Agreed, by and large. But I think there are more and less rational arguments for moral opinions - even if they are just opinions. In other words, we can usually explain why we think something is morally right or wrong - and the reasons we give are the substance of moral discussions and disagreements.Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 10:25 amYes, because, as he sees it, it makes it easier for him to make a sort of straw man out of it. If you notice, he is always trying to present atheism as some sort of belief system, and always capitalises the word as if to prove it. Then everything an atheist does, or thinks, is solely an act of defiance against God. He just doesn't get that common or garden atheism just means leading a life without thought, reference to, or interest in, God. He is determined to make atheism much more than that. And then he seems to think it all justifies the ridiculous situation of his trying to argue that we are not experiencing our experiences when we talk about morality.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 9:53 amGood question. And I think there's a reason why IC needs and wants to make the connection.In my understanding of what morality is, it has to be subjective; if it were not, it wouldn't be morality. Morality is about what you feel to be right and wrong, not what some authority or other tells you is right and wrong.The existence or non-existence of gods has nothing to do with morality - unless you believe that moral rightness and wrongness depend on your team's god: 'if my team's god doesn't exist, then there can be no morality - no rational distinction between moral rightness and wrongness'.
That this is a form of moral subjectivism goes without saying. Theistic moral objectivism is moral subjectivism pretending not to be. A person who thinks moral rightness and wrongness depend on any agent is, by definition, not a moral objectivist. If there are moral facts, then what anyone thinks about them is irrelevant.
So IC's moral argument amounts to a special pleading fallacy.
The failure of ontological arguments for the existence of any team's god means that theistic moral arguments don't even make it to the starting post. But if they did, they're disqualified anyway.
But yep - 'this is morally right/wrong because X says it is' has no place in a rational moral discussion. That kind of appeal to authority is as fallacious in moral argument as it is in any other kind.