mysterio448 wrote:Based on how you define "objective morality" here, it seems that the idea of morality being rooted in God's character is relatively unimportant; morality really lies within the "discerning" part. It doesn't matter much what God thinks about the matter unless one is able to discern it. But how does one discern God's will?
Great question. And we can make it even more problematic. For human beings have what sociologists call "incommensurable" moral values. Different societies embrace morals so different that it is impossible to reconcile a "win" for one society's morality with a "win" for another. So there is a host of choices and no clear winner, from a human perspective.
But must we take a human perspective? I mean, a "merely" human perspective? Let's think about it another way. If we grant the premise, "A Supreme Being exists," is there any reason to think that even if mankind could not discover morality for itself, such a Being could not choose to reveal it, and to make it completely comprehensible to His creatures? I see that as a straightforward, "No," since by definition, a truly "Supreme" Being would be capable of whatever He chose to do in this regard.
So the question turns not on "
could God do it," but on "
has He done it." Christians say "Yes." In that God has revealed both His nature, He has also grounded our moral judgments to the extend that they are consonant with that nature. If they are not, they are unwarranted, or "wrong"; if they are so grounded, they are "right."
I did not build morality into the premise; I built my own personal feelings into the premise, which, as I have already explained, is a normal component of a moral argument.
But "normal" is irrelevant here. "Normal" is merely a descriptive statement of the number of people in a given area who do likewise. It does not show that what they do is in any sense "moral." You need to show that your feelings are not just "normal" for, say Western males of a certain age, but that they are
legitimate: that is, that they are morally justifiable to a skeptical observer. And "normal" has no implication of justification.
Also, you said that a moral syllogism needs at least one premise with (objective) morality built in, but you also said that objective morality comes from discerning God's character. So you must explain what it means to discern God's character before you can create any moral syllogisms. Without explaining this, the idea of an "objective moral premise" is indeed arbitrary.
Yes. Quite so. The key question, then, is "Has God revealed Himself." If He has not, we're all just thrashing about in equal confusion, and the term "moral" has not real meaning, just a sort of aesthetic implication. But if God has indeed revealed who He is, then there is an objective truth grounding morality.
Let me ask you this: Is it possible that you can do something "objectively good" but in a way that gives you no personal satisfaction or that does not achieve what you would consider a worthy goal? If so, in what way is such a thing "good"?
This question equates, "morally good" with the idea of "useful." The problem with "useful" (or, to put it another way, with "good
for ___") is that unless the thing it's "good
for" is itself morally good, then it's actually useful
for the bad. In my earlier example, date-rape drugs are "good for" debilitating and raping women against their consent. But we can easily see that that is not morally good. But in that case, there's certainly a "goal."
What we need is a standard capable of evaluating the goal itself, not just the efficacy of the means to that goal. We need to be able to say, "Date rape is
wrong, not matter how "good for" achieving it the drugs are. So how do we derive that moral standard which judges not just the means but the end as well?
every situation that we evaluate will always ultimately be self-referential. But self-referential doesn't necessarily have to mean selfish. Sometimes what we want is what we want, but other times what we want is what others want or need. But it is still self-referential. It is still about asking: What do I want?
But "self-referential" is only morally informative if the "self" in question is already verified to be moral. If the "self" in question is Adolph Hitler, then he meets every qualification of your claims so far, and yet is widely (though, admittedly, not universally) recognized as a bad man. But how do we verify the moral quality of the agent, if morality only refers to the wishes of that agent, not to his objective moral condition?
I don't have to come to a moral judgment in order to determine whether or not I want to see an innocent woman get murdered. It's not a judgment; its a feeling.
What if that feeling changes? What if, for example, after a nasty divorce, you have tooth-grinding feelings of rage against your ex for all she has done to you? That's not unusual, I think. Will it then become "moral" for you to kill her, assuming you think you can get away with it, or assuming your rage is sufficient that you no longer care?
I asked:
Now, in the case you've given above, it would be possible for you to respond that there's no problem, since all three seem to be in line: but what if the question were, say, "Should I sleep with this desirable woman, even though I have no long-term interest in her?" For then, your a) feelings, and c) the consequences to the woman might be wildly opposite. And your "goals" could be either 1) the satisfaction of your present physical desires, or 2) the honouring of your promise to your own wife; so you wouldn't even know which "goal" to choose. What then? Which is the moral perspective, and how do you know?
You replied:
Once again, it is about asking the right questions. I have to ask myself what is most important to me in the situation. If it is to satisfy my physical feelings, then so be it. If it is to be faithful, then so be it. Now that may seem amoral to think that it is OK to cheat on one's wife, but this assumption only comes from the traditional moral rules that society imposes on people. Good is not a choice that one determines before the fact, but rather is an evaluation of the outcome after the fact. If what I truly want is to commit adultery, and this desire trumps all other relevant desires, then I see no reason to deny myself. If my wife has a problem with this, then the onus is on her to do something about it as per her own desires.
Wow. Okay. I can't argue against your consistency there. But I wonder, if she were the tempted one, and you were the one who was being cheated on, if you'd be inclined to be so generous in assigning her the right to do as her goals directed her. But not knowing you, I don't know that answer, of course.
There is no real difference between practical matters and moral matters; the only difference is that moral matters have been arbitrarily labeled so by society. For example, I once knew a woman who had a chronic digestive problem that caused her to have bad fecal odor. I would have considered it morally right for her to limit her contact with other people, but she insisted on going to numerous social events, consequently being a nuisance to everyone around her. Many people would consider this merely a practical matter, but I personally considered it moral. However, the difference is ultimately arbitrary and subjective.
That does seem a matter of choice. But I'm more impressed with your willingness to allow things like adultery, in which the moral stakes are much higher. If the "moral" ultimately is nothing more than the "practical," do you suppose we would be well-advised, in the spirit of keeping things honest, to drop moral language altogether? Maybe we should just speak of the "practical," and then everyone would be free from the danger of being drawn into moral judgments in situations that were, ultimately, only practical: do you suppose that's true?
There is no objective line of reasoning for why slavery is bad. Slavery is not good or bad in itself; it all depends upon the needs and dynamics of the society.
Are you content, then, that in the pre-war South, slavery was a moral institution? Was the North, then, failing to realize this when it instituted the war against the South? And would you say the same about modern chattel slavery, or even child slavery or sex slavery in the Developing World?
I don't agree, of course, but I want to be fair to your consistency...which you've already showed to be considerable...so I just need to ask.
Morality is a subset of reason; part of what this means is that a moral principle is only as valid as the best argument that a person can muster to support it. Thus, one person may come up with a compelling argument for why slavery should be abolished, but then later another person may come up with an even more compelling argument for why its should be instated. Therefore objective morality is an illusion. Individual moral principles are subject to flux, but the true, stable substance of morality is in the reasoning process itself.
I see. I now fully get where you're coming from. Yet it does seem to me you posit a very Nietzschean world, a world in which, really, raw power determines who wins, and moral language is simply an overlay -- it's merely the wording in which the victors claim superiority over the losers, but really power is the only thing that has made the difference.
As they say, "The winners write the history books," I suppose. But now it looks like they also write the books of ethics.
My feelings are my feelings; they are not subject to further explanation.
So, "slavery is wrong" means, "I feel I don't like slavery." No more, no less?
Finally, I wrote:
But now I will reply in kind:
Premise 1: The Supreme Being made all men accountable to Him for their actions.
Premise 2: One cannot be held accountable without the ability to perform free actions.
Premise 3: The ability to perform such free actions is incompatible with slavery.
Conclusion: Therefore, slavery is against the intentions of the Supreme Being.
And you replied:
You are basically saying that God opposes slavery because he holds men accountable for their actions but he can't hold men accountable for their actions under slavery. However, there is no indication in your syllogism that God
must hold men accountable, only that he
does hold men accountable. In other words, the syllogism doesn't imply that not being able to hold men accountable is necessarily a bad thing. Therefore, your syllogism is invalid.
Well, I think Locke's point has to be granted.
After all, on the premises that 1) God made human beings, and 2) God therefore made them for a purpose, and 3) to attempt to thwart those purposes is to be working against God, we'd have to concede his point. The Principle of Charity seems adequate to cover his suppositions, IF a Personal Creator actually does exist. There doesn't seem to be a reasonable objection there.
Of course, as always, this rests everything on the question, "DOES a Supreme Being exist," and as I indicated at the beginning of this reply, "Has He spoken?"
I feel I've got a sense of where you're coming from now. You're definitely an egoist-emotivist. I guess, though, that egoism-emotivism is not ordinarily thought of as a paradigm that allows for any real thing called "morality" or "ethics" to exist. For it would seem that there could be no "court of appeal," ultimately, for anyone who felt himself/herself to be ill-used, and no legitimate moral language in which he/she could frame an appeal to that court. So, for example, to say "Slavery is wrong," or "Women have been treated unjustly," is pretty much the same as saying nothing but, "I don't like..." And, of course, that some people "don't like" certain things is merely a contingent fact, nothing that puts a moral burden on anyone else to care.
Interesting. I think you've answered most of the questions I had. Thank you for all your efforts to explain. I think it's been worth it. I understand your view better.