Been hanging out in Philosophy a bit, lately, and one concept that I see coming up over and over is that there is an objective standard of morality that everyone must adhere to. (And, of course, that that objective morality is found in the Bible, even though we argue about what exactly that means.)
Now, I used to be very keen on this particular notion, myself, but now I see things a little differently.
In the ten commandments we have a list: Do this, don't do that. Surely if there is an objective standard of morality it would look something like that. These actions are good, those actions are bad, carved into diamond floating around in the center of the universe somewhere. The trouble comes from the same old stumbling block that trouble always comes from - Jesus.
In the gospels there are commands, of course, but Jesus said "Do unto others as you would have done unto you" and "how you measure it, it will be measured to you". These are extremely subjective standards. Or rather, they are one objective standard that must be applied subjectively.
No action, then, is inherently "good" or "bad", but the heart of the actor is what is judged.
Thoughts?
Now, I used to be very keen on this particular notion, myself, but now I see things a little differently.
In the ten commandments we have a list: Do this, don't do that. Surely if there is an objective standard of morality it would look something like that. These actions are good, those actions are bad, carved into diamond floating around in the center of the universe somewhere. The trouble comes from the same old stumbling block that trouble always comes from - Jesus.
In the gospels there are commands, of course, but Jesus said "Do unto others as you would have done unto you" and "how you measure it, it will be measured to you". These are extremely subjective standards. Or rather, they are one objective standard that must be applied subjectively.
No action, then, is inherently "good" or "bad", but the heart of the actor is what is judged.
Thoughts?
