I find the idea that the interpretation of external circumstance, based on personal values, is the driving force of human behaviour. — Shamshir
Isn't personal morality a circumstance, and the most determining circumstance at that? — Shamshir
This is debatable. — boethius
Which, if it's already proven by history a competent critical thinker would say "this provides strictly no new information, it was purely a superfluous demonstration of what we already know". — boethius
You seem to be arguing with no one. — boethius
The functional utility of Zimbardo's narrative is to present human nature as so fickle, so dependent on circumstance, that we have barely any moral agency at all ... well, at least when working for the state, to both coddle and excuse the sadist, which there seems to be good taped indication that Zimbardo has an unhealthy obsession about. — boethius
The issue is that Zimbardo, and others sympathetic to his cause, uses the experiment to make claims much stronger than:
"Ordinary people can do bad things under the right circumstances." — boethius
Without the consent and against the protests of the patient herself, the doctor sedated the woman then administered a lethal injection while the family held her down. — NOS4A2
it only takes a single counterexample to refute your original claim. — S
First of all, beliefs aren't chosen. — S
Secondly, the obvious difference between believing the one compared to believing the other consists in how gullible you are. The religious text is about an implausible supernatural event, and the historical account is of a plausible natural event. You'd have to be really gullible to believe the former, whereas the latter is reasonable to believe. — S
You know that logo at the top, what does it say? It doesn't say, "The Science Forum", does it? — S
Secondly, NO law of physics can ever be proved; because every law of physics is a historically contingent approximation, good to a few decimal places, to the results of the experiments we're capable of doing at any given level of technology. — fishfry
He is using it in a general way, talking about something common to most/all religions, a moral framework...what? Whats the problem? — DingoJones
The reason (why1?) was that God demanded it and God was the supreme moral authority. However, it didn't stop there. Religion also answered or attempted to answer why2? and stated in clear terms that all evil was caused by Satan, the Devil. — TheMadFool
Any and all moral theories have utterly failed to make humans gravitate towards the good and away from the bad. — TheMadFool
No history book offers supernatural and unlikely creatures like talking serpents and donkeys. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Historians stay in the real world while the religious hide behind a supernatural shield. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
A historian will argue his points with facts while the religious argue their points without facts. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
It is also true that the historical claims suit a particular religious worldview. — A Gnostic Agnostic
I am reading them and understanding at least what they are attempting to advance as a viable model which explains what we see. — A Gnostic Agnostic
If people started spilling blood over criticisms of Adolph Hitler, Adolph Hitler would be an idol that is worshiped by idol worshipers. — A Gnostic Agnostic
Are they willing to spill blood over it? — A Gnostic Agnostic
Anecdotal information, while interesting, has little value as compared to stats and the evils that the majority continue to do. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
What small % of Christianity is not homophobic and misogynous in your estimation? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Also I'm made to believe that the "Christian" God you refer to has wide appeal among the faithful. Am I wrong? — TheMadFool
Can you point me in the direction of a God definition that is better? — TheMadFool
For me, the omni- stuff is unhelpful. — Pattern-chaser
But God is perfect and it would be an imperfection to have not existed for some time. So any god that comes into being won't qualify as God. — Bartricks
