1 / 24

Introduction to Truths

Introduction to Truths. TODAY ’ S MENU. Appetizer: Truth…does it exist?…. Main Course: What is Truth? Absolut e and Relative morality Dessert: P.E.C. Questions. What is Truth?. What is Truth?. A Time To Kill – Clip . Plato's Allegory of the Cave. ETHICS & MORALITY CONT ’ D.

cais
Download Presentation

Introduction to Truths

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Truths

  2. TODAY’S MENU • Appetizer: • Truth…does it exist?…. • Main Course: • What is Truth? • Absoluteand Relative morality • Dessert: • P.E.C. Questions

  3. What is Truth? What is Truth? A Time To Kill – Clip

  4. Plato's Allegory of the Cave

  5. ETHICS & MORALITY CONT’D • _________________________is like understanding musical theory and knowing how to read the music. • Morality is like playing music and hitting the right notes. • ___________________refers to the stands by which we judge our actions to be good or evil

  6. Reality! • ________________________Truths: reality as it exists independent of observer ex.) Earth’s existence • Aka Knowable Truths or Absolute truths • Subjective Truths: mental representation/ model that we build of the objective world • Aka Experiences or relativism • Does not equal opinion

  7. Validity: How accurate your experience is to the knowable truth • Your world view is your subjective truth. • Subjective truth may or may not be accurate

  8. Water / gravity example

  9. TRUTH… • How do we reach truth? • Through ____________________ • Becoming more aware of the objective reality (the knowable truths) • Does non-material reality exist? • Love? • My husband’s goal is world domination?

  10. AN EXAMPLE … • Ex. 500 years ago I could I said the sun rises in the East and sets in the West. But you say the sun isn’t moving but the earth is moving and the sun is fixed. Based on my experience and knowledge what you say is difficult to understand yet you may be right. • Now we know that the sun being fixed is indeed correct but my theory appeared to be correct based on my experience (subjective reality) • Therefore, the truth (objective reality) did not change but our perspective (validity) changed.

  11. What we know about God? • GOD is… • Love • Justice • TRUTH • If morality is based on truth then morality is objective/absolute NOT subjective • Truth comes from God therefore it cannot be changed

  12. Relativism vs. absolute • ___________________= always comparing two situations • Uses the word but • “stealing is wrong, but if don’t hurt anyone its okay” • Absolutism= not relative, unconditioned • “stealing is wrong” • Q:When you watched Million Dollar Baby what was he obligated to do?

  13. What would be the relativist response??? • eating this mushroom will lead you to experience abdominal pain and maybe even death • Who was the first relativist?

  14. Some schools of thought • atheism (a-without, theism=God) • There are no absolutes • knowledge, material realities, non-material realties (God), even morals • because God cannot Be if nothing is absolute • ______________________ • no absolutes in human knowledge but there may be in material and non-material realities

  15. Some schools of thought • Moral relativism- there maybe absolutes in areas such asmath ie.) 2+2=4 but not in moral knowledge we know no more absolutes • Religious relativism- perhaps in moral knowledge but not in religious knowledge perhaps love

  16. Empiricism – moral judgments are only subjective feelings • “Murder is wrong” means to an empiricist “you hate murder” NO!!! Murder is wrong.

  17. WHO SAID THAT…. • “relativism will damn our souls” • You can’t repent if you don’t believe in sin to repent from, and you can’t believe in sin if you don’t believe in a real moral law, because sin means disobeying. Moral relativism eliminates the law, thus sin, thus salvation….

  18. “ Art, like morality consists of drawing a line somewhere.” G. K. Chesterton

  19. Christian Morality • Pharisees • Legalism approach • Jesus • Promote a new way of living- an invitation • Morality is not man made • Its origins are in the God’s revelation • Moral Theology • Application of morals • Ex.) thou shalt not kill = means abortion too!

  20. Here is why else? • It allows us to have _____________________, meaning and coherence in our lives. • As teens, you are in the process of making the moral decisions for yourselves • There are knowable truths of where to draw the line, of what is right and what is wrong. • Our actions speak to who we are…we are Christians…our actions should reflect Christ

  21. DON’T IMPOSE YOUR VALUES ON ME! • Let’s take a look at how law is created? • A law is enforced only by force • Your consensus really means SOME ppl ex.) lawmakers, majority impose their personal values on others • G.K.Chesterton“Once you abolish God, the government becomes god.”

  22. -Our Catholic Tradition and Scriptures lead us to discern how God wants us live? • -With great power (Free will) comes great responsibility • Example? • Driver’s license

  23. What is freedom? • human potential, the ability and the power to act on your free will. • does not equate doing whatever one pleases • Ex.) Your parents go away for the weekend for the first time. Do you adhere to their rules or do you have a house party because you were given freedom?

  24. WHO SAID IT… • Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought.

More Related