The idea of an objective moral code existing as the result of the Abrahamic God is logically unsound...
Does that idea really exist?
There is no moral or ethical action that is exclusive to Christians...
We have gone from "objective" to "exclusive to Christians".
How do I know what is moral without the direction of the objective moral arbiter?...
Then I guess by "exclusive to Christians" you mean Divine Command Theory.
Objective morality or Divine Command Theory, which is it?
How do children who are not indoctrinated by religion capable of recognizing correct moral choices...
Sounds like more Divine Command Theory.
Some atheists argue for a scientifically based objective morality,...
Now we have some context to give "objective" meaning.
There is nothing that is purely objective or non-objective. Objectivity is a matter of degree. If everybody observes an insect with their eyes and reports that it is an inch long, that is objective. If everybody then measures that insect with a ruler and reports that it is just under an inch long, that is objective. The difference is degree. By using a ruler we eliminate distortions.
Objectivity does not guarantee accuracy.
Objectivity is about reliability.
but I still see morality as somewhat subjective (and unfortunately) relative. Absolute morality does not leave room for the complexity of the human experience...
First we were talking about objective. Now you bring up absolute.
Objective is a matter of degree. Absolute is not.
Are we talking about objective or absolute?
The fundamental moral principles of Christian morality should be absolute If they're are the product of an objective moral arbiter...
Again, are we talking about objective morality or Divine Command Theory?
And, again, are we talking about objective or absolute?
For example, Should you truly "love your neighbor" under all possible circumstances? What If your neighbor rapes and murders your closest loved one, child, or spouse? Does anyone here seriously believe that they could love someone under this circumstance. Perhaps the most compassionate among us could forgive this person, but love is entirely different...
Now we seem to be talking about Divine Command Theory, but this time with a twist: the commands from God are categorical imperatives.
Does anybody really subscribe to this Divine-Command-Theory-with-categorical-imperatives system?
I have to say if you could love someone who raped or murdered your child, then you might be a sociopath...
I think that you need to check the definition of sociopath.
I am sure some are thinking "that is not what Jesus meant" and can cite a bible verse to support it, but if there are exceptions or conditions, then it is not an absolute moral principle...
Again, does anybody really subscribe to this Divine-Command-Theory-with-categorical-imperatives system?
The same applies to the question--Could you truly "do unto others as you wish them to do unto you" under all possible circumstances? What about high functioning psychopaths who enjoy pain and debasement. Both of these moral principles existed thousands of years before the establishment of Christianity and can be found in the writings of Buddha and Confucius. They are excellent moral principles and are universally found in civilization but are not absolute, and therefore, cannot be absolutely objective...
There is no such thing as absolutely objective. Nothing is purely objective or non-objective. Objectivity is a matter of degree.
But I thought that we weren't talking about objectivity anyway. I thought that we were talking about Divine Command Theory with the commands from God being categorical imperatives.
The part about Buddha and Confucius seems to be you refuting Divine Command Theory. But then you talk about objectivity--specifically, "absolutely" objective (and there is no such thing).
Morality must contain an element of subjectivity to allow for the contradictions of reality...
So the problem you have with this Divine-Command-Theory-with-categorical-imperatives system is the categorical imperatives part?
If the commands coming from God were instead hypothetical imperatives then you would have no problem with the system?
Or is it really the commands from God part that you have a problem with?
And, again, does anybody really subscribe to this Divine-Command-Theory-with-categorical-imperatives system anyway?
Human morality is a complicated amalgamation of evolutionary and social factors. Religion, as our first attempt at explaining the universe, naturally seeks to explain morality as well. However, as religion has failed to adequately explain the workings of the universe, it has naturally failed to explain the workings of biology and human nature.
Morality is concerned with the way things ought to be, not with explaining the way things are.