q, just know I don't use these words to be pompous. Been there, done that, and my life was made more insecure by it. Now I just like words, and I use them pretty much immediately, with a little revision here and there.
Whereas I am very suspicious of the way words can be used.
Well, I was just saying that there is authority in morality. Maybe you weren't saying that according to my understanding of authority.
Well, when I said "authority" I didn´t mean "authority" as you later introduced it in response to my statement, and I think that was pretty clear from the context.
Secondly, just because morality is convincing in itself (whether or not this means there's a "power" to morality in this sense) doesn't mean that God isn't needed as an authority.
Yes, that would be exactly what it means. It would, however, not mean that no God exists. And it wouldn´t necessarily mean that an existing God hadn´t created this sense of morality into us.
God might be needed to create this morality or sense of universality (I think all morality is mostly reduced to universality, which again isn't an argument for God but can be explained by evolution), in which case he's the authority of morality, and therefore accepting morality means indirectly at least accepting God's authority.
"Is needed" and "might be needed" are two substantially different statements. If, as you say, it "might be needed", you have some work to do in order to establish that it "is needed".
In your second sentence, you are presupposing that the morality that is "in morality" is congruent with God´s view of morality (which is an unsubstantiated premise).
I don't think we need to go into the details here. But the more complicated and less hillbilly-like theologians out there interpret Christ in non-physical form to be the Logos, which is the "tying together" of the universe, or that which keeps the universe in existence, and would apply to reason as well as morality as well. Which isn't at all to deny any adaptive, evolutionary aspect of morality.
Of course, this is a possibility (and one which - if we were to presuppose the existence of such a God - makes quite some sense).
That doesn´t mean God is necessary for such a convincing morality. It just means that God -
if such exists -
might be involved in the way we came to our moral sense. Two premises that need substantiation.
If you're making a point against divine command theory, I'm right there with you.
No, in my statement I haven´t been making a point against divine command theory, and I haven´t been making a point against the existence of a God. I have been making a point against a morality that isn´t convincing all by itself ("authoritative", in the way you used the word), and therefore requires an appeal to an "authority" (in the way I initially used the word) in order to be, though still not plausible or convincing, at least justified by an "authoritative" entity.
IOW, as soon as the claim comes up that God is necessary for morality the claimers are giving up on morality as being "authoritative" (in the way you used the word).
Interestingly, Aristotle and Kant were both theists, arguably "god-fearing" theists, and their conceptions of morality are the only serious ones to consider, IMO.
For purposes of this discussion it is entirely irrelevant whether they were theists or not. Their personal beliefs are just their personal beliefs. Even if their approaches were the only serious ones to consider - a proposition which would require substantiation -, it would be at best be relevant whether their approaches necessitated a God (or whatever moral law giving Higher Entity).