For number 3, I realize the implied point, and I assume that there is more to this argument, but that sentence was one big strawman. Also, I would respond by asking why someone following the ‘true essence’ but confirming to modern societal/ethical norms is any worse than someone who is following said norms for a different reason.
For #4, those novels don’t explicitly provide ethical direction-one can use a system of ethical precepts without it being absolute and unchangeable.
For number 3, I realize the implied point, and I assume that there is more to this argument, but that sentence was one big strawman. Also, I would respond by asking why someone following the ‘true essence’ but confirming to modern societal/ethical norms is any worse than someone who is following said norms for a different reason. For #4, those novels don’t explicitly provide ethical direction-one can use a system of ethical precepts without it being absolute and unchangeable.