AntiKarateKid
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Hey guys. I often bring my questions to this forum for guidance and advice and this time is no different. During my philosophy class today, my teacher insisted that we needed logic to find the universal truths of the word and started comparing moral dilemmas to mathematical equations such as
2+ 2 = 4
Murder = killing unjustly = bad
I countered that mathematical laws have no exceptions, whilst moral laws almost always have exceptions which need to be elaborated on further.
Next Point: He claimed that humans, now these are his words, have an almost mystical understanding or intuition that can pluck moral laws out through reason just as mathematical laws can me made.
I did a double take on that one. This guy denies God then believes in some mystical intuition that people supposedly have. I countered that we can't do this in most cases because there are extremely complex moral issues that cannot be brought into mathematical laws. I gave him the example of the poor man who uses his lunch money to feed a terminally ill homeless guy on the street. He said just because we cant find the law for that right now doesn't mean that we cant find one.
Is the Islamic response to the teacher as follows: We as human beings are i many ways products of our environment. Our reason is subject to our experiences and biases and not some pure tool as he supposes and religion remains as a pure guide tot he most complex problems that he admits cannot be solved by his " mystical mathematic reasoning".
I do hope that you guys can help me out in this topic and explain to me the Islamic response to the statement mentioned in the title of this thread!
2+ 2 = 4
Murder = killing unjustly = bad
I countered that mathematical laws have no exceptions, whilst moral laws almost always have exceptions which need to be elaborated on further.
Next Point: He claimed that humans, now these are his words, have an almost mystical understanding or intuition that can pluck moral laws out through reason just as mathematical laws can me made.
I did a double take on that one. This guy denies God then believes in some mystical intuition that people supposedly have. I countered that we can't do this in most cases because there are extremely complex moral issues that cannot be brought into mathematical laws. I gave him the example of the poor man who uses his lunch money to feed a terminally ill homeless guy on the street. He said just because we cant find the law for that right now doesn't mean that we cant find one.
Is the Islamic response to the teacher as follows: We as human beings are i many ways products of our environment. Our reason is subject to our experiences and biases and not some pure tool as he supposes and religion remains as a pure guide tot he most complex problems that he admits cannot be solved by his " mystical mathematic reasoning".
I do hope that you guys can help me out in this topic and explain to me the Islamic response to the statement mentioned in the title of this thread!
