Sanoy
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- Apr 27, 2017
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Euthyphro continued.Maybe I'm dense, but I still don't see how this makes God's morality somehow objective. It's not not an appeal to moral values being objective in and of themselves (again, that would have to mean they somehow existed even independently of God), but to authority.
I guess this would be your answer to the above. But (again I may be dense) I don't see how it follows that because one is maximally great, one must necessarily be maximally good. Is that some sort of natural law?
My faculties point toward some truth (I assume), and definitely toward moral oughts. I just don't believe that just because my intuition is that something is moral in and of itself, that it therefore must be so. Again, take the example of my kids. If I have any moral intuition at all, it's that they are the most valuable things in the universe. I can't not believe that. Yet I know it's not objectively true. I know that this, like any other moral sensibility, is a value statement, not a truth statement. It's undoubtedly true that they are the world's most precious thing to me. But it doesn't make sense to say they are objectively worth so and so much as if it was a matter of fact.
But I don't have to use myself as an example. Looking at what passed for good morality in history, it's obvious to see that people's moral intuitions hardly point at some sort of objective reality. If it did, how can people be so wrong about it? If it's God-given, why is it a mystery at all?
I assumed you would agree with me on the morality of genocide. Not because of some external standard, but because you and I, living in this day and age, most likely will agree on things like that. Was I wrong?
Sure, greed and charity can be seen in moral terms. I could've said self-interest and empathy instead. I'm not appealing to moral standards here, I'm just stating that people are driven by many things at once, and the drives are often in direct conflict with each other.
You said you wouldn't know what perfect morality would look like since you don't have it. Fine, but since your morality is corrupted or at best incomplete, how to you know that anything is morally right or wrong at all? If morality is objective and you, by definition, can't truly know fully what it entails, on what authority can you make any moral judgment at all?
For example, how do you know God is good? Is that just an assumption you make (if so, based on what exactly) or have you deemed his actions to be right and good?
I don't need certainty as in indisputable proof, I'm asking for reasonable evidence for the existence of objective moral values. If I've understood you right, the evidence is
a) because we have moral intuition, objective morality must exist, and
b) God exists, is by definition maximally great, and maximally great necessarily means he must be maximally good
Depends on what you mean by warrant. I'm assuming some axioms, and I think we agree on those. For example, the axiom that you or I aren't the only consciousness that exists. Another axiom: through our senses we can know at least some truth about the world. For example the "law" of cause and effect. I could be that some of our shared axioms are wrong, but the axioms we actually disagree on seem to be
a) that morality can be objective
b) that there is a God
But the dollar still doesn't have an objective value. It doesn't matter how many people agree on it, or on what it objectively can buy.
Like you say, life has value because someone values it. That's really my entire point. Value isn't inherent. It can't be. Just like love, art, or music, it doesn't doesn't exist in and of itself. We may say "this room is full of love," but it isn't. There's not some "love stuff" floating around in the room. It's not some invisible energy or field or vibration. It's something that happens in the minds of those who are there.
I agree. If I'm worth this or that to God, then I'm worth this or that - to God.
Our morals don't have to be optimal, they just have to be better than the competition. And I agree that moral values as we know them today, may not be the "best" evolutionarily speaking. Morality, just like any other evolved trait, may turn out to be less than beneficial when we're placed in a later time or different situation than where it came to be. Social anxiety is a great example. It's a perfectly natural reaction that made a lot of sense when we lived in small groups and depended on not being shunned by several people. For a guy living in a huge city where he'll never run into the same guy two days in a row, it's pretty pointless. It makes no difference if he makes a fool of himself. But his instincts are still those of a caveman.
I'm can't be bothered to take offense, but I hope you can see why many people would. You don't think I'm insane, but according to my own worldview I am... ok.
Anyway. Regarding my loving my kids, my perception of reality isn't the opposite of reality. Because it's not an objective fact that they're worthless. Just like it's not an objective fact that they're precious. Their worth isn't a fact, it's a value. It's a fact that I put this or that value on them, but their value doesn't exist in and of itself as if it were gravity or a mathematical law. The value exists in how I relate to them. When my boy brought home pebbles and rocks of all sorts, they were extremely valuable to him, and, by extension, to me. Nothing objective about it, but they were super precious to him, and he displayed them and guarded them and counted them. Now, Lego is the big thing and the rocks have become worthless and have been thrown out.
You don't (and can't) use objective measures to determine the value of something. I mean, is John Bonham (R.I.P.) of Led Zeppelin a better drummer than a two-year-old banging on pots and pans? If you're like most of us you'll say "yes, obviously." Well, according to what objective, ultimate standard? If you don't have an objective standard, does that mean it's pointless to say one is a better drummer than the other? Would it mean that nobody would care which of them performed?
I didn't think too deeply about this stuff when I was a believer, other than that I bought into the idea that if God doesn't exist, then objective morality doesn't exist either. Which I actually agree with now, only that I don't see how morality could be objective at all, even in principle.
But in any case, I didn't lose the value of anything. My kids are still, probably even more so now than before, the most valuable thing in the world to me. If there is a god, maybe they're valuable to him too. Who knows? How could I figure that out?
Sure, the answer may be A or B, the question is if there are good arguments for either A or B.
Morality under my view is objective because if there is an ought, God created that ought and He embodies the standard of that ought because he is the ultimate in respect to all that there is because He created all that there is. The person that created the game of Football establishes the ought. That is true for the players, but not the fans. In the case of God all are players, and there are none outside.
MGB.
Our world views don't overlap when it comes to the meaning of Great. For you it is subjective for me it is objective. For me great refers to a larger set of God's nature which includes both his power and His moral nature. For you great refers to whatever you think it is, it is internally defined.
Undesigned Intellectual Faculties.
You believe that your intellectual faculties point toward some truth only because that is what your intellectual faculties tell you. You can't undermine your intellectual faculties without undermining their results. Your claim that you know our moral faculties don't point to anything external relies upon the very intellectual faculties you undermined. Nor is it even consistent to say that you know something like this, while claiming a weak intellectual faculty whose only strengths correlate with genetic propagation. Further, you received your intellectual faculties from the same source as you moral faculties. If your moral faculties don't point toward anything real, why should your intellectual faculties?
It basically comes down to this, you can't undermine your intellect and make consistent and believable claims. And you can't confirm your intellect without rejecting your world view.
You are equivocating moral epistemology with moral ontology when you doubt our faculties due to variation of morals. Law is based on moral semantics, and it's limitations are in semantically identifying a rule for all situations because any moral paradigm requires accurate information and accurate identification. That doesn't mean the faculty doesn't work, it just means it needs accuracy and clarity.
Genocide, Morals and consistancy.
You continue to claim that you brought up Genocide to compare God's standard with himself, and were not using a moral standard. I still think that when you wrote those words you were operating under and a paradigm that includes an external standard. You stated that it is obvious that a perfectly moral human wouldn't commit genocide. That has nothing to do with God, but humans. So while you may not realize it, it is very clear to me that your world view operates with hidden and contradictory paradigms.
In your reply you now state that Greed and Charity are both morals, and that's all you meant. You are retroactively attributing this to your statement. You said:
"Morality isn't the only thing driving our actions. It's a balancing act between greed and charity and many other competing desires."
In this sentence you are stating that there is something else that is driving our actions. Something else OTHER than morality. You state that this other thing is greed. So you whether you realize it, or don't want to realize it. Your statements are perpetually inconsistent with your world view.Moral doubt.
You ask how I know that anything is morally right or morally wrong. Because my moral faculties tell me it's wrong. "But that's circular!". Yeah, well so are our intellectual faculties. IF you accept either of these faculties, you should attribute them to something that makes them likely. God makes them maximally likely.
You ask how I know God is good. Well if God exists then God created my moral faculties to point to Him as a paradigm. Good refers to God's nature, there is nothing else for Good to refer to on that definition. That is like asking how do I know squares are squares.
Inconsistency in world view.
It's not in issue whether or not you need certainty and indisputable proof. What is at issue is that you clearly prefer a robust intellectual epistemology before you will believe something, using words like know, certainty, evidence while claiming to have a weak intellectual faculty. You are not acting like you have a weak intellectual faculty, you are acting like you have a robust intellectual faculty.
The axioms you use to warrant your intellectual faculties come from your intellectual faculties. They can't be used to verify your intellectual faculties. The only way this works is to verify your intellectual faculties and attribute a source that makes it likely that you have those intellectual faculties. Otherwise, as I stated above - you can't undermine your intellect and make consistent and believable claims. And you can't confirm your intellect without rejecting your world view.
Value Objectivity.
The value of a dollar isn't dependent on a persons opinion of the dollar. It is dependent on the purchasing power of the dollar. The more you can purchase with it, the higher the objective value. The value of the dollar, right now, is objectively greater than the Peso. A thing can be objective and have subjective responses that are contrary to it's objective status. God has set the value on life, and He will enforce that value, it is objectively set.
Evolutionary Morality.
Our morals don't have to be optimal. But it's inexplicable why they are uniform as you claim with very little in the optimal range of Genetic propagation. The uniformity is expected on my view, I don't see how it is on yours.
Mental consequences of this world view.
Yes, according your world view you are insane. According to my worldview you are just wrong. Tell me otherwise. Your behavior follows your perceptions of reality, but your perceptions of reality are wrong.
You state that your loving your kids isn't opposite of reality because it's not an objective fact that they're worthless. This rewording doesn't fix a thing. Your perception is that they do have objective value, while in reality they objectively do not. The value you place on them is merely a few ions in your brain. Whether you eat them or love them, the only objective difference is the geographical location of some ions. Now, if you just had a revulsion at the thought of eating them then according to your world view that was an insane thought. But that is upside down and bizzaro right!? Insane would actually be eating them when you should love them. Well if that is true your world view is wrong.
Knowing God values us.
We know that God does value your Children because suffered a torturous death for them.
Objectivity of a moral standard.
The answer to the question of A or B is very easy. Our moral faculties come to us as objective. If we live according to the whims of our moral faculties rather than according to reality then we are insane. If we believe our moral faculties are wrong, while doubting our intellectual faculties we are confused. If we believe we can know something about our intellectual faculties while undermining our intellectual faculties we defeating our own claims. The only way that makes any sense is to accept that our faculties work, and God is the only thing that maximizes that likelihood.
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