Pointedstick wrote:
Laws don't stop bad actions, consequences do. Laws without enforcement, or with insufficiently bad consequences, or which don't make people believe that they will be affected by those consequences, are ineffective laws. Therefore it is perfectly possible to have a society that condemns and harshly sanctions robbery, rape, and murder even without laws as long as there remains sufficient outrage against these acts and social institutions support penalties for people who commit the bad acts.
By the same token, in a society where robbery, rape, and murder are considered no big deal, no amount of laws will save the victims.
Interesting perspective from a non-believer. Think about the presuppositions necessary to hold this view:
Victim - a possible presupposition is the one raped, robbed or murdered did not want that to happen. Why is that? How do you know they did not want that to happen? What is the origin of the moral compass that is apparently operational?
Laws do not stop bad actions - a possible presupposition is that we are completely free to follow the law or not. Why don't we?
Laws that do not have enforced consequences are ineffective - a possible presupposition is that behavior is caused by an external force, or comes from within due to wanting to follow the guidance of that external force. Why is that necessary? Where did that desire come from?
So, PS, are you really sure you are a non-believer? I think the seed is there and perhaps you are not aware it is sprouting.
For me, this is just another observation of why Christianity is so appealing; it is for me the most logical explanation for my scientifically trained mind of "why" humans behave the way they do, "why" the universe functions exactly the way it needs to to stay in existence, and "why" I can be at peace when the world around me seems to be going to "hell". I know that I am and will be OK and absolutely nothing other men can do to me matters in the long run. But that is just me.
Put not your trust in princes, in a son of man, in whom there is no help. Psalm 146:3