In answer to joshua and nixit. I have drunk alcohol, and yes, shock! I actually like the taste of it!!! OMG WTF HOW??!!
Yes, wine, and ales (my preference) do actually taste nice, if they're good quality.
I know they're potentially harmful, but I know that I do not drink anything near the quantities that make them so, and, yes, it is widely acknowledged that wine, red wine, can be beneficial against coronary disease.
I can only imagine your entirely negative view of alcohol is due to propaganda, rather than experience?
deadboy: as nixit says, there are many religions. It's not as simple as you placed it, hence, there are many more possibilities of there being an incorrect descision. Has it ever occured to you that you might die, and find that vishnu rejects you as a non-believer? Also, you forgot to add the happiness of life into your equation. You discuss the happiness of a possible afterlife, but what about the misery religion brings to millions in our current lives?
Phalynx wrote:To challenge what is right and wrong (and therefore religions of different sorts) is fine, to challenge that there is right and wrong, in their traditional absolute terms fundamentally devalues human existance. It makes genocide, paedophillia, rape, murder etc. philospophical questions with no concern for the human suffering they cause.
You're badly mis-reading me.
I am not, for a moment, suggesting that the things that almost every single person living agrees is wrong, ethically, are 'ok' in any way.
Just that, they are right to some, if only to the perpertraors, thus, they are not
universally wrong.
Take your examples - especially genocide. A genocide is not the work of one person. A number of people must have thought that it was the right thing to do. Same with paedophilia, rape, and murder. The people doing said things must have thought it was right.
That does not make it widely acceptable, nor am I in anyway, shape, or form, trying to make it defencible.
But what it does show, clearly, is that there can be no universal wrongs (or universal rights) in ethics. Your examples happened, thus, at least one person (And with the examples you gave, millions - there have been many murders, rapes etc etc) must have thought it was right - thus, by a simple fact of there being just one person who thought it to be right, it can not, by definition, be a universal wrong.
Thus, there can be no universal rights or wrongs.
There can be, and are, generally accepted wrongs, that does not make them universal.
Whoever you vote for.
The government wins.