."
Of course all rational beings have purposes and goals; the whole point is that these goals may not be the ideal goals to have, and that God, being omniscient, may know and want us to pursue our ideal goals.
So, the title of your post should read, "Without God, there is no Ideal Purpose." Even with that revision, your statement still isn't true, for without God, man's ideal purpose is the pursuit of life-affirming goals. Furthermore, I had thought that in previous posts, you agreed with me that a person's own happiness is his or her final end, ultimate value, or highest moral purpose. Are you now saying that you disagree?
Furthermore, the goals of all rational beings are attempts, and not necessarily successful attempts, to satisfy their needs as living organisms.
True, since we are fallible, we don't always achieve our highest values, but so what? I could say the same thing with respect to your philosophy -- that the goals of all religionists are attempts, and not necessarily successful attempts, to satisfy the commandments of God.

I wrote, "If God were to exist, then he would have only one alternative with respect to man's values and goals: either to respect them or to demand their betrayal."
OK.
"If he respects them, then his purposes are consistent with man's nature and are irrelevant."
That assumes that man's purposes are consistent with his nature.
Man's ultimate goal -- namely, the valuation of his own happiness -- is set by his nature, as are the conditions of its achievement. If he wants to achieve happiness, then he must act in ways that are required by his nature as a rational animal. It is these rational values and goals to which I was referring in the above statement.
If man's nature were designed such that it would only reach its fulfillment in the love of God, then God would certainly not respect the purposes (or at least would want to influence the purposes otherwise) of those whose purposes were inconsistent with their nature.
But it's not man's nature to reach fulfillment in the love of God; he reaches fulfillment by living a life that is consonant with his survival requirements qua man.

I continued, "If [God] demands their betrayal, then his purposes are inconsistent with man's nature and are morally perverse.
False conditional. See above.
It's not false, in light of my explanation. See above.

In any case, you're assuming in all of this that there is a God. You realize, of course, that since I don't believe in God, there is no reason for me to buy into what you are saying. In a previous post, you referred me to Richard Swinburne's The Existence of God. Rather than my reading the entire book, why don't you present what you consider to be his most persuasive arguments.

- Bill

Post 17

Thursday, November 2, 2006 - 9:48amSanction this postReply
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By "nature," I simply mean the kind of person one is. Thus, a person's nature can be static in some respects but dynamic in others. For example, a person will always be a human being, but he or she may change from an engineer to an architect. Or, a person will always be of a certain race, but his or her priorities may change in response to education.
Yes, a person will always be a human being, which is why I think you can say, with reason, that man's purpose can be determined by his nature-- his nature as a human being.  You wrote earlier:
Gottfried, what is supremely valuable to a person (meaning what will actually make him or her happy) is determined by his or her nature, as an individual.
But, given that you've allowed that a person's nature can change over time, what is supremely valuable to a person may change over time.  And, because you've defined "supremely valuable" as "what will make [one] happy," it seems that what will make one happy is indeterminate.  You thus must admit that what is supremely valuable to a person is not necessarily what will actually make that person happy.
I wrote:
One must obey God because union with, and love of, God is the final end of man.
Please note that this was a statement of my opinion.

William responded: 
Not true. The final end of man is the achievement of his own happiness, which is realized through the satisfaction of his survival requirements.
Here he's acting as though his opinion somehow falsifies mine. 

I wrote: 
To be united with God in love is to be truly happy, and God's intentions and purposes are designed to draw us toward this union. Hence, one must obey God in order to achieve this union. The refusal to love God amounts to the relinquishment of man's final end and true happiness. Men punish themselves by freely choosing to reject the love of God, since it is only in the love of God that man can attain true happiness.
He responded:
You might as well argue that men punish themselves by refusing to obey a dictator. Bear in mind that God controls all of this. He sets the terms, by telling us to obey him or else. There is no difference between God's dictates and those of an authoritarian ruler.
A very bad analogy indeed.  A dictator is not the Creator of the universe.  A dictator is not Being itself.  God's dictates are entirely rational and entirely just and entirely fitting for humanity, in my opinion.  Yes, he sets the terms, in the same sense that space-time sets your playing field.  But you wouldn't think of space-time as an authoritarian ruler, would you?   
Even assuming that what you say is true, I have no idea what relevance etymology has in this context. Rand is certainly not trampling on the actual meaning of the word. Webster defines "commandment" as "something that is commanded," and "command" as "to order," "to exercise a dominating influence over," or "to demand as one's due." Continuing with the Rand quote, "The moral is the chosen, not the forced...
Morals are injunctions to action.  Hence, they can be commanded.  It makes sense for them to be commanded. 
The moral is the chosen, not the forced, because morality pertains to actions that are chosen; a forced action is neither moral nor immoral, because the actor is not responsible for it.
Yes, a forced action is neither moral nor immoral, but a command isn't necessarily forced.  Morals, and often commands, are normative.  As such, they are things or actions to be done or chosen; they are not necessarily what is done or chosen.  ex. The golden rule is a moral.  The fact that it isn't always followed or chosen doesn't make it any less a moral. 
You're ignoring the context. "Obey" in this context means to follow another agent's orders or commands; it doesn't mean to follow one's own judgment as to what is rational.
Perhaps one's own judgment as to what is rational is in fact irrational. 

I wrote:
The moral is the rational, yes. Reason accepts no commandments, agreed: since God is Infinite Reason, his commands are eo ipso the commands of reason.
William responded: 
I don't follow you. First, you agree that reason accepts no commandments; then you say that God's commands are the commands of reason. Aren't you contradicting yourself?
To say that reason accepts no commands is not the same as to say that reason gives no commands.  So, no, I'm not contradicting myself.  ex. Reason commands that a triangle has three sides.  If I believe that a triangle has four sides, I'm disobeying a command of reason. 
Regardless of whether or not you think they are rational, they are still commands. They still amount to an order, "Do this, or I'll see to it that you're punished."
I'm not sure you're understanding me. 
Scenario:  Let's say Sally needs to go by train to work.  Let's say Sally is at the train station, and the train is leaving in five minutes.  Let's say Sally is aware of this, but decides to call her friend to pass the time.  Let's say she talks too long and misses the train.  Let's say Sally is late for work as a result. 
?
Interpretation:  The command of reason in the scenario was:  If you don't get on the train within five minutes, you're going to miss the train and be late.  The punishment in the scenario was:  being late.  (N.b., reason didn't punish Sally; Sally punished herself.)   
So, the title of your post should read, "Without God, there is no Ideal Purpose."
I didn't title the post in the first place. 
I had thought that in previous posts, you agreed with me that a person's own happiness is his or her final end, ultimate value, or highest moral purpose
I did and do agree with you that a person's own happiness is his or her final end.  However, because I believe union with God is in fact a person's true happiness, I believe union with God is a person's final end.  
I wrote: 

[...] That assumes that man's purposes are consistent with his nature.
You replied: 
Man's ultimate goal -- namely, the valuation of his own happiness -- is set by his nature, as are the conditions of its achievement. If he wants to achieve happiness, then he must act in ways that are required by his nature as a rational animal. It is these rational values and goals to which I was referring in the above statement.
I don't think that man's purposes are necessarily consistent with his nature, even if they are rationally constrained by it. 
But it's not man's nature to reach fulfillment in the love of God; he reaches fulfillment by living a life that is consonant with his survival requirements qua man.
I respectfully disagree. 
In any case, you're assuming in all of this that there is a God.
Of course. 
You realize, of course, that since I don't believe in God, there is no reason for me to buy into what you are saying.
Yes. 
In a previous post, you referred me to Richard Swinburne's The Existence of God. Rather than my reading the entire book, why don't you present what you consider to be his most persuasive arguments.
No one believes in God (I hope) based on arguments for his existence.  I think many people (myself included) believe in God because that's just the way they see it.  God exists within their worldview.  

So I honestly don't think these arguments will persuade you, but, anyway, here is one of his articles which essentially summarizes the claims and structure of the book:

http://www.leaderu.com/truth/3truth09.html 


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Post 18

Thursday, November 2, 2006 - 9:50pmSanction this postReply
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Gottfried: It is fitting for those who believe in God to believe God also has purposes for them.

Me: Doesn't that smack of a tautological proposition then? I believe that God has a purpose for me because I believe in God?

Gottfried: Faith can denote either a belief without proof or a belief without evidence. Believing without evidence is foolish, but believing without proof is rationally acceptable, and is something we humans do 99.9% of the time.

Me: No, faith is not rational. One doesn't have faith that airplanes fly, people tested them. People don't have faith a surgical procedure will work, they either know it will work or they know the probability of it working, but at no time does a surgeon do such things on faith. And so on. Basically, faith is the antithesis of the rational since it gives no meaning and no proof to any given conclusion.

Gottfried: An Almighty God would presumably choose not to create at all if it did not care about its creation. Following Aquinas, I maintain that God was not obligated to create, rather "He wills that the good of the universe be because it befits His goodness." (Summa Contra Gentiles)

Me: So God is an egoist as Max Stirner believed? Okay, I'm down with that, but it doesn't prove we were created by it. In fact, all it does is assume something to be true without proof or a reason to assume as such.

-- Bridget

Post 19

Friday, November 3, 2006 - 5:07amSanction this postReply
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More of "I think, therefore I am", than "I am, therefore I think" kind, huh........

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