andross77
Senior Member
I think Craig shoots himself in the foot when he argues "My point is that the classical theist faces no such problem, since he believes that God is a logically necessary being and so can ground moral values in every logically possible world."
What Craig does here is elevate a dogmatic or religious belief to a logical conclusion. One cannot simply "believe that God is a logically necessary being" to make it so. This is nothing more than a form of begging the question, and is unsupported. I've seen him make this slight of hand argument in other cases as well.
This is where Craig defends the following argument:
I have several objections to this argument on foundational grounds. Craig equates authoritative with objective and by redefining objectivety of morality as "something is right or wrong even if nobody agrees with it. (This is a point he often makes in this argument, tho not on this particular post). More slight of hand equivication going on here.
First of all, "nobody" in Craig's definition does not include god. Implicit in the premise is that God hands down morality, and it's true by the nature of god even if nobody agrees with it. But "nobody" would include the person of god, so the statement as Craig intends it is internally nonsensical. And again, that it comes from god only implies authority, not whether it is truly right or wrong.
Second, Craig's notion of what is objective at all is skewed. Things that acually exist, and not merely in the abstract, exist objectively if they do so independent of the mind. For example, does math exist? Yes, but only abstraction of the mind. Take away all minds, and rocks and water and oxygen will still be there, but don't expect to find any math. Morality is on the same page. It does not, and cannot, exist independently from the mind. It is also an abstraction.
Third, Craig would be better to define objective morality as moralty without any exceptions, but he does not - and for goot reason. Because if this were true, then there would be too many biblical accounts that would show God to act immorally.
Finally, there are plenty of sound, non-theist arguements in support of objective morality. Just because Craig may not personally care for them does not imply God is a necessity for objective moral values, only that's his personal preference.
Craig's Premise #1:
He starts off with the same problem I noted above, then goes all Aquinas on God's nature. I never like this argument, as it really don't think it answers anything, but just basically says "it is what it is" in an abstract sense. Furthermore, how one determine's God's nature is so utterly subjective that it renders the premise meaninglessly subjective in its own right. And even if true, God's nature (whatever it may be) does nothing to establish objective morality - but only at best authoritative morality.
Then posits:
First of all, supernaturalism and life-beyond-death do not stablish being held morally accountable in any respect in the afterlife. This is a huge jump between the two and no justification is given for it. Supernaturalism could be true and still be no afterlife. There could be both, but no moral accountability. There is no rational basis to think one way or the other. It is all equally speculative, and any assertion regarding a supernatural realm is a good as the next.
Second, that "evil and wrong will be banished, righteousness will be vindicated" is a purely theological statement, and absent any real philosiphical basis. It really advances nothing more than reconceived religious beliefs.
I read the entire debate, and as I did I realized I've read and heard it before. Dr. Taylor was correct that Dr. Craig was quote mining and then knocking down straw men. The two never truely connected on the issue, as they were arguing different premises without doing a particularly good job of directly addressing the point the other was making. I think the debate question contributed to this heavily. But to say Craig ran circles around Taylor? I don't think so. In fact, I'm not even sure he ran circles around his own staw men.
Thank you SO MUCH for reading thoroughly what i linked. That's all i can give you since i'm clearly not as smart as either of you. Good luck on your journeys.

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