Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 8:07 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:52 pm
Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 7:21 pm
Not so. Patent and demonstrable nonsense. The claim 'X says this is morally right/wrong, therefore X is morally right/wrong' has no place in a rational moral discussion.
It depends who's speaking. If it's just an ordinary person, right you are.
But if it's God, things are quite different. For the One who made the universe is perfectly capable of saying, and qualified to say, for what purposes He made it, what His Creation aims at, what it was created for, and what actions and attitudes are harmonious with His purposes.
In fact, nobody else really is.
We'd laugh it out of court.
Then it would be a miscarriage of justice, and we'd be proved fools. For we would then have access to the One who could actually speak authoritatively on the answer, and we'd have simply refused to listen at all.
Think about it this way.
Suppose you walk by somebody's house, and he has a huge structure on his front lawn...maybe with some beams and gears and other workings in it, but with no function you can instantly see. Who would be the person who could speak authoritatively as to why that strange structure is there?
There can be only one answer: whoever
put it there. He alone can tell you
why he did it. Moreover, if the strange structure actually has a function, only he can tell you what it is. And when it functions, the only person who can tell you whether it functioned rightly or wrongly is also the creator of it.
Without him, you and I are just guessing. And if the structure simply fell there by accident, we cannot even ask the question
why it's there. There can
be no reason.
The strange structure is the universe. If nobody put it there, it can have no function, and can't misfunction. It cannot achieve its end (telos), or fail to achieve its end, because it was not created for an end. So there is no objective morality in such a universe. It's not even possible for there to be.
But if the universe has a Creator, then He is perfectly able to say what the universe exists for, what its end (telos) is, and whether or not the things within it are functioning toward that end. He can judge its functioning perfectly, as nobody else is even capable to do.
So the question is ultimately not "Is there such a thing as objective morality," but rather, "Does the Creator exist?" The answer to that second question determines the possibility of a positive answer to the first.
Here's your argument:
This god created the universe and human beings for a purpose; therefore, acting to fulfil/thwart its purpose is morally right/wrong.
This doesn't follow.
As I said earlier, it is possible to imagine a Creator who creates and doesn't afterward care...some kind of Deism, I suppose. Though it immediately raises serious problems, it's remotely possible, I suppose. Not plausible, I think, but
in extremis, possible. However, you and I are not opting for that theory.
If what you call the "Abrahamic" God exists, then it actually does follow that to contradict His purposes and nature is wrong; and He's clarified that by actually
telling us it's wrong. The very definition of "wrong," (the accurate one) would be "contrary to the purposes and intentions of God, for an entity."
And describing the god's commands, nature or purposes as morally good/right doesn't fix the problem. That merely pushes the question back: there are moral facts because ... there are moral facts.
No, the moral facts are constituted into the very nature of the universe. They aren't assigned after-the-fact, as if God created things first, then scratched His head and arbitrarily assigned particular things particular values. There is, in fact, no distance between the terms, "intentions of God in creation" and "good." They are the same property: just described by two synonyms.
Theistic moral objectivism collapses in a question-begging mess.
I don't think it does. I'm not even sure what question would be left for it to "beg."
But if you can show it does, I'm interested in seeing that argument.