Science Fan wrote: ↑Mon Jun 19, 2017 3:43 pm
Immanuel Can: You have it completely backwards --
Before I respond, let me note right away that you did not respond to my very, very minimal test...to give me one moral precept to which an Atheist owes an obligation.
Very clearly, then, you have no reason to consider me anything but right about Atheism on that score. If you did, you'd have offered it. You would not have passed up a chance to defeat my proposition so utterly...
If you had it.
When God does something and you consider it to be moral, why?
Because the synonymous expression for "moral" is "harmonious with the will and character of God." There is no more profound meaning to the word than that, actually.
Is it simply because God did it? If so, then you have no basis for morality, because God could have arbitrarily decided to do something else. On the other hand, if you believe God did something because God was following a moral standard, then all we have to do is refer to the moral standard that this alleged God is following to make moral decisions, and God becomes irrelevant to moral issues.
You're repeating the old Euthyphro Dilemma, and it's been decisively refuted. Socrates was a polytheist, which was the only reason he could ask the question in the first place -- for him, there were multiple gods, each with a different perspective on whatever "the Good" really was. Since they disagreed, "the Good" had to be something bigger than all of them, he thought.
But if God IS "the Good," then this dilemma just goes away. And why? Because then you can no more ask, "Is God Good or is Good prior to God," than you can ask, "Is this person a man or a husband?" The simple answer is "Yes to both."
2. You have zero credible evidence for God.
You do not know what I have. You do know what you do not, at the present moment, have. That's all you can really say about that.
Even if we assume that a God exists and a God giving us a command must be followed in order for us to be moral, you have the added problem of not being able to determine what those alleged commands are.
You're right: God would have to reveal them. Is you suggestion that a genuinely Supreme Being would be unable to do that?

It's hard to see why...
Even if we assumed everything in the Bible was true, there is no answer in the Bible to such questions as whether stem-cell research should be allowed, whether a government should be permitted to record the people whom you talk with on your cell phone, whether abortions should be permitted, etc., etc.
Yes, I talked about this above.
What morality gives us is the general precept: the specific application is what we Divine Command people mean when we speak of "ethics." So, for example, let's take the issue you name above -- abortion. On an Atheist account, you can keep your children alive or butcher them, at any time in life, if you can get away with it. On a Divine Command account, we know that, as the Bible says, all souls are not at our disposal, but are the ultimate property of God. So to take away a child is to attempt to deprive God of His property...straightforwardly immoral. And this is why, if you've ever wondered, so many Theists are anti-abortion.
This is because all of these issues, and many others, depend on technology that was not in existence at the time the Bible was written.
Not a problem, as I indicated above.
...you claim one needs a direct statement from God in order to know what the moral answer is to a specific issue.
I did NOT say this. See above. What we need is the general moral precept that gives us the precedent for the particular issue in hand.
As an atheist, I can ignore all of the impossible issues to answer with respect to a divine-command theory of morality, which means that I can provide far better justifications for morality than any theist basing their claims for morality on a command from an alleged God.
Non-sequitur. If, as you say, you can "ignore all of the issues" in question, then you are not needing any morality at all. And as for justification, I've repeatedly asked you to give just ONE case of such a thing...and you cannot.
Maybe it's time you asked yourself why that is. You could win your point so easily...just by citing a single such "justification" or precept. But you do not.
Why is that?