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@EightFootChild I do enjoy debate but I don't think you understand philosophy, so I will kindly move on. Thanks
There is a reason why divine command theory isn't wildly accepted by philosophers.
You can avoid the horns of the dilemma this way - by strictly identifying 'good' and 'god' with each other, interchangeably - but you've rendered the entire concept of 'god' superfluous in doing so.
Yours is just a common misunderstanding of exemplar causation. God is goodness itself, the highest good in which all other goodness necessarily participates.
More than that, goodness is convertible with being and truth.
Creaturely goodness has an intrinsic relation to God and his own goodness. God has created everything and everything is good (Genesis 1:31), for it participates directly in the goodness of its creator.
For example...?Because something is faith based does not automatically mean it is not objective.
For example...?
I thought my confidence in the elevator button is based on inductive reasoning from a thousand other elevator experiences, plus reasoning about capitalism, product design, building codes, etc.When you step into an elevator and press the button, you have faith that the elevator will go to the floor that you have selected (if the elevator is working properly). If the elevator moves correctly to the selected floor, it has done so independent of your faith that the elevator works properly. This is objective.
Not the best example, but it is what I thought of in the moment.
God's moral law is not dependent on people's faith (or lack of faith) in it, and is thus objective.
I thought my confidence in the elevator button is based on inductive reasoning from a thousand other elevator experiences, plus reasoning about capitalism, product design, building codes, etc.
The probabilities and statistics make faith irrelevant for elevator riding.Those may be factors, but it is still a step of faith to push the button and trust that the elevator will operate correctly.
Probabilities and statistics say that if you ride an elevator 100,000 times and it operates correctly every time, that is no guarantee that the 100,001 time you push that button, that that elevator is going to work correctly.
Doesn't really matter what you call it, including 'goodness itself', you are still describing a standard.
In fact, I think any attempt to split the horns of Euthyphro by appealing to some third option, X, will always reduce to the same set of questions - is Yahweh in control of X, or is he not in control of X? Meaning, you are right back where you started, and the horns remain the same.
So, god equals goodness equals being equals truth.
Ok. I suppose I'll have to take it on faith that that makes sense to you somehow. I find conceptual distinctions to be useful, personally.
I believe you believe that.
If that's what it takes to make sense of moral goodness for you, you're welcome to it. I derive no meaning from it at all.
Since killing someone in self defense can be difficult even if one isn't a Christian I think it is a grey area in and of itself. IMHO if your family is at risk (and you know this beyond reasonable doubt) then you should do what needs to be done to protect them since their lives are at risk and not just your own. This is my opinion of course.As a Christian, this only becomes an issue when I begin to think about things like self defense. I have a gun in my home to point at bad guys if they break in. Would I ever shoot them? Not sure. I don't want to, but I think I could. Is it morally good for me to shoot that person? No. Is it morally good for me to defend my family? Yes. I think there are grey areas like this that are hard for Christian's to answer, but if it comes to something like "should I kill someone because they follow another religion" that would be absurd for a Christian to do and they would know that from scripture.
IMHO doctrines of 'good'/'evil' apply equally to everyone no matter what their position is and if they don't such a situation creates a double standard. This is kind of complicated but it is kind of similar to in Dharmic religions they believe in Karma, but they realize that someone born as an untouchable has a more difficult time doing what people consider 'good' when compared to someone who was born in a position where it is easier to do good dead, or what people consider to be good deeds. Bottom line, if someone was born in a bad situation and kept getting reborn into that bad situation because they could never do better than anyone else born in such circumstances it would be hard to say that there is any justice in such a system.Not sure what text in the OT you are referring to, but I would be able to defend them on a case by case basis if you have references. Keep in mind that Israel also functioned in a separate manner than the Chuch does today. God used Israel to bring about the birth of Jesus. Further, He was always patient waiting for the people to repent before he executed judgement on them. For example, he waited some 400 years according to scripture before he brought judgement on the Canaanites. Moreover, we would have to evaluate in what sense God would be or would not be just in dispensing judgement on a people. According to Christian doctrine God is perfectly just/holy/righteous/morally perfect. Would God be evil for executing judgement on free creatures who chose to disobey him? I don't think so. IMO he is beyond patient with us.
Actually it is because it is really no different than other appeals to authority fallacies. You see every society has rules and some of these rules have rational explanations and other are followed just because that is the way things are. If there is no reason to follow them, they become difficult to explain to those who are not part of the group that adheres to them.An appeal to authority is saying that such and such is true because someone said so. If the other poster is simply saying that moral right and wrong is decided based on the commands of God, then that would not be an appeal to authority. I didn't read it so correct me if I am wrong. Thanks
No I'm not. I'm describing God.
But your question doesn't even make sense given what I've said.
@zippy2006 that is a well formulated response. I think @Eight Foot Manchild is misunderstanding, because he is confusing moral ontology and more epistemology (i.e. he makes a claim about how we come to know morals and uses them as assertions about how morals exist). This is clear when he attempts to claim that morals are a standard then he claims that they exist outside of God, then he tells you to impale yourself, etc...
@Eight Foot Child what are you arguing for?
Are you saying that God cannot be the ontological basis of morality? Show me your argument why not.
All I hear is euthyphro this and that.
I was asking what positive case are you making for the ontology of morality. It doesn't sound like you are making one, so moving on....A few reasons.
Firstly, I consider the public scrutiny of ideas to be healthy for society, on both a person-to-person basis as well cumulatively, in the larger scale.
Secondly, because I enjoy it.
No, I would not make any such argument. Rather, I would say I find the arguments that attempt to prove the positive case to be unconvincing.
Yeah. As I've said before, Euthyphro is a response to the concept of theistic morality, it's not a positive defense of any particular moral philosophy.
As far as responses go though, I don't feel obligated to move past Euthyphro, in lieu of a convincing answer to it. All I've ever heard are answers that simply re-order it and collapse back into the same horns.
And in doing so, you necessarily imply a standard to which he is being measured. One that, if not met, would disqualify him from godhood.
Yes it does. For whatever third option X you choose, you will return to the same horns of the dilemma. It doesn't matter the value of X you try to plug in, nor does it matter if you rephrase it in terms of metaphor.
Is water wet because it comes from the fountain, or does the fountain emit water because it is wet?
But that's what you sound like when you declare Yahweh to be 'the sole fountain of goodness'. It is exactly as unconvincing, for exactly the same reason - 'goodness' necessitate no more basis in Yahweh than 'wetness' does in the fountain.
So yeah. If you're trying to illustrate a point, you chose a pretty bad metaphor.