- May 16, 2006
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While I cannot say I've done a great deal of research into meta ethics, I find that the common thread in terms of defending the idea of goodness itself is often couched in terminology that, whether one is aware or not, is fairly close to divine command ethics, arguing that goodness is identical to God's nature and commands thereof, rather than being something we can deduce ourselves
But even without applying the Euthypro dilemma, is it not a tautology to basically define God in such a way that its nature is goodness and thus any commands you ascribe to it by divine revelation and faith would necessarily have to be good?
How can you justify any aspect of divine command theory without making appeals to either tautological ideas of God that are goalpost shifting to avoid confronting the essence of goodness without reference to God's nature or holy scriptures?
But even without applying the Euthypro dilemma, is it not a tautology to basically define God in such a way that its nature is goodness and thus any commands you ascribe to it by divine revelation and faith would necessarily have to be good?
How can you justify any aspect of divine command theory without making appeals to either tautological ideas of God that are goalpost shifting to avoid confronting the essence of goodness without reference to God's nature or holy scriptures?