rusmeister wrote:Fist, it's like light. The existence of light cannot be disproved because some people do not feel it.
No, it's not like light. Light is something outside of ourselves that we perceive. We can test it; manipulate it; study it; create it;... The fact that some do not have the necessary body parts to perceive it does not mean it doesn't exist.
Your moral compass, otoh, is something you feel
within yourself. And, because you do, and because, if what you feel
is what you think it is it will help prove God's existence, you want to assume everyone
else feels it within themselves.
rusmeister wrote:The fact that everybody appeals to it, whether there is a law of the land or not, is enough to show its existence.
What land says it's not illegal to simply take what someone else worked for? There's no such land. Under certain circumstances, the ruling body might have the right, but it's certainly not a free-for-all in any country. Why? Because no society can exist that way. This is different from the homosexuality debate, where the society YOU want can't exist among accepted homosexuality. NO society can exist if everybody can take anything anybody else worked for.
rusmeister wrote:The problem of not feeling it - I'd say in most cases of LOSING that ability - is another one. But the existence of the moral law has been established, whether people sense it or not.
No, it hasn't been established. No more than the existence of the God you believe in has been.
rusmeister wrote:The argument of the thief complaining when he is stolen from is evidence FOR the moral law, not against it.
No, it's not evidence for
or against the moral law. It's just evidence that the thief doesn't want
his stuff stolen any more than the rest of us do.
Everybody wants to keep the stuff they worked for. (Amusingly, the thief wants to keep the stuff he stole.) But wanting to keep what I worked for does not automatically lead to "And everybody else should get to keep what
they worked for." Yes, it often
does lead to that in people. And it's reinforced, and even developed, in people by the voice of society, which, because it's the only way society can exist, says that's the way things should be.
But it's not always like that. There's a huge number of people who consistently act otherwise throughout their lives. Not an exceptionally small number.
rusmeister wrote:What you fail to explain is what exactly people are appealing to, particularly in the absence of formal law, when they themselves are violated. If there is no law, do they beg an approaching murderer for their lives? On what basis do they ask him to have mercy? What is it that they are appealing to in the murderer? Why bother with appealing if there is nothing to appeal to? Sure, they may beg on their own behalf, but the "I have 4 children" line makes no sense if there is nothing to appeal to. Why should the murderer in the lawless land have mercy? Why would anybody think he should? We don't say "Don't kill me because law #77234 of the criminal code of the state of NY says not to or you'll be punished!"
"I have 4 children" doesn't always work, though, does it. Nor "I'm only a 15 year old girl! I want to fall in love! I want to have children!" The person is still murdered often enough. There's no evidence that the murderer felt and lost your moral compass. There's only evidence that he acted against what
you (and, in this case, I) feel.