Ahanu
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In another thread called The Crucifixion, Devils' Advocate said:
In response I wrote:
"Let's illustrate what I think is an example of what you've said here (but let me know if I haven't captured your point). The Quakers believed that slavery was wrong. But most of their contemporaries accepted slavery. Abolitionist arguments couldn't convince their opponents slavery was wrong, so they couldn't prove it. Is it a sign of the Quaker's hubris to continue having absolute faith that slavery is wrong?"
Then DA replied with the following words:
I will reply here in a new thread. DA said the pro-slavery side knew the truth but "couldn't be bothered with the truth".
Take Francis Scott Key, the creator of America's national anthem, as an example of our typical anti-abolitionist. He regularly publicized his racist views, believing Africans were "a distinct and inferior race of people, which all experience proves to be the greatest evil that afflicts a community" (Wilson, "Where's the Debate on Francis Scott Key's Slave-Holding Legacy?"). Deep down in Key's heart he did not believe "slavery" was untrue: no, he really did believe he was superior, and, as a result, no doubt thought slavery was well-established on truth. Elite white men in the past didn't hesitate in believing there was a racial hierarchy. They merely differed in their reasons people of color were inferior: Benjamin Franklin had cultural reasons, whereas Thomas Jefferson had biological and mental reasons. Both were united in their belief that whites were standing at the top of the pinnacle. Are you sure they knew the truth but "couldn't be bothered with the truth?" Seems to me they thought they knew the truth. Period.
Next, DA said: "Point is as a species we are very good at altering truth to fit our needs. Our faith is often at the whim of our needs as well. And all of this discission thus far is within the human realm." This is the crux of the matter. We've been discussing the human realm? And here I thought we were discussing the supernatural realm: we're talking about what we "ought" to do in nature (for you believe humans ought not have slavery), and no exhaustive description of the universe can render what we ought to do by observing what "is". The discussion thus far is within the supernatural realm. Our supernatural convictions tell us slavery isn't true. Here I'll close this part with David Bentley Hart:
Works Cited
Hart, David Bentley. The Experience of God. Yale University Press. Kindle Edition.
Wilson, Christopher. "Where's the Debate on Francis Scott Key's Slave-Holding Legacy?" Smithsonian. http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smith...holding-legacy-180959550/#tfPVvjOHyVo79cYZ.99
". . . it just seems like hubris to believe what one accepts on faith is absolutely true. No doubts about it. It absolutely positively MUST be."
In response I wrote:
"Let's illustrate what I think is an example of what you've said here (but let me know if I haven't captured your point). The Quakers believed that slavery was wrong. But most of their contemporaries accepted slavery. Abolitionist arguments couldn't convince their opponents slavery was wrong, so they couldn't prove it. Is it a sign of the Quaker's hubris to continue having absolute faith that slavery is wrong?"
Then DA replied with the following words:
"An interesting analogy. It is grounded in the mortal world and within mortal morals. Slavery is a human institution. There are still similarities though. I would suggest the Quakers could prove slavery was wrong. Their proof was rejected by their opponents because they had too much to lose; their entire entitled way of life. It wasn't that they didn't know the truth, they couldn't be bothered with the truth.
It is a failing of the human condition. For example, America was built on the concept of freedom and equal opportunity. But as we know, not all men, much less women were created equal in reality. Blacks were not considered 'human' and were denied a voice. Women were denied a voice. Even most men were denied a voice as only the white male property owners were considered competent enough to make important decisions for the country. They were the only group that were allowed to vote. Over the last 200 years we have abolished most of those exceptions.
Point is as a species we are very good at altering truth to fit our needs. Our faith is often at the whim of our needs as well. And all of this discission thus far is within the human realm.
If our faith can be so easily blinded by our needs and desires even in the most mortal institutions, how much more complicated when we discuss faith of divine origins. Faith in the divine beyond our mortal frame is too great a leap to be able to say with an absolute certainty that we know we are right. Faith is too flimsy for absolute certainty. We can have a strong belief that our faith in the divine is reasonable; I don't see how we can make the leap from their to an absolute. Not if we are going to be truly honest with ourselves. From my point of view."
I will reply here in a new thread. DA said the pro-slavery side knew the truth but "couldn't be bothered with the truth".
Take Francis Scott Key, the creator of America's national anthem, as an example of our typical anti-abolitionist. He regularly publicized his racist views, believing Africans were "a distinct and inferior race of people, which all experience proves to be the greatest evil that afflicts a community" (Wilson, "Where's the Debate on Francis Scott Key's Slave-Holding Legacy?"). Deep down in Key's heart he did not believe "slavery" was untrue: no, he really did believe he was superior, and, as a result, no doubt thought slavery was well-established on truth. Elite white men in the past didn't hesitate in believing there was a racial hierarchy. They merely differed in their reasons people of color were inferior: Benjamin Franklin had cultural reasons, whereas Thomas Jefferson had biological and mental reasons. Both were united in their belief that whites were standing at the top of the pinnacle. Are you sure they knew the truth but "couldn't be bothered with the truth?" Seems to me they thought they knew the truth. Period.
Next, DA said: "Point is as a species we are very good at altering truth to fit our needs. Our faith is often at the whim of our needs as well. And all of this discission thus far is within the human realm." This is the crux of the matter. We've been discussing the human realm? And here I thought we were discussing the supernatural realm: we're talking about what we "ought" to do in nature (for you believe humans ought not have slavery), and no exhaustive description of the universe can render what we ought to do by observing what "is". The discussion thus far is within the supernatural realm. Our supernatural convictions tell us slavery isn't true. Here I'll close this part with David Bentley Hart:
"And, even if one could devise an account of human morality in evolutionary terms that seems to lead toward certain ineluctable 'ethical' claims, such as 'Slavery is bad for human society on the whole,' one still cannot account for the sense of responsibility that this knowledge might instill in any particular person. The ethical dimension of one’s judgment regarding one’s actions at any given moment is, of necessity, open to a realm that a purely materialist picture of nature cannot comprise. Whenever conscience commands a thing, it does so in the intonations of an unconditional obligation, directed toward a strictly transcendental end. The structure of any meaningful ethics, no matter how encumbered it may be with utilitarian or pragmatic obfuscations, is invariably 'religious.' It is prompted by concerns that, in evolutionary terms, are 'unnatural' or (better) 'supernatural.' Simply said, if there were no God, neither would there be such a thing as moral truth, nor such a thing as good or evil, nor such a thing as a moral imperative of any kind" (Hart 256).
Works Cited
Hart, David Bentley. The Experience of God. Yale University Press. Kindle Edition.
Wilson, Christopher. "Where's the Debate on Francis Scott Key's Slave-Holding Legacy?" Smithsonian. http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smith...holding-legacy-180959550/#tfPVvjOHyVo79cYZ.99