Archaeopteryx
Wanderer
In what way is Matt equivocating?We're talking past each other because you (and Matt Dillahunty) are equivocating on the use of the word "objective".
Now it seems that you're equivocating. In my experience, when Christian apologists use the word "objective," they are specifically referring to the dictates of God, since for them morality can only be "objective" if it comes from a divine source. Do you intend on using the definitions given above for the remainder of the discussion or is this just a bait-and-switch?I defined the two most common Christian uses of the word "objective" earlier, but reworded them below:
1. Objective moral ought = could mean "*in this particular situation*, the act in question is something we should do".
2. Objective moral ought = could mean, in a different context such as referring to OMV&Ds, "the act in question is something we should do, *not matter what any human thinks*".
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