iambiguous wrote: ↑Sat Sep 14, 2024 2:09 am
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2024 7:54 amBut let me then ask you. It seems like you see a difference between the situation sans God and the situation where we have a God. He is specifically saying you still have the same issue. So, why do you think the problem of knowing what is moral disappears if there is a God?
If you can justify that position, I can then apply his reasoning for why the situation is not suddenly free from conflict or really any different.
All I can do then is to note once again what I believe is that "rooted existentially in dasein" distinction I make between morality and meaning in a God World and in a No God world.
Great, appreciate it.
With most Gods you get omniscience. And who can possibly grasp morality and meaning better than someone who allegedly knows everything? And with most Gods you get omnipotence. In other words, even if you reject God's own assessment of conflicting goods and behave instead according to what you yourself have come to believe is the right thing to do, let's see how that all plays out on...Judgment Day?
So, one difference between your way of looking at the situatin is he is actually looking at what happens, on the ground, if we have a diety. You find proof there is a deity and the diety says rape is good and you need to get out and rape. Are you now in a world, for you, where the condlicting goods is eliminated on that issue?
For some people,this command is fine. They already like rape. But then, the commandment simply approves of their already present attitude.
For you and me, we have a problem. We have conflicting goods. I think rape is bad and on a visceral level. God sees it otherwise. Do I simply go along, in Eichman style: "I was just following orders."
and
"I was a mere instrument in the hands of stronger forces and stronger wills, and I was not a responsible leader."
Must one assume that a diety is correct morally? Why?
Must we override our very nature - which the diety presumably gave us? Why?
His point is that the avec God situation either confirms your already existing morals OR puts you in a situation with conflicting goods. That's oversimplification on his part. You hear that the deity says do X. You could then mull over X. Have I been mistaken? Is rape actually good? So it is possible that some people would at that point come over to God's side on the issue. Though I would guess many would simply be suppressed their own morality because of the power difference, especially if eternal damnation is part of the afterlife ontology.
So, you have the same morality, well, no difference between avec and sans God. You think rape is good.
So, you have a different morality, well, you still have conflicting goods. If there is a threat involved, as in certain Christian and Islamic models, well have we eliminate conflicting goods
or have we simply presented such an incredible threat that we go along with power
not for moral reasons
but out of fear.
I question whether this last is actually a resolution of conflicting goods. It seems to me it is not a conviction on morals, but a pragmatic response to a horrible choice.
So, you focused on the deity. The deity is more likely to know what is good, given its incredible omni-characteristics.
The author is looking at it from the perspective of the individual. Yes, the individual could think that. Jeez, God oughta know. But, the individual is their either already on that deities side - so, cool a confirmation - or disagrees. He is using rape, or at least I am, to show that really we are still at square 1, despite the omni characteristics.
1) because the very nature we got from God - in most models of God/human relations - and we have conflicting goods
but more relevantly
2) because we are most likely not going to suddenly or even in the long run find rape morally good. (though we may go along for pragmatic not moral reasons).
3) the demiiurge issue: a) how would we know this is actually the final God. Perhaps it is a demiurge and the ultimate big Kahuna deity does not want us to follow the demiurge's confused morality. b) how do we know God is Good? What if we cannot view rape as good? what then?
And given that you mention fractured and fragmented regularly: wouldn't almost any decree and set of commandments from an allpowerful deity, especially if they were one who uses eternal punishiments leave you fractured and fragments, but simply, perhaps in a new, and very scary way? It certainly would me. For me the fragmentation would be worse, at least with the Abrahamic deities? Unless I was incredbily lucky and all the commandments and idea of what is good and bad fit me really well, I would now be fractured between what I feel in my gut is moral and what I need to do to avoid being tortured for all time.
And by the way, to be clear: I understand how it might seem and seem obvoius that avec God solves conflicting goods, but I think in general he is right: it is either unnecessary (for those already aligned with God's perfect morality or just creating new problems for those who are not aligned. It doesn't really resolve anything.
Further one might well be Eichmanns. Hitler has more advisors than I do. He is the leader. He has more information. Perhaps the Jews are really causing horrific problems and he, with his greater knowledge and access can see this. In any case, who I am to contradict the leader. I have a clear role, and heck I don't want to go to prison or be shot, so......that aint morality. Note I am not saying Eichman was bad, here. My focus is on the moral problem one has even avec God.
You approached the issue using deduction and an outside perspective.
He is approaching the issue in situ. What actually happens, here on the ground, when I get the message?