It wouldn't matter even if such a being existed; clearly nothing is enforcing any sort of morality on the universe.
punishment / reward in the afterlife isn't a viable hypothetical enforcement?
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It wouldn't matter even if such a being existed; clearly nothing is enforcing any sort of morality on the universe.
punishment / reward in the afterlife isn't a viable hypothetical enforcement?
To me this seems to be shakier argumentation than asserting that morality established by belief in a deity is subjective because it is rooted in the opinion that a deity is the true god. This is because it could be argued that a deity that created the universe and dictates the objective laws of physics could just as easily dictate objective moral laws and enforce them.
To me this seems to be shakier argumentation than asserting that morality established by belief in a deity is subjective because it is rooted in the opinion that a deity is the true god. This is because it could be argued that a deity that created the universe and dictates the objective laws of physics could just as easily dictate objective moral laws and enforce them.
Your questions conflate moral standards with moral values.
In my view, for every moral consideration, there exists an objectively quantifiable outcome which results in the least amount of harm. Whether that outcome is actually desirable is necessarily a matter of subjectivity.
My standard (harm vs. health) is objective. Values are subjective by their very nature.
To the point though, you are in no position to stand in judgment over anyone else's moral philosophy. Like all supernaturalist philosophies, you've predicated yours on a nebulous non-concept that cannot be positively identified, verified or even coherently defined - in your case an amorphous, magical desert god named 'Yahweh', whom you assert has set forth certain moral decrees.
Even granting the existence of this phantom deity and his decrees, you have no reliable means of gleaning what those decrees are, how to discern which of them are true 'revelations' or merely imagination or deception, or indeed any reason why they should be adopted in the first place.
This is all to say nothing of the fact that the only unforgivable 'sin' in your philosophy is disbelief, so it's not as if you can provide a catalyst for good behavior anyway. The torturing, murdering, necrophilic pederast has a deathbed conversion and goes on to heaven, while the atheist philanthropist goes to hell.
Your moral philosophy is an utter wreck. It is both ontologically and epistemologically vacuous, and the doctrine of vicarious redemption destroys the very concept of justice.
Keep it. I like mine just fine.
Morality is the way that things ought to be.
Not the way that anybody thinks/feels/believes things ought to be. The way that things ought to be, period.
I do not see how the way that things ought to be is in any way subjective.
I do not see how it is objective either. I do not see how anybody can demonstrate or prove that anything categorically ought to be.
It appears that the only ought that can coherently be accepted and applied is a hypothetical one such as, "If we do not want people to suffer then we ought to...". That is not subjective--it does not depend on the person thinking/saying it. Meanwhile, what reduces or minimizes people's suffering can be objectively measured. But the other element--"if we do not want people to suffer"--cannot be objectively accepted or rejected.
That's your worldview, not an answer.
Yes you do
I never told you what hoops to jump through
Your atheism worldview is simply untenable
You know, SavedByChrist94, it has some kind of surrealistic feel: to see someone defend stoning and burning and razing cities and "marrying of" little girls, because all that is justified, all that happened only to evil people and all that was painless and humane... and on the other hand be accused of "in your worldview, Hitler was right for murdering Jews".
It is obvious that you are unable to even try to consider others people's arguments.
If you think that this is doing anything to bring people closer to Christ: you are doing it wrong.
Thanks for your time.
Atheists, What makes something Objectively Right or Wrong?
What makes Harming others Objectively Wrong?
What makes Helping others Objectively Right?
What makes Love Objectively Right?
What makes Hatred Objectively Wrong?
5 simple questions.
I noticed something very interesting. Something very revealing, you might say, about the way this kind of "moral objectivists" think.
We subjectivists are always ready to say that in our worldview, there is no objective "right" or "wrong".
And in any thread of this kind, sooner or later, we are confronted with "so Hitler was right in your worldview".
Never ever have I seen the objection "so Hitler was wrong in your worldview"... which would be equally valid.
I really wonder why this is.
(No, I don't really wonder why. I know rather well why. But if the "moral objectivists" who say this stuff realised the reason, they would perhaps understand what we are saying.)
Proof that it's based on Human Judgement rather than instilled?
I'm not going to blindly accept your claim that Humans make what's Right and Wrong.
Your responses on this are loaded with logic and i agree with you.
For some believers, what this really comes down to is this; if morality does not come from their God, it devalues their faith belief and provides great motivation to need to convince themselves they have better morals, because they are believers and their God determines this.
I noticed something very interesting. Something very revealing, you might say, about the way this kind of "moral objectivists" think.
We subjectivists are always ready to say that in our worldview, there is no objective "right" or "wrong".
And in any thread of this kind, sooner or later, we are confronted with "so Hitler was right in your worldview".
Never ever have I seen the objection "so Hitler was wrong in your worldview"... which would be equally valid.
I really wonder why this is.
(No, I don't really wonder why. I know rather well why. But if the "moral objectivists" who say this stuff realised the reason, they would perhaps understand what we are saying.)
Atheists, What makes something Objectively Right or Wrong?
What makes Harming others Objectively Wrong?
What makes Helping others Objectively Right?
What makes Love Objectively Right?
What makes Hatred Objectively Wrong?
5 simple questions.
The answer is nothing. The consequences of our actions are objective, however the values we place on them, and therefore moral values are subjective.
The ironic thing that most Christians miss is that if morality is actually dictated by a God, then it is still subjectively based. It is merely God's subjective values instead of ours.