The semantics was just semantics. I see amoral often used to mean evil, such as a serial killer being 'amoral'.Baby Tea said:What are you even talking about?TGLT said:No, according to your STRAWMAN of a non-theist there is no morality. As for an amoral universe, the universe isn't alive. It's not even amoral, it's nothing-moral. The absence of morals in the sense that it can't even have morality because it isn't a feeling thinking thing. But outside of semantics, that doesn't mean I don't think that suddenly actions only have relative impacts.
However, you're right, we do have difficulty determining right and wrong in some cases. But doctors in the past thought the black death was caused by sin and other nastiness. Does that suddenly make the black death relative to each person's sin because they felt justified in determining it that way and just because they were right that there was indeed a black death?
First off, amoral means neither moral or immoral. Just there. I didn't even know we were arguing semantics in the first place. And I'm not saying actions can't impact more then one person (Which it seems you think I am saying), but that has nothing to do with morality which is the 'knowledge' of what is right or wrong.
Which therefore bring me to your perplexing counter-point example which makes little sense. You're talking about justification and the black death being relative to each individual's sin (Which makes no sense) for some reason. Could you reword that point?
The black death is being used as a metaphor for our understanding of morality. We can see and diagnose the problem, but we have difficulty determining what exactly makes this that or the other. It's also being used as a metaphor for just because people strongly believe in something doesn't make them right, just that they strongly believe in it.