On Saturday, August 12, 2023 at 2:01:11 AM UTC+1,
peter2...@gmail.com wrote:
> I didn't post at all to Usenet yesterday because a family celebration lasted till after 9pm.
> But now I finally have time to finish the series of three replies to this thought-provoking post of yours.
> On Friday, August 4, 2023 at 1:11:03 PM UTC-4, Burkhard wrote:
> > On Friday, August 4, 2023 at 12:36:03 PM UTC+1,
peter2...@gmail.com wrote:
> > > On Wednesday, August 2, 2023 at 8:46:01 PM UTC-4,
peter2...@gmail.com wrote:
> [quoting from an essay by Oxford philosopher John Lennox:]
> > > > At the very least that shows me that God has not remained distant from human suffering but has become part of it. Furthermore, Christ rose from the dead, which is a guarantee that there is to be a future judgement. This is a marvellous hope, because it means that our conscience is not an illusion, and those who terrorise, abuse, exploit, defame and cause their fellow humans untold suffering will not get away with it. Atheism has no such hope--for it ultimate justice is an illusion.
> Picking up where I left off in my second reply:
>
> > There is also psychological basis for this - the "warm feeling": we get when doing good, the anxiety
> > when doing bad etc. It is at least not impossible to think of a world where the cost
> > of evil actions are intrinsically higher than any gain they can give to the perpetrator
>
> But that is not our world. I purposely talked to Harshman about conditions under Stalin, where the
> perpetrators inflicted untold suffering on the prisoners in the slave labor camps, yet there
> was no retribution to them at all, except in one solitary case of a perpetrator who fell from grace
> and had to share the worst conditions of the people he had once sent to their hell on earth.
Well, 3 possible answers, one theistic spiritual, one naturalised spiritual and one
theistic, all without afterlife:
1) the spiritual answer Epicurus, Plato or Seneca might have given: "
There is no greater punishment of wickedness than that it is dissatisfied with itself
and its deeds."
Why did the prison guards act as they did? Out of a range of emotions such as fear (of their
superiors, and also of the prisoners, not qua prisoners, but of
the groups they belonged to) Are fear and hate healthy emotions that lead to
happiness? No. So by remaining captives to these emotions, the guards
harm themselves and prevent themselves from achieving true happiness.
2) Now, as there is a danger that this is based on something resembling a circular definition,
as "happiness" as understood by them is less a descriptive and more a normative state.
The naturalised version treats this as a statement of psychology or anthropology - "as
a matter of fact" people who live brutal lives suffer mentally for it
3) finally, there is the answer Job's God gives: “Do you know when the mountain goats give birth?
Do you watch when the doe bears her fawn Do you count the months till they bear?
So it might look to YOU as if the prison guards got unpunished, and the prisoners treated unjustly,
but this is just b/c you are not in full possession of the facts. From the divine perspective, guard
A might get a particularly bad colon cancer at 80, prisoner B's daughter will have twins which for
B is the greatest thing possible, and prisoner C had it coming for other misdeeds you don't know,
possibly insufficient belief in the divine judgement.
Now to be sure I'm not arguing for any of these, especially I don't claim anyone has evidence that they are
factually correct. and doing an empirical longitudinal might be pointless in 1) and dangerous in 2)
(after all you are testing here someone who made the Behemoth AND can control him - can can you do
that? So better just take his word for it)
But I am arguing that as far as "overbeliefs" go, they do not require more, and possible a lot less, leap
pf faith than the afterlife based accounts of justice.
That would be an entirely different discussion. For the purpose of the one here, I'd
happy say I don't know either, and yes, that makes it extremely frustrating which gives
additional psychological support for punitive approaches - but that does not
make the facts go away. So we should at least be honest to ourselves and admit that
this is a response to emotions rather than a strategy to reduce crime.
There was a case last week here that struck me in this regard: criminal trial of a death
by dangerous driving case. Young man, newly qualified for driving, takes his father's
high powered BMW, races it across the streets and takes a selfie of himself. Runs of the
road and kills a young girl.
He gets 12 years, in my view a substantial sentence. The parents consider it unduly
lenient (which I understand on the emotional level) but also argue that by
asking for a higher punishment, they don't want it for revenge, but "to have
a proper deterrent for others, who now might do the same". Rationally, that makes
no sense of course. Nobody says: I'll take this care for a spin - what's the worst
that can happen, a mere 12 years in prison (and then having a previous conviction
that pretty much determines the rest of your life). That's not how humans work.
Instead, they think "nothing will happen", making the punishment more or less
irrelevant
That it is an emotional response doesn't make the parent's demand for stiffer
sentences necessarily illegitimate (as I said, that would be a different discussion) but here
it is for a an argument against Lennox' claim that we find punishment unattractive because
we fear that it would apply to us too. That is exactly not the way we think. The parent's
position got a lot of public support - and I bet that all the supporters discounted all
the "moral luck" that they have had in their lives - when they took silly risks, but nothing
bad happened - had it happened, they'd now sit in the dock.
Very few people really think like John Bradford (allegedly, the authorship is contested)
did when he said when looking at convicted criminals: "There but for the grace of God,
goes John Bradford"
OK fair enough, "nobody" is too strong. People can be guilt ridden - and an even
better example for me would be things like survivor guilt where people blame
themselves for no wrongdoing whatsoever.
Still a couple of things on that: First there is a difference between evaluating one's past actions,
and how they see themselves at any given point in time. Newton had his conversion, and then
reevaluated his past deeds. But that means he thought of himself as a goodie (or at least
not a baddie) when trading in slaves, and after that too thought of himself as a goodie (...
and now am found" if one who has a debt to pay. For Lennox argument to work, we'd have to
think of ourselves as baddies who intend to remain baddies and therefore are against
strict punishment.
Related, there is a difference between evaluating one's actions and one's "character" or identity.
What I meant above was the latter more than the former, and is not any more demanding than
what we observe in everyday life: When people watch crime dramas, westerns, historical dramas
and identify with one of the characters, almost always they'll chose a goodie because that's how
we like to think about ourselves,
>
> And you seem to speak of such people yourself below.
>
> > We see this in the penal institutions we create in this world: if people realised that the prison they
> > want to build, or the judicial torture, could one day be inflicted on them our prisons etc through
> > history would have looked very different. It's typically only the handful of penal abolitionists whose
> > empathetic reasoning makes them see themselves on the receiving end too.
>
>
> > This us vs them logic of punishment is well studied in the research on penal populism cf e.g.
> > classically Bottoms, A. (1995). The philosophy and politics of punishment and sentencing, If one
> > believes in evolutionary psychology, this may have evolutionary roots - I think the term is
> > "altruistic punishment" - opting for a system in which meeting out punishment even harms
> > the punisher
> > (I myself found Flesch: Comeuppance: Costly signaling, altruistic punishment,
> > and other biological components quite interesting )
>
> Sounds quite specialized, though.
True, but also universal, which indicates some evolutionary and biological roots. And other aspects
of punitiveness can similarly be traced across time and space)
>
> >
> > That the "us vs them" logic is also central to divine punishment is particularly obvious when
> > we consider that more often than not, the most serious punishment is reserved for non-believers
> > for no other reason that they are non-believers.
>
> This is a really serious misunderstanding -- confusing mere belief with the many-faceted concept
> of faith.
I'm still addressing here Lennox anthropological argument, so I'm not making a theological
claim about which interpretation of the Christian bible is best supported by the text, but
a much more general one that over time and across religions, membership in the religion
is deemed as a necessary (though not always sufficient) condition for a pleasant afterlife
(if of course the religion in question has a "punishment/reward model of the afterlife at all)
> I believe the Epistle of James was written to correct people who had this
> false idea of what "faith" entails. The Roman Catholic Church sides with James on this issue.
Not for the purpose of this issue I'd say, or at least "It's complicated". True, the CC is not "sola fides"
so belief is not sufficient - the issue here however is if it is necessary.
The old problem of the "justified heathen". And yes, the CC has softened its stance on this -
slowly and painfully.
I dug up an interview Benedict gave on this, back in 2016. In German, will try to find
an English version. But in essence he accounts for the prevailing doctrine after the council of
Trent that baptism was absolutely necessary to avoid hell, and how abandoning this idea
let to a "double crisis in faith".
A rare acknowledgement - by a conservative to boot - of the need of evolving dogma
My quick google assisted translation:
"While it is true that the great missionaries of the 16th century were still convinced
that those who are not baptized are forever lost [...] the Catholic Church abandoned this view
after the Second Vatican Council. This caused a deep double crisis [...]
He then discusses Carl Rahner and his idea of the "anonymous Christian" but rejects it. Merely
living a life by Christian ethical rules, even when motivated by a belief in a transcendental
being (atheists need not apply anyway) is not sufficient:
"This theory is fascinating, but reduces Christianity to a pure mental presentation of what a human being is
and therefore overlooks the drama of change and renewal central to Christianity"
And next he rejects even more strongly Jamesian pluralism:
"Even less acceptable is the pluralistic theory of religion , for which all faiths, each in their own way, would
be ways of salvation and in this sense, must be considered equivalent as far as their effects are concerned"
So the only compromise he offers is the Catechism: “Those who, through no fault of their own,
do not know the Gospel of Christ or his Church, but who nevertheless seek God with a sincere
heart, and, moved by grace, try in their actions to do his will as they know it through t
he dictates of their conscience – those too may achieve eternal salvation.”
So has to be "no fault of their own" which is a clear-cut case only for people who never
heard of the church (some wiggle room there) , they have to be "god seekers" (again,
atheists need not apply) and it is a "may" - so translated into cynical: We can't
prevent God from letting Plato into his heaven, but we draw the line at anyone
who decided the Catholic Church is not for them".
> Even the Lutheran Church seems to have turned its back on Luther, who removed that Epistle
> from his Bible, calling it an "epistle of straw."
Not quite... Yes, he doubted the authenticity, but not enough to remove it from the Bible -
it is in his German Bible translation, but moved "further to the back" in comparison to the
Catholic version. And he refers to it in the Great Catechism (Petition 7, the Lords Prayer)
which implies authenticity.
> > Indeed, for sola-fide Christians, any harm inflicted
> > on others during our lifetime is largely irrelevant, determinative for punishment is merely a state of
> > mind.
>
> There was such a person, proclaiming this travesty with a stentorian voice, on the University of Illinois
> campus back in 1975 or 1976. I'd give some details, but this post has gotten quite long as it is.
>
> [quoting Lennox again:]
> > > >The cross also speaks of a place where I can receive forgiveness and new life by repenting and trusting the one who died for me. Christianity competes with no other philosophy or religion since no one else offers me such a radical solution to my human problem.
>
> > Yes, and every member of every other religion will feel the same about theirs.
>
> Stop and think: what ARE the other religions which talk so radically about forgiveness?
That is question begging I'd say. It assumes that Christianity's focus on
forgiveness is the radical solution to the human problem.
> And how do they do it? I know of no examples, and I know of one that has no such
> thing: the Zoroastrians are so diffident about their religion that it can only be passed
> on by inheritance. The Jews aren't big on proselytizing either.
>
>
> > But also an interesting point on the substance. Is this really a vision
> > of justice that is plausible? Imagine being the victim of a terrible
> > crime - someone murdering one's family. now it comes to the trial,
> > and the judge says to the accused: "well, you did it, obviously, but you also
> > really love me,
>
> "AND your neighbor as yourself, AND even your enemies."
>
> Surely you know the NT better than to leave this out.
Love you neighbour is OT, people always forget this - what changes
is the NT is the definition of neighbour. But in any case, I left it out
because it is irrelevant for the point. "Love your enemy" is a rule
(maybe aspirational) for while you are alive, but here we are talking about
the point of judgement.
More generally, the neighbour and the enemies have no standing when it
comes to the final judgement - the transgression that is forgiven (or not)
is the one against God for not following his rules (which include the "love..."
rule) He is the injured party that therefore forgives the trespass.
The converse also holds - 5.Mose 32:35. "Forgive your enemy" does not
mean the enemy gets off Scot free - you just refrain from actions against them
in the hope/knowledge that God will punish them. There is a humorous take
in this in Weird Al' Yankovic's "Amish paradise"
A local boy kicked me in the butt last week
I just smiled at him and I turned the other cheek
I really don't care, in fact I wish him well
'Cause I'll be laughing my head off when he's burning in Hell
In fact, if you were to read the "love your enemy" any stronger, your own
argument would become self-defeating: Saying that the belief in an afterlife
with hell is needed to fulfil our desire for justice would then mean that the belief in
hell is in itself a sinful deviation from God's demand to love your enemy: you should
what the hell to be empty, not for your sake but that of your enemy
>
> >so that's OK then, off you go."
>
> The vision of heaven does not stop there for C.S. Lewis and many other
> Christian leaders. They include tearful confessions by the wrongers to the wronged,
> followed by reconciliation.
Where do you see that in Christian doctrine or theology?