What could make morality objective?

Should you think about your duty, or about the consequences of your actions? Or should you concentrate on becoming a good person?

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iambiguous
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by iambiguous »

FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:22 pm
iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 7:57 pm
Iwannaplato wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 7:16 am

So, a focus on consequences, again. (and not consequentialism, but the pleasant and unpleasant stuff that such a deity could do). And look, I certainly have sympathy for the weight of those consequences, in that hypothetical situation, but the issue, perhaps even more clearly stated by PH, was whether this deity is somehow objecctivelymoral, along with the issue of whether you're going along with the issue is moral. You implied that it would resolve in the positive the existence of objective morals.
Look, if you don't believe that an omniscient and omnipotent God who is entirely responsible for the existence of the human species itself can claim to be the font for moral Commandments, fine, you can take it up with Him on Judgment Day.

Right, IC?

Me, I'm still born again.

And, as always, you insist on making "the point" here my own failure to get "the point".
But you didn't get the point. You may lack the talent.
Ah, of course: The Point

The point that the "arrogant, autocratic, authoritarian" FFOs here thump us with? Or my point...that points pertaining to things like religion or morality are rooted existentially in dasein. That in a No God world, being "fractured and fragmented" morally makes sense...at least until the Serious Philosophers here are able to provide us with the secular equivalent of objective morality? Moral facts? If only up in the theoretical clouds?

And, again, I'm the first to admit that I may well be wrong about religion and morality. That's the point "I" pursue in my signature threads above.
FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:22 pmThere is a question over the basis of this big frightening sky beast's claim to that moral knowledge. It seems that his godly opinion is essentially rooted in dasein/DaSEiN/DASein/dASein, and that this is arguably not a sufficient basis for objective fact. You've already rejected the possible solution that this Godly person is aware of facts about the universe that are hidden from us mortals, which was a mistake on your part.
Same thing. You die and there you are soul to soul with IC's Christian God. You challenge Him to defend His capacity to author moral Commandments.

Really, try to grasp just how ludicrous it may well be for mere mortals to pin down the exact relationship between God and morality. And in a universe as staggeringly vast and [so far] as ineffable as ours seems to be.
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iambiguous
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by iambiguous »

Atla wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:52 pm
iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:09 pm
Atla wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 7:37 am
By having preferences/core values and a fairly stable sense of self, like normal people do? The question is why did "you" become fractured and fragmented, or is there even a "you" in there?
Right, normal people.

So, in regard to the morality of abortion or human sexuality or gun control or social, political and economic justice, or animal rights or war and peace or capitalism or socialism...who are the normal people?

Then the part where your own "preferences/core values and...sense of self" is or is not rooted existentially in dasein.

You tell me.

Let's commence an exchange regarding a "conflicting good" that is of particular importance to you, and we can explore these things. You can note how the points I raise in the OPs here...

https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=176529
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=194382
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 5&t=185296

...are not applicable to you [one of the normal people] at all.
This is just mentally ill bullshit word salad. You're making my point. Having preferences/core values and a fairly stable sense of self is a basic given for normal people, it's not something "in regard to". It comes before that.

And there is no such thing as "dasein".
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle.

Well, if I do say so myself. 8)
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FlashDangerpants
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by FlashDangerpants »

iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:10 pm That's the point "I" pursue in my signature threads above.
Your signature threads are banal. I'm bored of you.
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iambiguous
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by iambiguous »

Iwannaplato wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:53 pm
iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 7:57 pm Look, if you don't believe that an omniscient and omnipotent God who is entirely responsible for the existence of the human species itself can claim to be the font for moral Commandments, fine, you can take it up with Him on Judgment Day.
1) obviously I never said such a being couldn't claim to be...etc. 2) I obviously pointed out that you hadn't make any argument as to why.
And how exactly would I go about accomplishing that? Me, speaking for God Himself? Instead, I speculate about living in a world where, in fact, God does exist. He makes His existence known to us. And He focuses in almost entirely on consequences: Heaven or Hell?

It just seems reasonable to me "here and now" that if any entity is going to broach [and then enforce] moral Commandments, it would be the one who is omniscient and omnipotent. The Supreme Being who actually created us!!
Iwannaplato wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:53 pmYou made as assertion/assumption and appealed to incredulity that anyone could disagree that if such a being could be demonstrated to exist, then there is objective morality and it comes from that being.
Yep, and that still makes sense to me. Or is God himself unable to grasp the technical parameters of moral philosophy?
Iwannaplato wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:53 pmGet that. I pointed out that you hadn't made any argument.

You did tell us about the consequences on not doing what the entity says.

I pointed out that that you presented no argument that had to do with morals. It was a might makes right argument, which, if I remember correctly, you haven't really respected.
And around and around we go.
And, as always, you insist on making "the point" here my own failure to get "the point".
Iwannaplato wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:53 pmActually it's more like I am pointing out that you are not justifying your assertions. And 'here are all the things you are going instead.'

My posts have all been on topic, not only in relation to your posts, and in relation to the thread topic.

Yes, I ADDED some stuff aimed at you. Which is something you also do.

If you're not interested in responding with substance fine. But I'm not going to pretend that you're actually supporting your claims.

And what is this strange shit where you talk to IC in a post to me? (rhetorical question).
Right. Your understanding of substance here. And how my "assertions" and "claims" are unsupported because [in my view] they do not support your own.

And my posts here are sheer conjecture. I'm "supposing" that a God, the God, the Christian God does in fact exist. I'm noting that this omniscient/omnipotent God provides us with a Scripture containing moral Commandments. I'm noting those Christians who insist that if we fail to obey them the consequences are truly, truly dire.

And of course, in regard to God and religion, consequences are everything!!

I'll let you and others take up the philosophical question of whether this God can lay claim to being the font for objective morality.

That seems reasonable to me...as sheer conjecture.

Or do you actually believe that mere mortals here who call themselves serious philosophers really can pin this down such that, what, they convince God Himself that He's not?
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iambiguous
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by iambiguous »

FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:24 pm
iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:10 pm That's the point "I" pursue in my signature threads above.
Your signature threads are banal. I'm bored of you.
Snip, snip, snip.
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle.

Okay, okay: if I do say so myself.
Atla
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by Atla »

iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:13 pm
Atla wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:52 pm
iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:09 pm

Right, normal people.

So, in regard to the morality of abortion or human sexuality or gun control or social, political and economic justice, or animal rights or war and peace or capitalism or socialism...who are the normal people?

Then the part where your own "preferences/core values and...sense of self" is or is not rooted existentially in dasein.

You tell me.

Let's commence an exchange regarding a "conflicting good" that is of particular importance to you, and we can explore these things. You can note how the points I raise in the OPs here...

https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=176529
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=194382
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 5&t=185296

...are not applicable to you [one of the normal people] at all.
This is just mentally ill bullshit word salad. You're making my point. Having preferences/core values and a fairly stable sense of self is a basic given for normal people, it's not something "in regard to". It comes before that.

And there is no such thing as "dasein".
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle.

Well, if I do say so myself. 8)
Says the shameless wiggle guy, how about facing the shame of never addressing the actual human condition, always just wiggling out of it?
Iwannaplato
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by Iwannaplato »

iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:56 pm And how exactly would I go about accomplishing that? Me, speaking for God Himself? Instead, I speculate about living in a world where, in fact, God does exist. He makes His existence known to us. And He focuses in almost entirely on consequences: Heaven or Hell?

It just seems reasonable to me "here and now" that if any entity is going to broach [and then enforce] moral Commandments, it would be the one who is omniscient and omnipotent. The Supreme Being who actually created us!!
Well, you asked me how would you go about accomplishing that: re: my request for your justification. Well, generally when one makes assertions and one is asked one explains that convinced us. In a philosophy forum that would be explaining some kind of justification. If you express incredulity that others could possibility disagree, than probably some other people are going to expect some pretty strong justification. So, I'm not quite sure why you're asking me, given you arrived at your conclusion by some process and that conclusion seems obvious to you. Heck, if you'd said: it just seem obvious, self-evident, intuitively clear. I wouldn't have granted this was convincing - and presumably you wouldn't have expected it to be. But if that was the process, well, fair enough that's your answer. I might in that case point out that it wasn't convincing for others, but, then we're at a final point, for now.

But you do go on, after asking me, to start justifiying......
1) It seems to me the 10 commandments are present in the form of orders. Rather than 'here's a way to be a good person (who also doesn't end up in Hell etc.). But I think Jesus may go ahead and make it more like a set of moral guidelines.2) I am not contesting that in this hypothetical situation such a deity has defined a set of rules and threatened us with judgment. 3) However you then phrase the next part If any creature is going to..... But it doesn't explain why we must take such a creature's proclamations as moral. It may think they are moral. But your actual sentences says if any, which leaves open the option that none do. Perhaps you're right, though I don't think you've justified it yet. Here you have justified a sentence like if any entity determines what is moral than it would be the omnipotent and omniscient one does. But it doesn't explain why we must choose any entity, even one like that. IOW it presumes it's a contest or at least that some entity in existence is the determiner. And if there is the Christian God, well, then that's the one.

Another way to put my objection is to point to PH's responses that just because this incredibly powerful entity has these preferences, this doesn't entail that they are objectively moral. I believe he thinks they cannot be.

I might ask why the most powerful entity need be moral? Do we notice that in the mundane world those who have the most power are more moral and more or closer to objectivity?

Your last sentence is about this being being our creator. I am not sure why this means this entity must be moral and that its preferences are objective.

I do have sympathy for the sense this is obvious, somehow, but I don't think it is. In any case I don't see it demonstrated.

I appreciate that you started to justify your position though. Really that's all I have been asking.
Iwannaplato wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:53 pmYou made as assertion/assumption and appealed to incredulity that anyone could disagree that if such a being could be demonstrated to exist, then there is objective morality and it comes from that being.
Yep, and that still makes sense to me. Or is God himself unable to grasp the technical parameters of moral philosophy?
What if he's an asshole? I mean, I don't think such a being could ever convince me that really eternal damnation is objectively good, for example.

Now you're looking at this as: Well, by definition he is smarter than you iwannaplato, so if he thinks that's a good thing, it is.

But I think this is a category error.
And around and around we go.
No, no. You actually took some steps to answer my original request. I think we have got some forward moveement. Will we agree in the end and dance around the maypole? Doubtful, but who knows. On the other hand, looking at what seems obvious and trying to explain that to others is, well, to me anyway, part of what we are doing here. I realize that's not universally agreed upon, here, though I haven't heard anyone willing to say their not interested in that.
And, as always, you insist on making "the point" here my own failure to get "the point".
Right. Your understanding of substance here. And how my "assertions" and "claims" are unsupported because [in my view] they do not support your own.
I can easily see support for assertions that I don't agree with. Can't you?
And my posts here are sheer conjecture. I'm "supposing" that a God, the God, the Christian God does in fact exist. I'm noting that this omniscient/omnipotent God provides us with a Scripture containing moral Commandments. I'm noting those Christians who insist that if we fail to obey them the consequences are truly, truly dire.
Of course. Your assertions have been conditional. If this is then then X must be true. But we can still look at the assumptions and justifications for this.
And of course, in regard to God and religion, consequences are everything!!
Well, if they are everthing then it's a practical issue.
I'll let you and others take up the philosophical question of whether this God can lay claim to being the font for objective morality.

That seems reasonable to me...as sheer conjecture.
Well, then, sheer conjecture is all reasonable, it seems, according to you.

But look, you're acting a bit like I am being unreasonable asking for justification for, yes, conditional assertions. In answering such questions, you can come to understand your own assumptions and see if YOU think your own assumptions and justifications have merit.

I assume that's part of your goal in writing all these threads about determinism. To get clearer about things and, regardless of how small the chance, perhaps come to understand something better regarding these ontological issues.

Well, to do that you may need to look at your own and other people's assumptions. You certainly look at other people's and expect them to justify well and critique them when they fail to be convincing.

It shouldn't be a shock that others might have similar reactions to your assertions.
Or do you actually believe that mere mortals here who call themselves serious philosophers really can pin this down such that, what, they convince God Himself that He's not?
If I questions someone arguing X is true, it doesn't mean I must be able to demonstrate X is false. Why not stop using the, for you, pejorative 'serious philosophers'? It's is a philosophy forum. You made assertions, and they underlie explorations you've been doing for years. You've claimed that you would be happy if someone could demonstrate the existence of God X or some other answer to your core questions. So the issue and your assumptions around it are relevant to you.

So, my asking you what your justifications are is not some off base act. It's the kind of thing you do in response to others when they assert things.

It's not some cold, symbolic logic response.

And if you don't care about anything other than consequences, which you claim above, then you could simply have said that. Yes, I'd like to know it if theirs a deity and which one and what that one wants. And I'd wanna make sure to be on its good side and not go to hell. So, I don't care if it's objectively moral. I'd want to get into heaven adn avoid hell.

Fine.

I would have dropped the issue.

If you want to imply I'm ridiculous for asking for justification and somehow a negative kind of philosopher for doing precisely what you do in relations to the claims of others, don't be surprised if I ALSO get personal.

Here you actually replied. You actually did what I wanted. I think it's incomplete, and not yet convincing, unless you completely hold to the 'I only care about consequences'. OK, that's fine then, conversation over. It doesn't matter to you if that entity is objectively moral or not. And, as I said, I have sympathy for that position. I don't think it's mine, but it's hard to say what I would do if push came to shove. I don't think I'd do what Abraham was willing to do, but....I can't know for sure. I don't think Abraham made an objectively moral choice however.

In any case, I can't see how understanding your own assumptions and finding out your own justification could be negative for you. And I certainly don't think it was unreasonable to ask for it or point out that you weren't doing it, while acting as if my questions were ridiculous and anyone by a fool would agree with you.

I am going to leave it here. Because even if it was a small step. It's precisely the kind of step I've found it so hard to get. I don't know why it happened and I must say I am afraid the next step will be a regression. I congratulate us both for having taken a small step. And perhaps I'll see in a different context if a different small step could be taken. This might be seen as cowardly, but I see it as merely cautious.
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iambiguous
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by iambiguous »

Atla wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 4:40 am
iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:13 pm
Atla wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:52 pm
This is just mentally ill bullshit word salad. You're making my point. Having preferences/core values and a fairly stable sense of self is a basic given for normal people, it's not something "in regard to". It comes before that.

And there is no such thing as "dasein".
Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle.

Well, if I do say so myself. 8)
Says the shameless wiggle guy, how about facing the shame of never addressing the actual human condition, always just wiggling out of it?
My guess: He or she actually means it!!! :shock:
Atla
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by Atla »

iambiguous wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 7:12 pm
Atla wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 4:40 am
iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:13 pm

Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle.

Well, if I do say so myself. 8)
Says the shameless wiggle guy, how about facing the shame of never addressing the actual human condition, always just wiggling out of it?
My guess: He or she actually means it!!! :shock:
Of course I actually mean it. You could have figured this out on your own decades ago, and then again many times on such forums, but still no. Or maybe it's willful denial. So let's try hammering it into your head.
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iambiguous
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by iambiguous »

Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pm
iambiguous wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 9:56 pm And how exactly would I go about accomplishing that? Me, speaking for God Himself? Instead, I speculate about living in a world where, in fact, God does exist. He makes His existence known to us. And He focuses in almost entirely on consequences: Heaven or Hell?

It just seems reasonable to me "here and now" that if any entity is going to broach [and then enforce] moral Commandments, it would be the one who is omniscient and omnipotent. The Supreme Being who actually created us!!
Well, you asked me how would you go about accomplishing that: re: my request for your justification. Well, generally when one makes assertions and one is asked one explains that convinced us. In a philosophy forum that would be explaining some kind of justification.
Again, here's the justification that seems reasonable [to me] given the indisputable existence of IC's Christian God:
It just seems reasonable to me "here and now" that if any entity is going to broach [and then enforce] moral Commandments, it would be the one who is omniscient and omnipotent. The Supreme Being who actually created us!!
That's not justification enough for you or PH? So be it.
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmIf you express incredulity that others could possibility disagree, than probably some other people are going to expect some pretty strong justification. So, I'm not quite sure why you're asking me, given you arrived at your conclusion by some process and that conclusion seems obvious to you. Heck, if you'd said: it just seem obvious, self-evident, intuitively clear. I wouldn't have granted this was convincing - and presumably you wouldn't have expected it to be. But if that was the process, well, fair enough that's your answer. I might in that case point out that it wasn't convincing for others, but, then we're at a final point, for now.
Clearly, this means something to you that it does not mean to me. Sure, I find it hard to believe that others would not construe an actually existing omniscient/omnipotent Christian God [or one of the others] as a font for objective morality. If only up in the philosophical clouds by and large. But then back to the part where I note that we all live lives that in any number of ways are very, very different. And the part where the communication shifts from the either/or world to the is/ought world.

Same here...
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmBut you do go on, after asking me, to start justifiying......
1) It seems to me the 10 commandments are present in the form of orders. Rather than 'here's a way to be a good person (who also doesn't end up in Hell etc.). But I think Jesus may go ahead and make it more like a set of moral guidelines.2) I am not contesting that in this hypothetical situation such a deity has defined a set of rules and threatened us with judgment. 3) However you then phrase the next part If any creature is going to..... But it doesn't explain why we must take such a creature's proclamations as moral. It may think they are moral. But your actual sentences says if any, which leaves open the option that none do. Perhaps you're right, though I don't think you've justified it yet. Here you have justified a sentence like if any entity determines what is moral than it would be the omnipotent and omniscient one does. But it doesn't explain why we must choose any entity, even one like that. IOW it presumes it's a contest or at least that some entity in existence is the determiner. And if there is the Christian God, well, then that's the one.
From my frame of mind, this is your own "up in the intellectual clouds", rooted existentially in dasein, philosophical spin on God and morality.

It's not mine though. Or Mr. Cant's. At least not "here and now". But that's my point too. Given new experiences, any of us here might find ourselves changing our minds about these things. It's just that if and when the day comes that a God, the God reveals Himself to us, well, that changes everything, doesn't it?
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmAnother way to put my objection is to point to PH's responses that just because this incredibly powerful entity has these preferences, this doesn't entail that they are objectively moral. I believe he thinks they cannot be.
Right, given his own philosophical assumptions about God, religion and morality.

In the interim, we'll just have to wait for one or another denominational rendition of the Second Coming. God Himself ought to be able to set us straight.
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmI might ask why the most powerful entity need be moral? Do we notice that in the mundane world those who have the most power are more moral and more or closer to objectivity?
Huh? How on Earth can you compare those mere mortals in power down here with an omniscient and omnipotent God? Instead, the far more intriguing question for some is how exactly does one reconcile an omniscient God with human autonomy itself?
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmYour last sentence is about this being being our creator. I am not sure why this means this entity must be moral and that its preferences are objective.
Trust me: no one is sure about these things. Some simply insist that they are because [in my view] it comforts and consoles them to believe that their own souls are covered on both sides of the grave. Again, the "psychology of objectivism" I call it.

Here and now.

And at least those like IC make an attempt to "demonstrate" the existence of our moral Commander here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=P ... SjDNeMaRoX
Iwannaplato wrote: Sun Nov 19, 2023 8:53 pmYou made as assertion/assumption and appealed to incredulity that anyone could disagree that if such a being could be demonstrated to exist, then there is objective morality and it comes from that being.
Yep, and that still makes sense to me. Or is God himself unable to grasp the technical parameters of moral philosophy?
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmWhat if he's an asshole? I mean, I don't think such a being could ever convince me that really eternal damnation is objectively good, for example.
Or, given this...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_earthquakes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_l ... _eruptions
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_t ... l_cyclones
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tsunamis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_landslides
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fires
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_epidemics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_deadliest_floods
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_t ... ore_deaths
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_diseases
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_extinction_events

...what if He is a sadistic monster? Or, perhaps, Harold Kushner or henry quirk come the closest to pinning Him down.
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmNow you're looking at this as: Well, by definition he is smarter than you iwannaplato, so if he thinks that's a good thing, it is.

But I think this is a category error.
God and a "category error"? Why doesn't that surprise me? :wink:
And around and around we go.
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmNo, no. You actually took some steps to answer my original request. I think we have got some forward moveement. Will we agree in the end and dance around the maypole? Doubtful, but who knows. On the other hand, looking at what seems obvious and trying to explain that to others is, well, to me anyway, part of what we are doing here. I realize that's not universally agreed upon, here, though I haven't heard anyone willing to say their not interested in that.
Let's just say that, when it comes to things like morality and religion and the Big Questions, "I" have become considerably more cynical regarding the actual value of philosophy. Though, sure, some here, in preferring to discuss and debate them in the "Ethical Theory" forum, only have to come into sync in regard to their definitions and deductions.
And my posts here are sheer conjecture. I'm "supposing" that a God, the God, the Christian God does in fact exist. I'm noting that this omniscient/omnipotent God provides us with a Scripture containing moral Commandments. I'm noting those Christians who insist that if we fail to obey them the consequences are truly, truly dire.
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmOf course. Your assertions have been conditional. If this is then then X must be true. But we can still look at the assumptions and justifications for this.
Okay, but we're discussing the existence of objective morality given the existence of an omniscient/omnipotent God. How realistic can our assumptions be there?
And of course, in regard to God and religion, consequences are everything!!
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmWell, if they are everything then it's a practical issue.
Again, with an extant God, where does theoretical end and practical begin? Which is is why I suggest that the bottom line here is Judgment Day itself. There you are soul to soul with God Himself. That's the time to raise the points PH does. Or so it seems to me.
I'll let you and others take up the philosophical question of whether this God can lay claim to being the font for objective morality.

That seems reasonable to me...as sheer conjecture.
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmWell, then, sheer conjecture is all reasonable, it seems, according to you.
Sheer conjecture about what? I could speculate that the universe itself created God. Or, as some argue, even rocks are conscious. It's just that the farther out on the metaphysical limb one goes the more problematic the reasons become.

But...

If it's a fact that IC's omniscient/omnipotent Christian God does exist, and a fact that He provided us with the Gospel Truth regarding moral Commandments, and a fact that Judgment Day is the real deal, and a fact that He judges us based on the behaviors we choose on this side of the grave...?
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmBut look, you're acting a bit like I am being unreasonable asking for justification for, yes, conditional assertions. In answering such questions, you can come to understand your own assumptions and see if YOU think your own assumptions and justifications have merit.
Merit? In regard to God and morality?! Something that "here and now" we can only engage in sheer conjecture regarding?
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmI assume that's part of your goal in writing all these threads about determinism. To get clearer about things and, regardless of how small the chance, perhaps come to understand something better regarding these ontological issues.
I have very, very few illusions here. Given "the gap", "Rummy's Rule", the "Benjamin Button Syndrome" and "dasein", I will almost certainly go to the grave no less bewildered about the "human condition" in the context of the existence of existence itself.

It's just that, in turn, very little can actually be completely ruled out. Up to and including solipsism? sim worlds? dream worlds? the Matrix?
Or do you actually believe that mere mortals here who call themselves serious philosophers really can pin this down such that, what, they convince God Himself that He's not?
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmIf I questions someone arguing X is true, it doesn't mean I must be able to demonstrate X is false. Why not stop using the, for you, pejorative 'serious philosophers'? It's is a philosophy forum.
I basically only use it in regard to things like morality, religion and the Big Questions. The part where we express what we believe about them and the part where we at least attempt to demonstrate why all rational men and women are obligated to believe the same. The part where what some do believe "in their heads" about them can have truly dire consequences for others. And here I quote "the news".
Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 3:00 pmYou made assertions, and they underlie explorations you've been doing for years. You've claimed that you would be happy if someone could demonstrate the existence of God X or some other answer to your core questions. So the issue and your assumptions around it are relevant to you.
Trust me...

When you believe that your own existence is essentially meaningless and purposeless, that "I" is fractured and fragmented in the is/ought world of conflicting goods, and that your death encompasses toppling over into the abyss that is oblivion, why not come to places like this and explore the possibility that it might well be otherwise. My "win/win" assessment.
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iambiguous
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by iambiguous »

Atla wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 7:37 pm
iambiguous wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 7:12 pm
Atla wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 4:40 am
Says the shameless wiggle guy, how about facing the shame of never addressing the actual human condition, always just wiggling out of it?
My guess: He or she actually means it!!! :shock:
Of course I actually mean it. You could have figured this out on your own decades ago, and then again many times on such forums, but still no. Or maybe it's willful denial. So let's try hammering it into your head.
Hell, I can just go back to ILP for crap like this.

He said in jest. Sort of. :wink:
Atla
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by Atla »

iambiguous wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 9:17 pm
Atla wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 7:37 pm
iambiguous wrote: Mon Nov 20, 2023 7:12 pm

My guess: He or she actually means it!!! :shock:
Of course I actually mean it. You could have figured this out on your own decades ago, and then again many times on such forums, but still no. Or maybe it's willful denial. So let's try hammering it into your head.
Hell, I can just go back to ILP for crap like this.

He said in jest. Sort of. :wink:
Yeah go back and stay there
Peter Holmes
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by Peter Holmes »

Just a thought. Omniscience and omnipotence have no moral significance or entailment. It doesn't follow that an all-knowing and all-powerful being will or must be all-good. It could just as well be all-bad.

The claim that an all-knowing being would have all-knowledge of morality assumes there is such a thing as moral knowledge - which begs the question. And anyway, from having all moral knowledge, it wouldn't follow that you'd necessarily choose moral goodness.

And, one step back - the 'omni' property is incoherent anyway - and the invented omni-god is a walking contradiction. A fitting hero for some moral objectivists.
Iwannaplato
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by Iwannaplato »

Peter Holmes wrote: Tue Nov 21, 2023 10:31 am The claim that an all-knowing being would have all-knowledge of morality assumes there is such a thing as moral knowledge - which begs the question. And anyway, from having all moral knowledge, it wouldn't follow that you'd necessarily choose moral goodness.
I think this is the area where the moral objectivist could put forth their best argument. If they argue that omniscience would include complete knowledge of morals. And then then moral antirealists will rebut this as you do. With Iambiguous both FDB and I noticed he was heading, slightly in that direction, though it hadn't been clearly articulated.
And, one step back - the 'omni' property is incoherent anyway - and the invented omni-god is a walking contradiction. A fitting hero for some moral objectivists.
And the sad/ironic/confused thing is that the whole omni debate came out of some very literal minded theologians in the Middle Ages. The Bible, for examples, is an expressive text in many parts. It does not assert some kind of mathematical omnipotence - the kind that leads to all the silliness of making stones heavier than God can lift, etc. One can easily interpret the various scriptures as describing an entity with powers and knowledge beyond us. (which could even fit, for example, non-theist scenarios like we are in a simulation created by some advanced species). It is not a universal theist position: that every quality God has is infinitely extended, whatever that would mean, and has no limits, even those of logic.

Yet, became everybody's (hyperbole) seens of religion, squirting out as it did from some theologians in the Abrahamic religions and now theists feel honor bound to defend absurdities and atheists/agnostics think this once extremely minority position is entailed, period, by theism. We have centuries of silly discussions to look foward to.
Peter Holmes
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Re: What could make morality objective?

Post by Peter Holmes »

Iwannaplato wrote: Tue Nov 21, 2023 11:09 am
Peter Holmes wrote: Tue Nov 21, 2023 10:31 am The claim that an all-knowing being would have all-knowledge of morality assumes there is such a thing as moral knowledge - which begs the question. And anyway, from having all moral knowledge, it wouldn't follow that you'd necessarily choose moral goodness.
I think this is the area where the moral objectivist could put forth their best argument. If they argue that omniscience would include complete knowledge of morals. And then then moral antirealists will rebut this as you do. With Iambiguous both FDB and I noticed he was heading, slightly in that direction, though it hadn't been clearly articulated.
And, one step back - the 'omni' property is incoherent anyway - and the invented omni-god is a walking contradiction. A fitting hero for some moral objectivists.
And the sad/ironic/confused thing is that the whole omni debate came out of some very literal minded theologians in the Middle Ages. The Bible, for examples, is an expressive text in many parts. It does not assert some kind of mathematical omnipotence - the kind that leads to all the silliness of making stones heavier than God can lift, etc. One can easily interpret the various scriptures as describing an entity with powers and knowledge beyond us. (which could even fit, for example, non-theist scenarios like we are in a simulation created by some advanced species). It is not a universal theist position: that every quality God has is infinitely extended, whatever that would mean, and has no limits, even those of logic.

Yet, became everybody's (hyperbole) seens of religion, squirting out as it did from some theologians in the Abrahamic religions and now theists feel honor bound to defend absurdities and atheists/agnostics think this once extremely minority position is entailed, period, by theism. We have centuries of silly discussions to look foward to.
All agreed. An omni-god, like a maximally great being, falls apart under even minimal scrutiny. So they're left with more or less blind loyalty to my-team's tribal god - who can be as wickedly fickle as you like. An imaginary Great Leader. A cosmic Donald Trump.
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