henry quirk wrote: ↑Fri Feb 27, 2026 1:30 am
And you really aren't in a better position as a deist. You can't get ALL of morality from deism. You need a moral judgement "if there is a God, I should follow the moral dictates of that God". As a deist, you believe the "if" part true, so the conclusion true, you should follow the moral dictates of God. But to get there you needed that one PRIOR moral judgement. Where did THAT come from?
As Flash points out in the slavery thread: I'm quite retarded. Mebbe you explain what you mean when you say I need one prior moral judgement cuz I'm not wrappin' my limited head around it.
Using God to justify morality is just kicking the can down the road.
If the objects in the world around us have physical properties such as height and weight, we don't ask God how tall our garden fence is, or how fat our wives are, we just measure one of them with a tape of some sort, and the other by sitting her on your face and seeing if she squashes your head. In other words, we have direct ways of finding out these properties, and the height of the fence is a known fact once it has been measured.
If moral properties are part of the world about us, we can look at the world about us and find out about them. If a tin of beans has the property of goodness, what is that goodness? How do we see it? We make up something based on whether it has niceness when we eat it, or healthiness when it comes into contact with out cholesterol or something. But goodness is something we don't seem able to discover.
An easy solution might be to ask God. Does God tell us that the beans are good, but leave it up to us to decide if the fence is more than 1.3m in height? Well, it seems we have a problem. God knows whether the fence is a certain height by refence to its physical properties, no? Ask God if your fence is 1.3m high and he's going to tell you the same thing the measuring tape does because he doesn't lie and the tape is telling you the measured facts. But how did God decide the beans were shit?
Does he just not enjoy beans? Is this merely the opinion of somebody whose opinion is only made important by him being the biggest person with the biggest opinions? Or does God examine the properties of the beans to discover goodness that is somehow impossible for us to know about?
So you either need to just tell everyone to shut up and take God's word for it about stuff and never think about how God finds out this information... which is the general idea of the thing Mike describes as
MikeNovack wrote: ↑Fri Feb 27, 2026 12:53 am
"if there is a God, I should follow the moral dictates of that God"
... or you need to have a metaphysics of morality. Something which describes how God finds out what is right and wrong. But you can't have "God says so" as the root for that. Nor will waffle about manifesting both the will and the nature of God in one and the same instance.
Fundamentally, you guys rely on a negative move. You argue that morality has to be perfect* or else it is nothing but garbage. And then you argue that atheists can't have perfect* moral knowledge, therefore they cannot have any moral reasoning because all uncertainty is randomness. And then you just claim God sort all that out for you. A handy little deus ex machina at the end of the story there.
*I don't know the full list, but this at least includes that it must be knowable, true, and consistent : if one asserts to know that slavery is always wrong it is wrong in any and all possible worlds and there is no slavery that is right under any circumstance in any possible world, excluded middles and so on.