CIN2 wrote: ↑Fri Apr 11, 2025 8:52 pm
I accept, of course, that it is possible to set up merely
valid arguments in support of the thesis that a deity creates moral values; that is not the issue between us.
Actually, that's exactly the issue between us.
My claims are actually very modest, if you understand them: they're that a religious worldview (of many kinds) can validate a moral system on the basis of its own worlview, even if it turns out the worldview of that religion fails to be true. In other words, there's nothing incoherent about speaking of Hindu morality, or Islamic morality, or Judaic morality, or Christian morality, or even pagan moralities of various kinds. Truth is not the issue: they can all do it.
Secularism cannot validate anything on the basis of its own worlview. My point is not merely that secularism fails this test because it's untrue (I've already pointed out that untrue worldview can pass the test); my point is that secularism cannot structure in a valid way any moral claim at all...even if secularism were true!
Get it yet? "Truthfulness" and "soundness" are not the issue. "Validity" alone is.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 8:31 pm
...their belief that Moo made women less valuable than men cannot be correct.
"Cannot"? What makes you say so?
The fact that I believe it to be impossible.
The fact that you, personally believe it's impossible means everybody else should agree it "cannot be correct"? I'm sorry, but the word of any one person, or one person's mere belief in something is clearly insufficient warrant to declare anything "impossible." You'll have to do better than that.
There must be some difference between men and women that could account for the difference in their value.
And there could be. Islamists, for example, believe that women are less valuable then men. They claim that it's because Allah is a male entity, and because women are naturally subservient. And they read a lot from the fact that women are smaller and weaker physically, and are more dependent because of things like their reproductive dependency period.
If those are the Islamists' arguments, what makes him wrong? Nothing in secularism helps make a different case.
But something like Christianity might. Christianity says that "neither is woman independent of man, nor is man independent of woman. For as the woman originated from the man, so also the man has his birth through the woman; and all things originate from God." It also says both man and women were equally created "in the image of God." So that would make them value-equal, despite the obvious differences in things like size, strength and so on.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 8:31 pm
...the issue is whether a deity can determine moral values.
Well, if a Supreme Being exists, whether Moo or otherwise, he certainly "can" do that, else he wouldn't be "supreme" at all.
If you are going to define 'supreme' in such a way that a being can only be called 'supreme' if he can set moral values, than you are effectively saying that a being can only be supreme if he can do the impossible.
It's not at all impossible, though. Even false religions can set their own moral values; it's only secularism that bogs down and dies at the validity stage.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 8:31 pm
I don't claim that secularism can determine moral values.
There it is. You're right.
I claim that moral values, if they exist at all (see * below) , are an emergent property of the natural world. Specifically, once you have the following:
1. beings capable of pleasure and/or pain
2. beings capable of intentionally giving other beings pleasure and/or pain
and
3. free will
then you automatically have morality, because you have beings who can freely decide to do pleasant or painful things to other beings, and that is the only way we know of that you can have morality.
If it's just human beings who are deciding then their "morality" is a Nietzschean fake. There's nothing authoritative behind it. Psychopaths and Sociopaths find the pain of others pleasurable, and masochists find their own pain pleasant: what it there in secularism that justifies stopping them and preferring your own view?
* Since I don't believe that there is such a thing as free will, I don't believe there is in fact any such thing as morality. It's a fantasy.
That's a separate point, of course; but if you really believed there's no free will, why are you arguing? According to Determinism, arguing is just the product of whatever the speaker was pre-programmed to believe, and is unrelated to facts, logic, arguments or truth. So there could be nothing more futile than arguing, when both the arguer and the listener are merely
predetermined to believe whatever they end up believing.
It follows from this that if the Creator's purpose is to create a universe in which people suffer as much pain as possible, then habitual and deliberate torture would be morally good in that universe.
That's what we call a "hypothetical." The problem with a hypothetical case like that is twofold: one, it's not how things really are, and 2) it's actually not possible to know what the outcome of the phony situation would be.
And none of what you say here constitutes an explanation of how God creates moral values.
That's easy.
He is both the Creator and the Judge of what morality is. Morality, if such exists, was created by none other. None other can say what its purpose and nature are, nor what He created it for. As the ultimate Originator and Final Authority in the universe, God is the source, if you want to believe in any objective morality at all.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 8:31 pm
Certainly, no contingent being, like humans, say, would be in a better position to speak on that topic. That's surely obvious.
There is no reason why the Creator of a universe should be morally superior to the beings in the universe he has created.
Actually, there is. There's a principle in science that says that any cause must be sufficient to have produced the effect attributed to it. So, for example, if a thousand-pound square rock is moved fifty yards, then
dynamite,
gravity and
earthquake are possible causal explanations: but
bird
and
toddler weightlifter are not.
If objective morality exists, then whatever produced that objective morality must be sufficient to the effect attributed to it. You can only choose from among those causal explanations capable of performing the task.
Supreme Being is certainly in, and
human and
secularism are clearly out, if for no other reason than that both are contingent.
We are on the verge of being able to create robots that act in the same way as humans. Are we bound to be morally superior to those robots? Of course not.
Of course we are. The robots are bound to be amoral: they'll only be capable of responding to their programming, even if we make that programming randomized. Morality will never enter their circuits. If we program them to be limited to what we consider "good," they will be; if we program them for things we imagine to be "bad," they will be. But neither way will they have any choice. They won't be moral about either.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 8:31 pm
P.S. -- To be frank, this argument is so easy to win that I can even do it while conceding every one of your objections.
An argument is only won when both sides agree that it's won...[/quote]
Well, no: that's actually not how it works. An argument is effectively won when logic is offered that cannot be refuted, whether the losing side is willing to admit it or not, actually. One cannot go farther, because people are quite capable of simply becoming intransigent and irrational, if they don't want to hear the truth. I trust you're not of that sort, though.
But let us see. I put a challenge to you, and you can refute me so, so easily: just
demonstrate that secularism can serve as justification for one moral precept. Just one. Any one.
Go ahead.