I hold a batchelors degree in philosophy and studied moral philosophy as part of that. I studied Plato at A Level when I was 18, so I already have all the basics of this stuff down thank you very much. You may now quit trying to condescend to me.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 2:03 amThe inherent properties behind morality "belong" to God. They're not attached to objects, or even to situations, or to persons, apart from that.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 12:06 amI simply alluded to physical properties because they inhere to something. I wasn't asking if morality is physical, I was asking if moral properties are inherent properties that belong to something.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 11:52 pm
"Moral" is not a physical property, it's true. It's a relational description.
I think you've got a bit of a Platonic idea about morality -- except that I see you don't really have a philosophy education, and so probably don't know Plato, so you're getting the same idea from somewhere else, apparently. But that's it actual origin, I would think. You seem to imagine "moral" as being independent of the identity and character of God. But it's not.
I obviously don't hold a platonic conception of morality, I was simply checking to see if you do because you have been so unclear on the subject. Now that we have established that "factual moral properties" are just the opinion of somebody very important, we don't need to worry about Plato, which I think we can all agree is good news.
The important thing is that there is no such thing as an inherent moral property about which we could even be correct or mistaken, so it's all just beliefs. You believe the source of your moral "facts" is the beliefs that are held by a big scary monster in the sky, I don't.
You accuse me of Platonism and then you rip off the similie of the cave.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 2:03 amShow me the word "ritual" in what I suggested, and I'll respond to it.So back to what I wrote earlier then.... there's no systematic way to know moral truth without relgious ritual?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 11:52 pm
It actually says the opposite: it says you CAN reason about them IF you don't first reject God. It says God's "invisible" attributes and "divine nature" (which are the grounds of objective morality) can be "clearly understood" and one is "without excuse" for not knowing them.
But it says that once one rejects God, then there are no limits to how "futile" and "senseless" moral reasoning can become.
Actually it's just what H. and I have been discussing in the last few pages. There are two ways at looking at the world: in its relation to God, and out of that relation. If you look at it as in that relation, then you can see its moral features; if you deny that relationship exists, then you can only see "nature red in tooth and claw," the bare facts of physical laws and entropy, and none of it has any purposive or moral characteristics for you.Something still doesn't make sense though. How does us believing in God make it something we suddenly can know? Just in technical terms, that doesn't make any sense.
But the problem is in the original disposition of the onlooker, not in morality itself. It's like if you put on clear eyeglasses, you can see all colours; but if you put on rose-coloured glasses, you not only stop seeing other colours, but because you only see red, there's no point in seeing any colours at all. They're not distinct from one another. There's nothing to detect.
Just so, if one insists on seeing the world's landscape as a product of mere time and chance, and devoid of any Creator or purpose, what one sees is only the external shape of things, and not their moral tinges. But if one sees the world as a purposeful creation of a loving God, then one sees quite differently: purpose, intention, providence, meaning, morality...they all leap into sharper focus, and you start to see the world as it actually is, instead of divested of its moral character.
But you'll never know if you've never done that. The tinted glasses will not permit you to see anything but accidents and oddities, not adding up to or tending toward anything at all. So I understand why you feel committed to the proposition that there is no objective morality to detect.