zippy2006
Dragonsworn
- Nov 9, 2013
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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.
The Euthyphro dilemma is about piety and the gods. The dilemma states that either piety is a function of the gods' opinions and follows wherever they go, or else the gods are simply passing on the standard of piety that exists above and beyond them. Either piety is determined arbitrarily by whatever the gods say it is, or else the gods are beholden to piety just as much as the humans are.
The Greek anthropomorphic conception of the gods is at the heart of the "dilemma," and most atheists are committed to an equally anthropomorphic conception of God. The key to the dilemma is the separation between piety and the gods. They are extrinsic concepts, neither contained within the other. The first horn conceives of piety as an artifice constructed by the gods; the second horn sees it as a standard external to themselves that they must adhere to. This extrinsic nature of the terms is unavoidable on the anthropomophic premise.
When we speak of God instead of the pantheon of Greek gods, and of goodness rather than piety, the dilemma is substantially altered. As already explained, God is the source of all goodness as Goodness itself. Goodness is intrinsic to God. The separation between the two terms and their extrinsic nature, which obtained in the original dilemma, no longer holds. Goodness is clearly not an artifice constructed by God, and neither is it a standard external to God that he must adhere to. It is just what he is. It is just his nature. God is no longer anthropomorphic, but rather the transcendent source of all goodness.
This becomes even more obvious once we consider the convertibility between goodness and being and instead insert "being/existence" into the dilemma. The dilemma would go something like this: either being is determined arbitrarily by whatever God says it is, or else God is beholden to being just as much as the humans are. Clearly both are false. God is the creator who creates ex nihilo out of the fullness of his own being. He is ipsum esse subsistens, self-subsistent being, Being itself. Being is not determined arbitrarily, it comes from God's own nature and is bestowed upon all things. God is not beholden to an external standard of being. There is no being, no standard, apart from himself.
is Yahweh in control of X, or is he not in control of X?
Your reproduction is accurate insofar as it also represents the two terms as extrinsic and separated from one another. It really makes little sense to a Christian. Is God in control of Goodness? Yes and no. Insofar as it is his nature, he is not in control of it, for he himself is the source of all being, goodness, and truth. It's just what he is. Insofar as he freely bestows goodness (and being and truth) on creation as its Creator, he is in control of it. The two horns are avoided: goodness is not reduced to arbitrariness, nor is there some standard apart from God. If you think that either of these two horns remain, you would have to note the horn and then explain why it remains.
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