Well, in Christianity, there is no "form of goodness" in the Platonic sense, and as for the Demiurge, it's pretty much the dead opposite of the Christian God.Ginkgo wrote: ↑Wed Jul 15, 2020 2:42 amGinkgo wrote: Not necessarily the case, Platonic ethics doesn't contradict Christian ethics and vice versa.Plato's concept of the Form of Goodness itself and his Demiurge, or the creator of the universe.Immanuel Can wrote: I think they do. Maybe you have an example in mind?
So I'm not seeing the comparability there.
Actually, there is. He often uses the expression "gods," and sometimes mentions them in specific. Or, if you take a look at something like the Euthyphro Dilemma, the whole dilemma depends entirely on Euthyphro agreeing with Socrates that there are multiple gods.There is no evidence in Plato's philosophy that he was a theist or a polytheist,...
Kant's easy to show internally inconsistent, as I've pointed out. He has three different CI's, for example. And Plato's even easier.Ginkgo wrote:Your just assuming that Plato and Kant are internally inconsistent. So far you haven't shown that to be the case.
I don't disagree. IF there were no God, morality itself would be a myth. But God is not a myth, so morality is objective.Not a non sequitur. If God exists then you have an objective theory of morality, if he doesn't exist then you have an ethic based on a myth. That follows. It is that simple.Immanuel Can wrote:Ginkgo wrote: It is easy to dismiss God and keep morality simply because God doesn't exist.
Non-sequitur. It might be easy to say, but it's far from easy to do. Once you dismiss God, as Nietzsche saw so clearly, you've banished objective morality with Him. So even if we granted the the claim that God was, as you say, a "myth," that would not help you one iota in showing that morality wasn't also a "myth."
Not really.Well, they are similarImmanuel Can wrote: You said earlier that Kant's ethics were objective. Now you say that Plato's were. But Plato has no CI, and Kant had no belief in "the realm of ideal forms." So they contradict each other.
You didn't answer my question. I'll pose it again: Is it your idea of the word "objective" that something can be both "objective" and untrue?My claims are not contradictory...Immanuel Can wrote: Is it your idea of the word "objective" that something can be both "objective" and untrue? Because it would have to be, to make sense of your contradicting claims.
It seems not. But when you tell me what yours is, I'll be able to confirm that for you. Can something be both "objective," as you understand it, and untrue at the same time?My definition of objective would be similar to yours.