muso,
Quote:That's why we've got a legal system.
A legal system is indeed part of the moral code, so suggesting it's something else is just plain wrong. A Legal system decides what's good and bad, and then enforces that on all of society, punishing those who disagree/disobey.
What you really mean to say is that you seek to distill out those moral subjects you don't believe the state has a right to decide upon, and move them over into the personal domain, whereby each individual formulates his/her own personal approach to them?
Quote:The things that can actually harm somebody need to be part of a legal system that adapts to changes in societal norms through the ages
How do you define harm? There's bound to be a lot of activities that cause harm, but you can't actually perceive it directly. Perhaps it's long term harm, perhaps the harm manifests itself in indirect ways etc. When we define laws according to societal norms, we set a dangerous precedent. Because societies are often misled into accepting norms which are really quite wrong. By your definition the Nazi massacres against minorities were fine, because the societal norms in Nazi Germany permitted it to come about.
Quote:because religions don't have that mechanism to adapt
I would have to strongly disagree here, and suggest you really haven't studied religions enough to comment on this.
Christianity for a start is a great adapter. It can mould and twist itself to compensate for almost any condition, even expunging some of it's own core tenets just to please the masses of the time.
Islam also has mechanisms for adapting, specifically the process of ijtihad.
Quote:The minor differences in morality, such as what happens in people's bedrooms have no place in law
You've gotta be kidding? You think people can just do anything they like in their bedrooms and the society at large is completely unaffected by it? And as we can see by the Mardi Gras example, what happens in people's bedrooms rarely stays there. The fact is that many practises occur in bedrooms that do affect societies, and this will always be the case. You simply cannot seperate law and morality, they are one in the same.
Quote:Religions should have no right to condemn people who choose to follow another path
As I am a believer in theocracy, that really doesn't mean much to me, as I believe the entire state apparatus should be controlled by the laws of the Creator. Religion shouldn't just have an input, it should be the only single deciding factor in the way a state should be run.
Quote:People should be totally free to make their own decisions on what they believe regardless of what their parents believe
You sound like a rebellious teenager, what are you doing on a political forum?
Quote:By the way societal norms do change. If you don't accept that, you're being hypocritical
for 1350 years of Islamic rule, societal norms did not change. The laws of the Shari'ah remained the same. That doesn't mean they couldn't expand to deal with new situations, they could, but the basis by which they dealt with those new situations was exactly the same immutable concepts that were revealed by the Creator.
The fact that societal norms change, is a case against your concept of "rolling morality". If we base our morality on something that's constantly changing, then chances are our morals are going to end up pretty corrupted.
Quote:I don't want to bring up this historical pedophilia discussion again, but it illustrates my point
That's a completely seperate issue. Islam always regards the age of consent to be the age of maturity, regardless of time period. When the shari'ah is re-implemented again, it will be the same, it is timeless. It is only the Western nations which have changed their attitude about this.
Quote:You may have noticed that I stayed right out of that particular debate, because I consider it distasteful and disrespectful to Muslims.
Feel free to engage in that debate if you wish, I had no problem with it whatsoever. Those who tried to twist the concept were quickly silenced. All we had was one lone lunatic who insisted on continuing to mount personal attacks against the Prophet (Pbuh) and that person will find themselves ignored, as their vitriolic attacks and slanders do not warrant a reply.
Quote:As long as people don't try to force their beliefs and the morality of their religions down my throat, I'm quite happy
Well my intention was not to force anyhting down your throat, just to raise some issues I think you should consider i you're going to adopt such beliefs about morality
Quote:The fact of the matter is that we live in a country with many different beliefs and many different religion-based morality systems, though not as different as some may have us believe.
Yes we do, and I am pleased you recognise it. A lot of people wish to ignore this fact, and delude themselves into thinking they still live in the "steak and eggs 50s" as you put it
Quote:You're missing the point. I don't seek to impose my personal morality on an entire nation. That's what some religious people do.
You might not think you do, but in reality that's what has to occur. Some kind of law/morality has to be imposed upon the nation, either it's yours or it's mine, or we all get together and decide according to the social norms, or we use an absolute standard
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