> My point is, however, that life grounded on self-orientation too easily lapses into boredom and fear, but life grounded in an eternal Dimension (God) that knows no bounds or limitations only finds one fulfillment after another, and a continuing stream of interest and inspiration.
I would consider it selfish of me to worship a God that created a universe like this where the bad things I've listed occur. I would consider it the same as 'cashing my chips' so to speak, with a criminal of the worst kind. I would also consider such a life subservient. I don't want to lick the boots of someone who sends people to hell. It would be ignoble.
> But why? I mean really why.
Because it worsens being. Someone engaging in excessive activity, even at their own choice, will worsen their being, and maybe others as well. They may believe a particularly excessive life suits them well, but be unable, unaware, or duped away from a more healthy state of living. If you were to ask me why again, I'd ask if you think a worsening of being is good. My guess is that your answer would be no.
> But some people are: hedonistic at the expense of others and narcissistic because it's where they want to be at. And I presume whatever people want to be is OK as long as it's where they want to be at? (Is that what your position is?)
No it's not. Worsening other people's being is wrong, so I don't condone people doing whatever they want as long as it suits them, because there are externalities. It's a difficult issue, because some people do unhealthy things and I don't lecture them. That has to do with preferences within a certain sphere. Some people chain-smoke for example. I do not. But if someone forced another person to chain-smoke, I would object.
> supposed someone is making good money trafficking young girls, and he is happy and where he wants to be at. What makes that wrong in the grand scheme of things?
Because it harms the young girls. This is wrong in the grand scheme of things because such an occurrence is itself part of the grand scheme of things. Obviously at some point in the "grand scheme of things" it will be over, but that's not the point. The point is that it occurs and worsens their being at that point. The fact that the harm might, perhaps, not be "Eternal" with a capital E, doesn't make it unimportant.
> I know he was objectively bad, but not in his mind nor in the minds of at least some others.
I don't care. He was mistaken, as were they.
> In your view, however, if we're just evolved from chemicals with no intrinsic value or meaning, I wonder if there's truly a logical basis to object. (There's certainly an emotional one, but if we're just "survival of the fittest," and if we're just evolved matter, on what logical basis can I say such behavior is wrong?)
Firstly, your conception of me thinking we come from "chemicals with no intrinsic value or meaning" is an assumption of my position. I don't necessarily believe that. I'm unsure of our origins, whether life is matter or mind, or both, and how (some) processes develop. Additionally, what applies at one level of reality may not apply at another. That's part of what the subject of emergent properties is about. Certain chemicals may not have the same kind of rules apply to them as they don't have consciousness (at least not in the same way) so they can't be tortured like we can. It's a little like going for a walk in the sunshine or eating something healthy. Someone could say "it's not worth doing any of those things, you'll eventually be dead". That's not the point. It's what happens between now and then that counts. It gives these things even more value in my opinion, as we must grasp them before they pass away.