And this is 'might makes right' - which is what theistic moral objectivism boils down to - the opposite of moral objectivism. It's moral subjectivism pretending not to be.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 8:02 pmActually, no.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 6:39 pmFalse - how ever often you repeat this falsehood. 'Agent A says X is morally wrong; therefore (it's a fact that) X is morally wrong' is a non sequitur, for any agent - even a creator god.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 1:33 pm ...a person who believes in God has every reason to believe in objective morality...
For God, as the Creator, has both the perfect right to say what His creation is for, and to say what is permissible and forbidden within those purposes.
Is morality objective or subjective?
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Peter Holmes
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
When we have children, which we very often bring into existence because of a conscious decision, most of us would not think that principle morally right. To create an inanimate object and think you have the right to have full authority over what is and isn't permissible during its existence is fine, but you can't, or shouldn't, do that with human beings. God (hypothetically) can do what he like, of course, because nobody can stop him, but even so, when he gets it wrong, he needs to be told.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 8:02 pm
For God, as the Creator, has both the perfect right to say what His creation is for, and to say what is permissible and forbidden within those purposes.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Authoritarianism, in other words.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 7:40 amAnd this is 'might makes right' - which is what theistic moral objectivism boils down to - the opposite of moral objectivism. It's moral subjectivism pretending not to be.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 8:02 pmActually, no.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 6:39 pm
False - how ever often you repeat this falsehood. 'Agent A says X is morally wrong; therefore (it's a fact that) X is morally wrong' is a non sequitur, for any agent - even a creator god.
For God, as the Creator, has both the perfect right to say what His creation is for, and to say what is permissible and forbidden within those purposes.
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
No, it's "Designer knows purpose." And of course he does, and only He really does. The rest of us, including you, are playing "catch up," trying to figure out what's right for us to do or be. He never gets it wrong.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 7:40 amAnd this is 'might makes right'...Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 8:02 pmActually, no.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 6:39 pm
False - how ever often you repeat this falsehood. 'Agent A says X is morally wrong; therefore (it's a fact that) X is morally wrong' is a non sequitur, for any agent - even a creator god.
For God, as the Creator, has both the perfect right to say what His creation is for, and to say what is permissible and forbidden within those purposes.
That's why you can't find objective morality. You've arbitrarily banished the very grounds of morality from your thinking, and predictably, you have then decided that morality must have no grounds.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
"Wrong"? This from somebody who insists there is no objective "wrongness" to anything at all, but it's all just subjective? It's not at all clear what you can mean by that, since you don't acknowledge any moral objective values.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 11:18 amWhen we have children, which we very often bring into existence because of a conscious decision, most of us would not think that principle morally right. To create an inanimate object and think you have the right to have full authority over what is and isn't permissible during its existence is fine, but you can't, or shouldn't, do that with human beings. God (hypothetically) can do what he like, of course, because nobody can stop him, but even so, when he gets it wrong, he needs to be told.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 8:02 pm
For God, as the Creator, has both the perfect right to say what His creation is for, and to say what is permissible and forbidden within those purposes.![]()
But as you see with children, what we do is give them a measure of autonomy and a measure of regulation, according to their maturity and need. But a combination of autonomy and regulation persists even into adulthood, when we have more autonomy, as reality always regulates us to some degree. We're never without the two. And absent one, we're dehumanized: an unfree human is alienated from his humanity; but so is one that has no regulation...he's lost in solipsism, unreality and anomie.
If you give children only one or the other, -- only autonomy, or only regulation -- then you're either a negligent parent or a tyrannical one; but in both cases, you're abusive.
And what does God give us? Moral direction plus moral autonomy. Sounds like very good parenting, to me.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Of course it's subjective. No action or event can contain wrongness; it is something that only exists in our minds.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 2:32 pm"Wrong"? This from somebody who insists there is no objective "wrongness" to anything at all, but it's all just subjective?Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 11:18 amWhen we have children, which we very often bring into existence because of a conscious decision, most of us would not think that principle morally right. To create an inanimate object and think you have the right to have full authority over what is and isn't permissible during its existence is fine, but you can't, or shouldn't, do that with human beings. God (hypothetically) can do what he like, of course, because nobody can stop him, but even so, when he gets it wrong, he needs to be told.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 8:02 pm
For God, as the Creator, has both the perfect right to say what His creation is for, and to say what is permissible and forbidden within those purposes.![]()
I acknowledge subjective values, though. It means that I disapprove of God's conduct. If morality were objective, you would be forced to disapprove of it, too.It's not at all clear what you can mean by that, since you don't acknowledge any moral objective values.
Well that would be more relevant to me than, "God no like".You can't mean that God is objectively "wrong." Maybe you only mean "Harbal no like."
Don't you ever get tired of having to make excuses for him?But as you see with children, what we do is give them a measure of autonomy and a measure of regulation, according to their maturity and need. But a combination of autonomy and regulation persists even into adulthood, when we have more autonomy, as reality always regulates us to some degree. We're never without the two. And absent one, we're dehumanized: an unfree human is alienated from his humanity; but so is one that has no regulation...he's lost in solipsism, unreality and anomie.
If you give children only one or the other, -- only autonomy, or only regulation -- then you're either a negligent parent or a tyrannical one; but in both cases, you're abusive.
And what does God give us? Moral direction plus moral autonomy. Sounds like very good parenting, to me.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Morality is following your own ethical values. Abiding by those of someone else, including God, is just obedience, not morality.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 2:25 pm
That's why you can't find objective morality. You've arbitrarily banished the very grounds of morality from your thinking, and predictably, you have then decided that morality must have no grounds.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
So it "exists in your mind" that you have a feeling of not liking what you (incorrectly) say God does? That's it? That's what you meant when you said "he's wrong"?Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 3:01 pmOf course it's subjective. No action or event can contain wrongness; it is something that only exists in our minds.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 2:32 pm"Wrong"? This from somebody who insists there is no objective "wrongness" to anything at all, but it's all just subjective?Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 11:18 am
When we have children, which we very often bring into existence because of a conscious decision, most of us would not think that principle morally right. To create an inanimate object and think you have the right to have full authority over what is and isn't permissible during its existence is fine, but you can't, or shouldn't, do that with human beings. God (hypothetically) can do what he like, of course, because nobody can stop him, but even so, when he gets it wrong, he needs to be told.![]()
That's not a charge that anybody needs to take very seriously, is it?
Yes, that's what I said it meant.I acknowledge subjective values, though. It means that I disapprove of God's conduct.It's not at all clear what you can mean by that, since you don't acknowledge any moral objective values.
But if "that's wrong" only means "Harbal doesn't like," then it's just the contingent feeling of one person. Nobody needs to agree, or even should; and God is not being indicted of anything bad.
I can't believe you meant so little...but if you say that's all you meant, then I guess that's all you meant.
Right. So you're not expecting me to have to agree with your "disapproval" of God's alleged conduct...you're just saying, "Harbal no like, but you can like whatever you want, and so can everybody else."If morality were objective, you would be forced to disapprove of it, too.
As soon as you stop attacking Him, I don't have to explain why you're off base. But it's really my job, as a Christian, to make sure you are properly acquainted with what God says and does, so much as any human can. So you're free to quit complaining about Him anytime, and I have a different set of responsibilities to fulfill...objectively.Don't you ever get tired of having to make excuses for him?But as you see with children, what we do is give them a measure of autonomy and a measure of regulation, according to their maturity and need. But a combination of autonomy and regulation persists even into adulthood, when we have more autonomy, as reality always regulates us to some degree. We're never without the two. And absent one, we're dehumanized: an unfree human is alienated from his humanity; but so is one that has no regulation...he's lost in solipsism, unreality and anomie.
If you give children only one or the other, -- only autonomy, or only regulation -- then you're either a negligent parent or a tyrannical one; but in both cases, you're abusive.
And what does God give us? Moral direction plus moral autonomy. Sounds like very good parenting, to me.![]()
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Following values is still following.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 3:05 pmMorality is following your own ethical values. Abiding by those of someone else, including God, is just obedience, not morality.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 2:25 pm
That's why you can't find objective morality. You've arbitrarily banished the very grounds of morality from your thinking, and predictably, you have then decided that morality must have no grounds.
Obedience. Following. Potato/potatoh
But should we draw attention to the anthropomorphism?
Your values lead so you follow?
Lol.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
No, that's solipsism, or even narcissism.
Even in secular thought, we can certainly realize that ethical values are shared properties of human societies, not "your own." And because they govern relations among and between people, not simply what you do to yourself, they're other people's concern as well as yours.
Morality is a common code regulating interactions among the various entities that count in the moral equation: between you and your duty to self-care, between you and your neighbour, between you and your community, between you and your nation, and between you and your Maker. It's not "following your own ethical values".
That's a mere conceit of our very solipsitic and narcissistic social ethos. It's not at all even logical. For how can Harbal "owe" Harbal to do anything at all? Harbal himself is a limited, contingent, temporary being. From where comes his "duty" to treat himself in any way at all? What "dignifies" his existence, since he regards himself as the mere accidental product of an utterly indifferent universe? Who will call Harbal to account if he does anything to himself, or fails to do anything to himself? Where's the "morality" in any of that?
In fact, Biblically, what you're describing is not courageous or lofty at all. As it says, "All we, like sheep, have gone astray; we have, every one of us, turned to his own way..." (Isaiah 53:6) That's not a recommendation; it's a moral condemnation of our selfishness, waywardness and smugness.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Actually, it's what you say God does that I don't like; God doesn't do anything, of course. And did I say that I expect anyone to take it seriously?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 3:16 pmSo it "exists in your mind" that you have a feeling of not liking what you (incorrectly) say God does? That's it? That's what you meant when you said "he's wrong"?Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 3:01 pmOf course it's subjective. No action or event can contain wrongness; it is something that only exists in our minds.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Sep 16, 2023 2:32 pm
"Wrong"? This from somebody who insists there is no objective "wrongness" to anything at all, but it's all just subjective?![]()
That's not a charge that anybody needs to take very seriously, is it?
It's my personal criticism of God's conduct, and others are free to agree or disagree.Yes, that's what I said it meant.
But if "that's wrong" only means "Harbal doesn't like," then it's just the contingent feeling of one person. Nobody needs to agree, or even should; and God is not being indicted of anything bad.
In essence, yes, that's correct.IC wrote:Right. So you're not expecting me to have to agree with your "disapproval" of God's alleged conduct...you're just saying, "Harbal no like, but you can like whatever you want, and so can everybody else."Harbal wrote:If morality were objective, you would be forced to disapprove of it, too.
I was just following orders; just doing my job.IC wrote:As soon as you stop attacking Him, I don't have to explain why you're off base. But it's really my job, as a Christian, to make sure you are properly acquainted with what God says and does,Harbal wrote:Don't you ever get tired of having to make excuses for him?
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Having an ethical approach to your dealings and interactions with other people is neither solipsistic nor narcissistic.
Yes, I can broadly go along with that, but the values within any community can vary, and even conflict, so you are painting a rather simplistic picture.Even in secular thought, we can certainly realize that ethical values are shared properties of human societies, not "your own." And because they govern relations among and between people, not simply what you do to yourself, they're other people's concern as well as yours.
Morality is a common code regulating interactions among the various entities that count in the moral equation: between you and your duty to self-care, between you and your neighbour, between you and your community, between you and your nation, and between you and your Maker. It's not "following your own ethical values".
I'm going to have to stop you there, I'm afraid; I don't do biblical.In fact, Biblically,
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Not sure what difference it makes whether you are following orders; or following your values when you commit genocide.
You were doing your job.
Hitler was doing his calling.
Last edited by Skepdick on Sat Sep 16, 2023 4:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.