Moderator: felix dakat
Flannel Jesus wrote:From what I understand, Crusaders back in the day used to force Muslims to recant Islam and convert to Christianity at the point of the sword, and immediately after they converted, they were killed. The Crusaders thought they were doing them a favor, sending them to heaven.
Coriolanus wrote:Doesn't a belief system that implies someone who believes otherwise will experience eternal and extreme suffering morally obligate a serious attempt to assimilate the other to one's way of seeing things?
Flannel Jesus wrote:From what I understand, Crusaders back in the day used to force Muslims to recant Islam and convert to Christianity at the point of the sword, and immediately after they converted, they were killed. The Crusaders thought they were doing them a favor, sending them to heaven.
What follows from this is that anyone who holds these beliefs is immoral insofar as they're not doing what they can to save their fellow men.
Flannel Jesus wrote:I don't understand what problem you're seeing with what I said. It fits very well into both of your points. They coerce them to convert, and then they kill them, thereby sending them to heaven.
It doesn't necessarily follow. There may be people doing everything they reasonably can. How do you know?
Coriolanus wrote:I want a general argument, and you brought up a historical specific example. It's easy to focus on that and lose track of the argument.
I'm not making an empirical point.
felix dakat wrote:I'm not making an empirical point.
You're not making an analytic point either. It doesn't follow from your premises that people who believe there is a hell are not doing their utmost to save people from it.
Coriolanus wrote:felix dakat wrote:I'm not making an empirical point.
You're not making an analytic point either. It doesn't follow from your premises that people who believe there is a hell are not doing their utmost to save people from it.
...what part of what I've said makes you think I'm saying people who believe there is a hell are as a matter of fact not doing their utmost to save people from it?
That depends on the probability of hellfire. If hell was 100% certain then extreme action would be justified. However, it is far from certain.What's unreasonable when eternal hellfire is at stake?
If it was very likely that your brother would be kidnapped, then restraining him would be justified. In reality it is not at all likely, so locking him up will get you charged by the police and examined by a psychiatrist.You sincerely believe that if your brother continues on with his plans to vacation in Mexico, he will be kidnapped and tortured for many years. You tell your brother your concern, but he doesn't believe you. You know if you stall him even for a day he will avoid the kidnapping and torture, so you lock him up in your room for a day. Is what you did morally permissible? Is it obligatory? In other words, is failure to have done it morally impermissible?
Coriolanus wrote:What's unreasonable when eternal hellfire is at stake?
Put in those terms, sure. It would be similar to seeing someone in a burning house who does not acknowledge they are in a burning house. or walking towards an open manhole while reading the newspaper. I am pretty sure many Christians do see the situation like this and this justifies what others often find to be intrusive, dominance type behavior. I suppose if I believed that this was the case, certainly anyone I even slightly cared about would end up barraged by, well, unpleasant conversation gambits on my part. I don't think, however, even if I believed this was the situation, I could at the same time love and honor such a God. I would be very confused by much of the rest of the religion. And terrified, probably all the time.Coriolanus wrote:Doesn't a belief system that implies someone who believes otherwise will experience eternal and extreme suffering morally obligate a serious attempt to assimilate the other to one's way of seeing things? If eternal hellfire is at stake, then is anything one could do in their short period of time on earth, short of compromising one's own chances at eternal bliss, out of the question for the purpose of assimilation?
phyllo wrote:That depends on the probability of hellfire. If hell was 100% certain then extreme action would be justified. However, it is far from certain.
felix dakat wrote:Coriolanus wrote:What's unreasonable when eternal hellfire is at stake?
Methods that didn't work like coercion were typically recognized as unreasonable by evangelicals who believed in eternal damnation when I attended their churches.
Coriolanus wrote:felix dakat wrote:Coriolanus wrote:What's unreasonable when eternal hellfire is at stake?
Methods that didn't work like coercion were typically recognized as unreasonable by evangelicals who believed in eternal damnation when I attended their churches.
So the criterion that determines rationality is pragmatic. If a tactic works, i.e., if it gets people to start believing, then it's fine.
felix dakat wrote:Occasionally preachers would use fear tactics in their preaching --you know-- so called fire and brimstone preaching. I didn't like that. But, it seems that if that is what one earnestly believes then it is an ethical thing to do. One variation on the theme was "if you died tonight, where would you go?" Those sermons could produce tearful confessions of faith even in Baptist congregations where presumably everyone had already been saved before at least once.
It would be hard not to take a pragmatic view, if those are the stakes. We handle things like that in society. Guy on a ledge. Police come, will say anything to get him off the ledge, prevent his choice with some kind of net on the ground, will even assault him to get him off the ledge if this can be done with some minimum of safety for the rescuers and him.Coriolanus wrote:felix dakat wrote:Coriolanus wrote:What's unreasonable when eternal hellfire is at stake?
Methods that didn't work like coercion were typically recognized as unreasonable by evangelicals who believed in eternal damnation when I attended their churches.
So the criterion that determines rationality is pragmatic. If a tactic works, i.e., if it gets people to start believing, then it's fine.
Moreno wrote:I mean, I dislike proselytizing and the beliefs fundamentalists have around hell. But once you accept Hell, I can see where it leads to justifying all sorts of interpersonal rudeness.
They only carry moral weight if a lot of people can be convinced that the beliefs are true - the perceived probability of truthfulness. If everyone in the world is 100% convinced that wiping your butt with your right hand sends you to hell then there will be special features to prevent that in toilets. Right arm amputation will be a religious ritual.Probability has nothing to do with it. I'm asking what a set of beliefs in which the belief that someone who does not hold this set of beliefs will go to hell is therein contained, regardless of the justification, implies. I don't care about whether the beliefs are true, just what moral weight they carry.
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