dekoi said:
Natural Law is very hard to explain. Some explain it as "the desire for good and the ignorance of evil." Others state natural law is "the purpose of an object or being." Personally, i reason natural law is the feeling of compassion when you see a man with sorrow in his joyless eyes.
Not to be too crass, we could hook up all kinds of SQUIDS, do PET and fMRI scans, etc, etc, etc, and characterise your feeling, and others' when they report 'compassion'; we could then form hypotheses about 'compassion', test them, and so on.
The feeling of an odd admiration for human life when you are present during a birth. It is the feeling of relief when you are honest and truthful. It is the appreciation for the good.
Ditto.
This unexplainable noumenon (antonym of phenomenon?) is indeed the nature of human beings: the appreciation and hunger for the good, otherwise known as the “natural law” set upon humanity.
Assuming this research program were to be successful (and there's no way of knowing to what extent it would be, ahead of the results), we would have then quite precisely described and formed testable hypotheses about these subjective feelings. Of course, nothing at all in the results will substitute for the subjective experiences, but at least the extent of their objective reality will have been well defined.
We are unable to escape our nature. Our body and soul continuously demonstrate the presence of this metaphysical power, through our conscience, design, and natural consequence. A universal standard is shown with the use of conscience, since, “Deep conscience…is an ‘interior witness” , “…it is ‘the reason why even a man who tells himself there is no right and wrong may shrink from committing murder.’”
Well, objectively, executioners in the pay of the state appear to have no qualms about firing the gun, releasing the trapdoor, pressing the plunger, etc. Nor, apparently, do those who commit 'honour killings', or community sanctioned 'revenge killings'. Also, we should be able to study all these subjective feelings using the scientific method of today's science, which could, in principle, show that a) 'our nature' is largely predictable, based on our genes and the circumstances of our birth and early childhood, b) 'this metaphysical power' has (or has not) any physical realisation, c) the extent to which 'a universal standard' is truly universal (well, wrt Homo sap. individuals; doubtful we could even say anything about other mammmals, let alone plants or fungi)
Our design also demonstrates the existence of a natural law, with human features such as interdependency (all humans somehow depending on each other), the complementary nature of males and females, and the complexity of the human body.
Well, E. O. Wilson pretty much showed that most of this is common among a certain types of mammals, and is related to the strategies that evolution has 'lead' our species to adopt, and that other 'natural laws' are quite successful as adaptations, for other mammalian species.
Lastly, natural consequence also proves the existence of a natural order.
I didn't follow this at all, could you clarify please?