Of course, humans are even capable of disbelieving for good reason obvious facts and coming up with their won views because they may be in denial, biased, have false assumptions or have just honestly come up with an alternative view due to their their psychological makeup.
We have seen this many times in social settings where people get the wrong idea/view of a person despite others showing facts of contrary behaviour. As I mentioned earlier many scientific theories have varying views about what are the facts. Those who think the earth is flat really have an alternative view that the earth is flat based on facts and believe that.
Climate change is another, Human consciousness is another? The fact is we are conscious beings but there are varying views on what consciousness is. Ask any witness of an incident what factually happened and you will get varying views of what happened. The list goes on.
And all of those issues come about because of subjective perceptions that can't be verified objectively.
Ask a person what they witnessed when the incident took place, and you can get a different answer from everyone, because how are they going to verify their perceptions? It's not like they can experience the incident again.
But if you get a video recording of the incident, suddenly it becomes a lot more objective, and it becomes possible to verify what happened. This happens because we are removing the subjectivity of the witness's experience.
In fact in science the observer plays such an important role that some think there is no objective reality and reality (the physical world) is created by the observer. That really opens up the possibility that peoples views can vary about objective reality.
There's no actual evidence for that idea though, is there.
How is it special pleading when you were quite willing to debate Gods role and even gave your opinion that God makes moral laws like governments do.
I don't recall ever making that claim. Can you show me where I did?
So qualifying Gods role is relevant. Therefore we have to assess whether God can be viewed in the same way we humans view things and use support such as what the Bible says about God and moral law. Philosophers have determined that God is not an entity that dictates moral laws but is made up of the morals like Love, Honesty, justice, kindness, generosity ect.
That's assuming God exists, and that's a big IF there.
Yes that’s right, there is no basis for assuming that there is an "ought" anywhere in the explanation evolution uses to account for morality. Is only descriptive and not proscriptive.
So what?
You are the one who claimed "...evolution does not explain why we ought to be good..." as though there actually IS an "ought" in there. You have not shown that there's any reason to believe that there's an "ought".
Yes I have done that several times. For example can you or I or anyone who is having a debate like we are in seeking the truth or a matter disregard the moral values of Honesty and Truth in our debate.
As I have said several times now, we can't reach a conclusion on the morality of honesty just on the basis that it's honesty.
See the onus on proving there is not moral realism is on the moral sceptic and not the person claiming moral realism because moral realism or objective morality is based on intuitions of lived morality.
Again, any lived experience is a SUBJECTIVE thing.
Just like we know and believe intuitively that the physical world is real according to our senses and we are in some simulation and therefore have no reason to doubt this when we for example sit on a chair and it doesn’t disappear.
If you have to rely on "believe intuitively," then what you're talking about is not objective.
So too do we intuitively know and believe our experience of moral situations are real. We don’t just walk on by when a child is being abused and think morality is subjective so the perpetrator is just acting out their moral view. Rather we know this act is wrong for anyone and want to stop it.
The passerby who steps in and tries to stop the abuser does so because their morality tells them it is wrong. The abuser's morality tells them that it is acceptable to abuse the child. This is exactly what we'd expect to see from subjective, not objective morality.
So just like our physical world is real and there is no reason to doubt it until the moral sceptic can come up with evidence that our moral intuition is not real then we are justified to believe it is real. They would have to come up with the same level of evidence that would prove our physical world is not real because both are based on intuition.
Intuition is not objective.
Explaining or describing morality through evolution or science doesn’t tell us why something is morally right or wrong. For example evolution may say that human getting along and not stealing or killing each other is an evolved behaviour that helps human societies survive and not destroy themselves. But why says that human survival is a morally right act.
No, much of Human behaviour is caused by genes. Dawkins described how this works in his book "The Extended Phenotype." If there were Humans who did not act like survival was something to strive for, then they would have not tried to survive and the genes for such behaviour would have died out with them. Natural selection favours those who try to stay alive as much as possible.
Plus evolution is about chemical reactions, how proteins are mutated and naturally selected to pass on genes. Chemical reactions don’t explain or account for morality which is nonphysical and nothing to do with biology.
As I just said, evolution and natural selection can account for behaviour.
Plus its a non sequitur because even if we accept that morality came about by evolution this still doesn’t deny that there are objective morals and we are discovering them through evolution just like we discover reality/the world with evolving understanding.
You seem to be fundamentally misunderstanding evolution.
From an evolutionary point of view, there is no objective moral right and wrong in just the same way that there is no objectively best body shape.
but it cannot account for why something is morally right or wrong. It’s just descriptive and not proscriptive.
You have not shown that a proscriptive explanation is required.
It does if those objective morals apply to lived moral experiences like laws that cannot be denied. I have given the example of Honesty.
Once again, lived experiences are subjective, not objective.