who gets into Hell, is going to lead to two very similar people who have committed similar acts of faith, goodness, repentance, etc. to receive eternal damnation or eternal salvation. — Bridget Eagles
going to lead to two very similar people who have committed similar acts of faith, goodness, repentance, etc. to receive eternal damnation or eternal salvation. — Bridget Eagles
This claim is not substantiated in the argument unless Theodore Sider is privy to information we're not aware of. It's implausible at all levels of credulity. — TheMadFool
there is no black and white, only shades of grey — http://tedsider.org/papers/hell.pdf
This claim is not substantiated in the argument unless Theodore Sider is privy to information we're not aware of. — TheMadFool
He considers both fine-grained and continuous scenarios as hypothetical suppositions. Why use theology as an example when ethical ones are emotive enough I have no idea. — bongo fury
How is it possible that two ethically similar people have contradictory outcomes (one going to hell and the other going to heaven)? — TheMadFool
If people are spread like a continuum and morality is a spectrum without any discrete borders... — TheMadFool
... then it is possible that two people of similar moral standing may have opposite fates — TheMadFool
going to lead to two very similar people who have committed similar acts of faith, goodness, repentance, etc. to receive eternal damnation or eternal salvation.
— Bridget Eagles
This claim is not substantiated in the argument unless Theodore Sider is privy to information we're not aware of. — TheMadFool
If there's a 50% mark. If you are more than fifty percent ethical, Heaven. Less, Hell. And God can read ethical tendencies down below the ethical 'Planck length', so every falls to one side or the other.I still don't get it. How is it possible that two ethically similar people have contradictory outcomes (one going to hell and the other going to heaven)? — TheMadFool
How is it possible that two ethically similar people have contradictory outcomes (one going to hell and the other going to heaven)?
— TheMadFool
Similar as in approximately equal but not necessarily actually equal. E.g. not-noticeably-different. Two such people will go to different places if their separation (however small) on some (fine-grained or even continuous) moral scale coincides with the sharp border between one choice (by the judge) of appropriate destination and the other. So, in the same way that two people can be spatially close but in different countries.
Sider supposes that a sense of proportionality excludes any such sharp border. It favours vagueness, and borderline cases. (I agree.)
If people are spread like a continuum and morality is a spectrum without any discrete borders...
— TheMadFool
... Do you mean without any discrete steps or increments, i.e. continuous?
... then it is possible that two people of similar moral standing may have opposite fates
— TheMadFool
Yes although the same is equally possible if the (small) distance between them is measured in discrete steps. — bongo fury
If there's a 50% mark. If you are more than fifty percent ethical, Heaven. Less, Hell. And God can read ethical tendencies down below the ethical 'Planck length', so every falls to one side or the other. — Coben
How about 2 people that lead identical lives except: one accepts Jesus Christ as their lord and savior, the other accepts Thor as their lord and savior.
Sounds pretty darn similar to me, and yet one goes to heaven and the other to hell (if purgatory exists and the Thor guy had NEVER been exposed to Christianity, then they might be allowed to go to purgatory).
Does that work?
I think the point that Sider was making was more along the lines of the binary nature of heaven and hell. IF those are the only two options, then there must be an exact line dividing those that deserve heaven and those that deserve hell. People just barely south or north of the line would have lead very similarly moral lives.
To be fair, I would have guessed that Sider made his argument at least 100 years ago. Many modern christians seem to believe that awful people go to hell, while everyone else goes to heaven (all religions or philosophies that help people to behave "good" are part of god's plan). In that case, there is no need to worry about "the line" because it is WIDE and STARK. — ZhouBoTong
What say you? — TheMadFool
There is no black and white, only shades of grey. — http://tedsider.org/papers/hell.pdf
Morality is scalable within each island like so: worst to very bad to bad in the island of the bad and good to very good to best in the island of the good. — TheMadFool
I disagree that sin and virtue aren't just as continuous as any other conception of moral variation. And your rumination at the end, about redemption, is (to me) similarly off-point. — bongo fury
I think this is more or less what I was saying. If you lean towards the bad, even by the minutest degree over 50% bad, you will tend to create a net negative whatever. — Coben
To make it easy for you, I ask for one plausible case of the Sider variety where two people who are morally indistinguishable have different fates in re heaven and hell. — TheMadFool
Some suggest that we add in Purgatory as a means to solve the binary afterlife debate, leaving our options as Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven. This is still immoral and there is a division among very similar people who will receive eternal damnation in Hell and people who will make it to Purgatory, eventually making it into Heaven. Even if it takes several years to get into Heaven, it is still more satisfactory than eternal damnation in Hell. I believe adding in Purgatory is also an issue for the division between those going to Purgatory and those going to Heaven. Although they will all eventually make it into Heaven, it seems immoral that very similar people will either have to work for their place in Heaven whereas some will receive eternal salvation without the effort of Purgatory. — Bridget Eagles
Why? How do you come to that conclusion? — TheMadFool
I would think this interpretation jars somewhat with common usage, which tends to suggest that sin and virtue do meet, and possibly overlap. — bongo fury
First you are asking me to distinguish between two people where there is a fine line between them. — Coben
So are sin and virtue separated by clear blue water, on your view? Or do they square up either side of a sharp border? — bongo fury
0 is as sharp a border as it gets. [...] ...one might be just a tiny bit better, in a moral sense, than a rock but that deserves a place in heaven. — TheMadFool
possible that two ethically similar people have contradictory outcomes (one going to hell and the other going to heaven)? — TheMadFool
And you get how Sider thinks that this consequence of a sharp border conflicts with most people's intuition of "proportionality" as a criterion of justice? — bongo fury
I agree that reward/punishment should be proportionate to the good/bad deeds respectively we do. However, Sider's claim isn't about this particular aspect of the issue. Sider claims that two people who are morally indistinguishable can have opposite destinations in the afterlife. — TheMadFool
Choose any moral matter of degree you like: number of charitable donations made, number of hungry fed, naked clothed or feet washed, number of random acts of kindness performed, or even some amalgam of several factors. Given a binary afterlife, there will be someone who just barely made it, and someone else who just barely missed out. This is impossible, given the proportionality of justice. — http://tedsider.org/papers/hell.pdf
that reward/punishment should be proportionate to the good/bad deeds respectively we do. — TheMadFool
Ok, do you see that you basically agreed with Sider and the OP all along? — bongo fury
Hell is for evil people and heaven is for good people. This is quite obvious but, if Sider is right, then, as some of you have suggested, morality should be on some kind of continuum and there has to be a cut-off point between those destined for hell and those destined for heaven. This would be problematic just as Sider says: there will be people without noticeable differences in moral standing and yet have futures that are polar opposites.
However, look at how we view sin and virtue. Let's take murder and altruism as two of the best and clearest examples of sin and virtue respectively. It's simply impossible that these two can appear close enough in whatever scale of morality we're using to cause a situation like Sider expects. One is obviously bad and the other obviously good and there are no grey areas to confound us. — TheMadFool
To be fair, I would have guessed that Sider made his argument at least 100 years ago. Many modern christians seem to believe that awful people go to hell, while everyone else goes to heaven (all religions or philosophies that help people to behave "good" are part of god's plan). In that case, there is no need to worry about "the line" because it is WIDE and STARK. — ZhouBoTong
We can't commit half a murder and torture, although scalable, isn't ever good enough to cause confusions in judgment. Similarly a good samaritan can never be confused for a murderer or torturer. — TheMadFool
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