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Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 3:01 am
by MikeNovack
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jun 04, 2026 10:12 pm
You are also using presumptions about what this God wants to do, intends,
This isn't true, but it has nothing to do with the question anyway. So I could grant it to you for argument's sake, and stilll, you've said nothing to the point.

The question is about what secularism can warrant by its own lights, regardless of what somebody else can or cannot do.
No, the question at THIS POINT is not about "secularism". It is about a BELIEVER in deity, just not a deity inclined towards being as "hands on" as you picture deity being. I will admit to an ulterior motive. I think you will end up having the same objection about "then no basis for morality" (as you do with the secularist). But that will mean your objection is not really about what you think the secularist cannot do, but what you think nobody can do whether a secularist OR a believer in deity unless they believe in the same sort of "hands on" deity as you do. Unless they believe in YOUR GOD (a god with the properties you believe God to have).

Plenty of believers would consider it presumptuous to decide what properties God does or does not have, what God wants or does not want. Or they might have beliefs about those things, just not the same as you do.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 4:09 am
by Immanuel Can
MikeNovack wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 3:01 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jun 04, 2026 10:12 pm
You are also using presumptions about what this God wants to do, intends,
This isn't true, but it has nothing to do with the question anyway. So I could grant it to you for argument's sake, and stilll, you've said nothing to the point.

The question is about what secularism can warrant by its own lights, regardless of what somebody else can or cannot do.
No, the question at THIS POINT is not about "secularism".
Yeah, it is...and only about that.

You want to switch away for this reason: that you have no answer. But that makes you the same as every other person who tries to do it. It cannot be done.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 9:44 am
by Iwannaplato
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue May 26, 2026 1:12 am
MikeNovack wrote: Tue May 26, 2026 1:03 amBUT FOR THE MOMENT. IC, explain.
a) If your moral system is valid because it is dictated by a god. what standing do you assign the moral systems dictated by other gods (to the believers of those gods? Do you understand this question? I am not a Christian but a person familiar with many religions and their moral teachings.
Asked and answered. See my last post on the other site.
What other site?

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 2:53 pm
by MikeNovack
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 4:09 am
MikeNovack wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 3:01 am
No, the question at THIS POINT is not about "secularism".
Yeah, it is...and only about that.

You want to switch away for this reason: that you have no answer. But that makes you the same as every other person who tries to do it. It cannot be done.
You insist the secularists can't do this because they don't believe in any god/gods.

I am saying NOT because they don't believe in any god/gods but because they don't believe in any god/gods with the interests, proclivities, etc. of god as pictured by Christians. Yes of course that would be the case for the secularists since if they believe in no god/gods won't be believing in god/gods as pictured by Christians. But so would all the theists whose understanding of what god/gods want or do is different from as pictured by Christians.

So this is not secularist vs theist difference. It is secularist plus general case theist vs specific case theist.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 3:07 pm
by Immanuel Can
MikeNovack wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 2:53 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 4:09 am
MikeNovack wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 3:01 am
No, the question at THIS POINT is not about "secularism".
Yeah, it is...and only about that.

You want to switch away for this reason: that you have no answer. But that makes you the same as every other person who tries to do it. It cannot be done.
You insist the secularists can't do this because they don't believe in any god/gods.
I don't say anything about that. I just ask secularists to show, with reference to nothing but their secularism, how they can justify imposing any moral duty, obligation, law, precept or requirement on anybody, including themselves. And they can't seem to do it.

That's really telling. And that's the only point to be made here. You can do the rest of the deduction yourself, without my help.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 4:24 pm
by FlashDangerpants
Some of you guys need to rethink what you are trying to do. When IC is asking "Can you make it a duty, an "ought" or obligatory to have a "feeling"?" he's requiring moral absolutism.

If you are not a moral absolutist, you don't need to have any single obligatory "ought" for all people and he is mistaken in demanding it of you. He has no argument to share that says you are wrong here, he can only tell you about a rumour that he is in posession of such an argument.

If you are a secular moral absolutist, then just offer something to fulfil his demand. The easiest option there is that it is morally required in all circumstances to view others as ends in themselves rather than as a means to ends of your own. Just borrow from Kant if you are out of ideas of your own.

But if you have any chops at all, you should be able to argue that every moral agent is required to act in accord with his/her own conscience is no less valid than any claim that all people are required to act in accord with the conscience of their creator.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 5:22 pm
by MikeNovack
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 3:07 pm
I don't say anything about that. I just ask secularists to show, with reference to nothing but their secularism, how they can justify imposing any moral duty, obligation, law, precept or requirement on anybody, including themselves. And they can't seem to do it.

That's really telling. And that's the only point to be made here. You can do the rest of the deduction yourself, without my help.
Why secularists? Why are you not making the same demand of those who believe in god/gods (just not a deity concerned about the behavior of humans)

"I just ask believers in god/gods to show, with reference to nothing but their belief in god/gods, how they can justify imposing any moral duty, obligation, law, precept or requirement on anybody, including themselves. And they can't seem to do it."

JUST belief in god/gods does not imply belief in a deity who is the least bit interested in handing out orders to humans or monitoring their behavior. THAT is the key point. It's not belief in god/gods that gets to your source of morality but belief in God with specific interest in handing our moral directives and monitoring human behavior.

Your more proper division is not believers in deity vs non-believers in deity but believers in a specific description of deity vs non-believers in a deity OF THAT DESCRIPTION. Yes of course, non-believers of any deity would fall in that latter category but so would many believers.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 5:43 pm
by Immanuel Can
MikeNovack wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 5:22 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 3:07 pm
I don't say anything about that. I just ask secularists to show, with reference to nothing but their secularism, how they can justify imposing any moral duty, obligation, law, precept or requirement on anybody, including themselves. And they can't seem to do it.

That's really telling. And that's the only point to be made here. You can do the rest of the deduction yourself, without my help.
Why secularists?
Why not? I don't absent my own views from critical scrutiny...and Atheists wouldn't grant me to do that, even if I were to try. But why is secularism supposed to be immune from critical examination? I see no reason why it shouldn't live up to the sorts of tests it demands of others.
JUST belief in god/gods...
That's not secularism. It has no relevance to the question. Ever were it true that no religious theory could ground morality, it would still be true that secularism can't. And then we'd all, logically speaking, have to become amoral, if that's what you prefer. I doubt it is.

But that argument wouldn't save secularism from its own internal problems, precisely because they are internal to secularism. No criticism of anybody else will change it one iota. It's secularism we're talking about right now, though I sense your desperation to pull in the irrelevant, so we'll stop having to look at what we can plainly see before us -- namely that secularism grounds no morality.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2026 11:10 pm
by thomyum2
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 9:57 pm We all have to begin with a kind of personal commitment to set of beliefs. That is as true for the secularist as the religious or ideological person. The secularist has to assume something like, "The material world is all that really exists," perhaps, or "The current state of the world is the result of an unguided, directionless, progressive evolution initiated by a cosmic explosion." Whatever he chooses, it's going to be something he hasn't proved -- he wasn't around to see whatever started this little show, nor were scientific instruments in place to record it. He's going to have to say, "This is what people I respect have told me happened, and I have chosen to believe them." That's an act of faith, just as much as the religious person who says, "This world looks to me to have the hallmarks of Creation in it." Neither can manufacture absolute proof; rather, they operate by some sort of indicative evidence, plus faith.

So our first question to form a first premise would be something like, "Do we live in a world that is more likely to have been created by an Intelligence, or in the kind of accident-plus-time world that is supposed in most current secular accounts? And the answer to that question is going to delimit what kind of deductions can be made from the evidence around us, from which we form our second premise.

If the world has been created by God, we would expect certain features: order, of course, and complexity, of course...but also intelligibility and plan...even things like a teleological purpose or an inherent meaning to the creation. There would logically be a divine intention for such a world, and one could get that intention right or wrong...which would suggest we look for truth, and also for meaning, and something like morality, as well. But that would be a deduction from that first premise, of course. A different premise yields different expectations.

If the world was the product of a cosmic happenstance or accident of some kind, what we should expect changes. It would be surprising to find order and complexity coming out of a pure accident like the Big Bang, say. But if they are observable, we'd need a secular explanation. It would be even more surprising to find out this order was intelligible to some particular beings accidentally created. But maybe we can find an explanation for that, too. What we would know not to expect would be any teleological purpose or meaning: accidents, happenstances, explosions in the cosmos do not impart or imply meaning or a particular direction to what's here. It would be surprising to think that a cosmic explosion, or a black hole, or an impersonal other such thing "intended" anything by our being here. And truth...well, how would we know that truth was a thing we should seek, if being deluded was more comforting? And as for morality -- and here's the cruncher -- how would we ever expect an accidental universe to contain such realities as some things that are to be understood as "right" and others that are to be understood as "wrong"? It's just not the kind of thing one expects from an accident.
thomyum2 wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 7:51 pmThat is the case whether one is religious or secular. Reason enters the picture not to create the foundation, but only to derive the precepts or specifics of the moral code once the foundation is established.
Right. But the first premises, the first principles, are quite different, and they imply quite different entailments. I submit to you that a secularist has no reasonable expectation of there being any such thing as morality, on the basis of the worldview he declares he believes in as his first premise.
Hello again IC, it’s been another week and I’m finally able to sit down and put together some thoughts. I appreciate your patience and also that you’re interested in continuing to work through some of these ideas. Our discussion is becoming a little and cumbersome to format, so rather than bring it all forward, I’m just going to list some of my thoughts on a few of the ideas. On the whole, it seems to me we probably agree about more things here than we don’t, but I still feel there’s some things I’d like to put down in writing, as well as others I'm still thinking about.

Let me start with your very last quote which I think sums up well your full position:
The secularist may behave morally -- as indeed, many do -- but he cannot derive any warrant for his belief in morality from his own first principles. And so his commitment to morality cannot become durable or well-founded. At some point, he'll find that he's free to disbelieve in it entirely, as Nietzsche found.
To start with, I’m in complete agreement with your argument that within the worldview that you call an ‘accidental’ or ‘happenstance’ universe, that there’s no sound logical reason to believe in an objective morality. I do recognize a fundamental incompatibility of a hard belief in this kind of world with an idea of right or wrong that is anything more than just subjective opinions.

But part of where I disagree is that you’re attributing atheism and materialism in a generalized way to all secularists. In my experience, more people who consider themselves ‘secularists’ are closer to being agnostic on both of these questions. And I also think that many people adopt metaphysical positions in the same way that science adopts theories – that they are more often held because they are seen as the ‘best available explanation given the information I have at the moment’ – rather than committed beliefs. So these kinds of worldviews differ from those of faith in that they are not always a deeply held commitment to a particular belief as much as they are a ‘working hypothesis’ that serves a more pragmatic purpose, and as such are much more readily subject to revision. I’ve actually found most secular people to be pretty open minded about alternative ways of looking at the world (although from what is argued in many philosophy forum posts, one certainly gets the impression that’s not the case. 😊 )

Another point I’d offer for consideration is that in logic and philosophy we tend to think in linear terms, such as that metaphysical positions act as ‘first principles’ from which all others, including moral principles, are derived. But is that necessarily so, or just due to the way we conceptualize the world? In terms of how human thought develops, it doesn’t seem to me to be how most people operate. I think that moral sense is something that develops very early in life with the infant’s recognition that other persons have real being and are not just objects in their world (which I think is also is why morality is so deeply held by people in general), whereas metaphysical worldviews evolve more gradually during the course of education and experience, and reflection, and are perhaps for this reason also more malleable and subject to revision than basic moral convictions. So, counterintuitive though it may appear, it seems to me that it is reason that drives change to metaphysics out of moral first principles, rather than the other way around. For example, I’ve noticed that even the most hard-core materialists still acknowledge the existence of other people, and treat them as such, even while their worldview should be telling them that those persons are nothing more than a mindless collection of atoms, which suggests to me that this sense of the personhood of others endures even when a seemingly contradictory metaphysical position is taken.

This might be more a question of human psychology rather than philosophy, but in fact, I think there’s a lot of philosophical support for the idea that morality is a step towards metaphysics rather than the reverse. I’ve read that Kant definitely felt this way, that the ‘duty within’ points us toward the recognition of the existence of a greater being. And certainly also Kierkegaard, whose ‘Stages on Life’s Way’ – the Aesthetic, followed by the Moral, finally leading to the Religious – each stage points to the next.

So all this is part of why I struggle with the question you ask several times: what makes the secularist obligated to assume these moral principles? I think that the sense of right and wrong is so deeply imbedded, and connected to daily human experience in all of our interactions with our community, that it is always first and foremost – this is why I say it is ‘self-evident’ for most people and forms a stronger foundation or first principle than does any other component of metaphysical worldview which is more readily changed or revised if found wanting. Morality is connected to people we have to live and get along with every day - metaphysics is something more abstract and intellectual and doesn't demand our attention as much (unless you're a philosopher :)).

Your quote here stands out:
I'm concerned that, for the secularist, no rationale connects their present actions with their first principles. It seems obvious to me that when they really start to believe their own first principles, they will find there is no reason at all for them to feel obligated to persist in believing in any particular morality, rights or responsibilities; and when incentives are big enough, they will have no reason not to abandon such beliefs immediately. And I don't think that bodes well for the future.
I think that I do understand your point here, the ‘incentives’ that you mention – we might also call them ‘temptations’ – do compete with our moral directives and a person needs to be well equipped to recognize them as such in order to properly resist them. But isn’t this an issue for everyone, not just secularists? Haven’t we seen just as many people through history who profess a religious faith also compromise it and rationalize some of the worst kinds of immoral behavior? Why did their worldview fail to rescue them?

In spite of all the wrongdoings that get so much air play in the news, I think there are many more who would hold fast to their principles than the ones who don’t. In fact, I believe that many people who might call themselves ‘secular’ lead a more morally upright life than I myself do, so can only ask ‘who am I to judge?’ if I do not happen to share their worldview.

Aquinas, in the opening of the Summa, shares the insight that “the truth about God such as reason could discover, would only be known by a few, and that after a long time, and with the admixture of many errors…. Therefore, in order that the salvation of men might be brought about more fitly and more surely, it was necessary that they should be taught divine truths by divine revelation.” I interpret this as saying that although reason has its place, it may not be the best tool for most people. And similar, I tend to see the moral sentiment that reaches and is shared by so many as a hopeful sign that God is at work in, and revealing Himself, to everyone, even those who don’t profess a faith or who are not able to produce carefully reasoned arguments for how they live.

I’ll wrap up by mentioning an additional area that I'm questioning. I see your point that adopting the belief that God exists (the metaphysical question) may help tell us why I should take morality seriously, but it doesn’t immediately answer the question of how we should live our life or act in a given situation (the moral/ethical question). That gap leads in turn a lot of other questions and assumptions that must be made in order to move forward from there. Even if we believe that there is an objective right and wrong that is given to us by a higher power and that we have a duty to consider in making my choices of how to act and live, I still rely on some form of guidance to inform help inform that choice. So to what authority do we turn to for that answer, e.g. to which scriptures, or to whose interpretations of those scriptures, to which church or authority within the church, and to what extent can we rely on our own conscience even when the authority seems to tell us that our conscience is in error, etc.? I think these are moral challenges faced by both secularists and theists alike. In short, how do you think we can traverse that gap from a metaphysical principle to specific moral precepts that are universal?

You’ve said quite beautifully that “conscience, when it's functioning aright, is the faculty God has given all of us to sense the requirements of the universal moral law.” So I ask, in light of what I’ve just said about discerning moral principles, what do you understand the ‘universal moral law’ to be? Is it something we can articulate in words, or is it something ineffable that dwells within us? I’m curious to hear your thoughts.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Sat Jun 06, 2026 2:13 pm
by Immanuel Can
I'm going to clip off our earlier conversation, just for the sake of shortening the space here, if I may. It is, of course, located above, for anybody who is tracking with us.

I'm finding your comments very stimulating and useful. Thanks for taking the time for the conversation. I'll keep the entirety of your remarks recorded below, so as to be sure to cover everything that is your concern, so much as I can.
thomyum2 wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 11:10 pm Hello again IC, it’s been another week and I’m finally able to sit down and put together some thoughts. I appreciate your patience and also that you’re interested in continuing to work through some of these ideas. Our discussion is becoming a little and cumbersome to format, so rather than bring it all forward, I’m just going to list some of my thoughts on a few of the ideas. On the whole, it seems to me we probably agree about more things here than we don’t, but I still feel there’s some things I’d like to put down in writing, as well as others I'm still thinking about.
Good. Let's go.
Let me start with your very last quote which I think sums up well your full position:
The secularist may behave morally -- as indeed, many do -- but he cannot derive any warrant for his belief in morality from his own first principles. And so his commitment to morality cannot become durable or well-founded. At some point, he'll find that he's free to disbelieve in it entirely, as Nietzsche found.
To start with, I’m in complete agreement with your argument that within the worldview that you call an ‘accidental’ or ‘happenstance’ universe, that there’s no sound logical reason to believe in an objective morality. I do recognize a fundamental incompatibility of a hard belief in this kind of world with an idea of right or wrong that is anything more than just subjective opinions.
Right. And "subjective," in respect to morality...to understand the fatal flaw in that idea, we have to go back to what we look to morality to do for us.

When do we refer to morality? You'll note it's never when what I want and what I should do are exactly the same thing. For instance, if I have money for ice cream, and I want ice cream, I can have it: I don't ask myself, "is it okay for me to buy this ice cream?" However, if I were fat, or had no money, or was stealing, or for some other reason had a hesitancy about buying the ice cream, I would have to ask myself whether or not it was moral for me to be getting the ice cream. So it's when my wishes and the right thing are at variance that morality is supposed to do some work for me, and tell me what my final action should be. Otherwise, I don't even need it.

But this is where subjectivism gets its first problem: because "subjective" often simply means, "what I want to think," or "what I want to do." Subjectivism is, if nothing else, personal, individual, and private -- that's why people like it, because it affords them total freedom in choosing their own values. But it's personal in a bad sense, too, in the sense that it obligates nobody...not even me, really, since I can choose to change my subjective wishes any time I want. Subjective morality cannot be binding, obligatory, required of me...and hence, it really has no justification to be constraining any of my wishes.

"Maybe it doesn't need to," we might say. But if so, exactly what work is morality doing for me? How is it helping me form right decisions, since impulse, instinct or desire are not being contradicted by it? So Subjectivism is failing to inform me of anything. It's not telling me what's "right"; and if that's what I really want to know, I've lost my moral compass.

"Maybe morality doesn't need to do any work," we might reply. But I don't think we can say that, can we? After all, human beings DO look to moral axioms for all sorts of needs, both personal and social. Of course, we're looking to morality to inform our own personal choices; that's already been said. But what else? How about our social relations with others? Is not one of the things we look to morality to do to tell us what kind of respect or duty we owe to neighbours? And beyond that, don't we use it to guide the ethics of institutions of various kinds? And don't we need it desperately in questions of justice, whether informally or in a formal justice system? In the extreme, how do we explain to ourselves that we incarcerate murderers, who are only acting on their subjective impulses, and reward those who save lives with medals and honours? Such decisions have serious social implications: and this brings us to a second fatal flaw in moral subjectivism: it cannot guide our social relations.

If we all had exactly the same moral conscience, we could, perhaps rely on that. But it's clear that conscience, however universal it might be thought to be, is deficient in psychopaths and sociopaths. But even more critically, it tends to be informed and reshaped -- as you later seem to point out -- by things like acculturation and training. So that a person who mass-murders in Boston is thought to be evil, but one who shoots up a theatre in France genuinely supposes he's obtaining eternal bliss and 72 virgins. How are we to arbitrate such extreme cultural oppositions, if morality is merely subjective? Can we be sure the terrorist is not subjectively convinced of his moral position? How did we arrive at that conviction?

In short, morality is supposed to do a lot of important things for us: not just to guide my personal decisions, but to structure my whole society and inform my entire conception of justice. And those concepts are not mine alone; they're socially-shared and socially-harmonious concepts, in that I need to be able to persuade my fellow citizens of their rightness, so that laws and social relations are as they ought to be.

Can Subjective morality do these things for us? No, because its fatal flaw is that it is limited to the private and the personal, and does not have any impartiality from my personal agenda and impulses. Subjectivism, we might rightly observe, is not genuinely moral at all: that is, it doesn't do anything we look to morality to do for us. It turns us loose, and gives us no guidance.
But part of where I disagree is that you’re attributing atheism and materialism in a generalized way to all secularists. In my experience, more people who consider themselves ‘secularists’ are closer to being agnostic on both of these questions.
I think that's true. It's not always admitted by them, to be sure; but I think it's the case for anybody rational. After all, the hard Atheist position ("I know there is no God") is not intellectually or scientifically tenable. So the only alternative for a rational and honest thinker is going to be something softer, some form of agnosticism.

But "agnostic" really only means, "I don't know anything (about X)." While that might be an honest thing to admit, it's not particularly laudable if one should know something, is it? And should we know something about God's existence? Theists suggest we should, from various evidences. Since we, as agnostics, are admitting to having no information, how do we know they're wrong?

Sometimes agnosticism even tips over into an untenable conclusion: "I don't know anything about God, and you can't either." But how would we decide that we, who don't know, can know that others are not permitted to know what we fail to know? There can be no justification for such a sudden flash of certainty interrupting our agnosticism: would we not have to stop at the more sensible point of saying, "I don't know; but maybe, possibly, somebody else does"?
And I also think that many people adopt metaphysical positions in the same way that science adopts theories – that they are more often held because they are seen as the ‘best available explanation given the information I have at the moment’ – rather than committed beliefs.
Yes, I think that's right.
So these kinds of worldviews differ from those of faith in that they are not always a deeply held commitment to a particular belief as much as they are a ‘working hypothesis’ that serves a more pragmatic purpose, and as such are much more readily subject to revision. I’ve actually found most secular people to be pretty open minded about alternative ways of looking at the world (although from what is argued in many philosophy forum posts, one certainly gets the impression that’s not the case. 😊 )
Just one problem: life does not stop when we don't know things. We still have to make our own decisions, live in a society, structure a justice system, and even make judgements of international and cross-cultural moral evaluation, regardless of our agnosticism. Life does not have a pause button, and will not spare us from making decisions while we figure things out. This is precisely why we often have to go forward on partial information, as you put it, on "the best available explanation given the information I have at the moment." And that is precisely what faith is, actually: it's the extension of the best available information into the more uncertain zone of future action.

So faith inevitably returns. And agnosticism, like Moral Subjectivism, does not provide us with the information we need in order to obtain the desired certainties. In fact, agnosticism doesn't provide us with anything, really. To "not know" is a useless first premise in any syllogism. We can't build any conclusions from it, except that we're not yet emotionally or cognitively ready to act...and yet, we still have to act. So we end up committing on exactly what you suggest: "the best...we have at the moment." That's just how all of life works.
Another point I’d offer for consideration is that in logic and philosophy we tend to think in linear terms, such as that metaphysical positions act as ‘first principles’ from which all others, including moral principles, are derived. But is that necessarily so, or just due to the way we conceptualize the world? In terms of how human thought develops, it doesn’t seem to me to be how most people operate. I think that moral sense is something that develops very early in life with the infant’s recognition that other persons have real being and are not just objects in their world (which I think is also is why morality is so deeply held by people in general), whereas metaphysical worldviews evolve more gradually during the course of education and experience, and reflection, and are perhaps for this reason also more malleable and subject to revision than basic moral convictions. So, counterintuitive though it may appear, it seems to me that it is reason that drives change to metaphysics out of moral first principles, rather than the other way around. For example, I’ve noticed that even the most hard-core materialists still acknowledge the existence of other people, and treat them as such, even while their worldview should be telling them that those persons are nothing more than a mindless collection of atoms, which suggests to me that this sense of the personhood of others endures even when a seemingly contradictory metaphysical position is taken.
I think this is astute. But does it really indicate that metaphysical knowledge is founded on something more intuitive and taught later in life?

Procedurally, developmentally and chronologically, I think you're correct: we first learn morals, then learn reasons and justifications for them in later life, if we pursue further understanding. But in rational order, metaphysics still is primary. It may not be the order in which we discover things, but it's the order in which rational justification is eventually established in our minds, because logically, rationally, conclusions have to be supported by sufficient premises.

Michael Polanyi, the great philosopher and epistemologist, makes a wonderful case for this in Personal Knowledge, his magnum opus. Most of what we learn in life, we learn not by rational knowing of the premises, but by a kind of "apprenticeship" to others, who teach us the conclusions by rote, long before we understand the premises which make the conclusions rational.

He gives the example of riding a bike. How many of us know the physics of bicycle wheels? Hardly anybody, actually. The dynamics of repeated oscillations on curves (wheels) are obscure to almost everybody who rides a bicycle -- that it's a series of "falling" motions, accelerated by the differential radii of the bottom of each wheel and the sides of the same wheel, that's all unknown to the kid learning to ride a bike. He may never have any understanding of it, but still ride his bike very successfully.

But does that mean that the physics is not the reason his bike works? NO. It just means his level of understanding is very limited, and the truth of the physics is something that would have to be explained in detail to him. Bike riding is still made possible only by the physics. And without the truth of the physics, there would be no bike riding.

In the same way, a person may be trained into morality long before he comes to understand the metaphysics behind that morality. However, the existence of the morality is still dependent on some tacit or personal knowledge, a having-been-apprenticed to something one has not yet understood. So one can morally "travel" for years, in complete ignorance of the whys and wherefores. Still, a proper understanding of morality is always premised on a metaphysics; and those who are able to make this metaphysics visible, conscious and relevant are ahead of all those who cannot. For it is quite possible to be founding one's moral convictions (as taught by one's parents, say) on nothing. It's even possible to be wildly wrong or immoral, based on ignorance of the underlying metaphysics.

In short, when we see a house, we often do not see the foundation. It's below ground. Yet without the foundation, the house is not stable, and can easily fall. So we need to know the metaphysical foundations are in place, before we build our moral "house," or insist that the moral "house" into which we have been born is the right one.
This might be more a question of human psychology rather than philosophy, but in fact, I think there’s a lot of philosophical support for the idea that morality is a step towards metaphysics rather than the reverse.
As I say, developmentally, that would be correct: however, rationally, it would be reversed.
I’ve read that Kant definitely felt this way, that the ‘duty within’ points us toward the recognition of the existence of a greater being. And certainly also Kierkegaard, whose ‘Stages on Life’s Way’ – the Aesthetic, followed by the Moral, finally leading to the Religious – each stage points to the next.
Christians believe that conscience is actually a universal possession: all of us have one, and if it's functioning rightly, it points us to the universal moral truth -- unfortunately, it's also now a vulnerable detector, and can be distorted by immoral training, obstinacy, callousness through abuse, and other such things, so it cannot be universally trusted. Hence, the need for recourse to fixed and stable codes of morals and ethics, since they, at least, do not change merely on our whims or impulses.
So all this is part of why I struggle with the question you ask several times: what makes the secularist obligated to assume these moral principles? I think that the sense of right and wrong is so deeply imbedded, and connected to daily human experience in all of our interactions with our community, that it is always first and foremost – this is why I say it is ‘self-evident’ for most people and forms a stronger foundation or first principle than does any other component of metaphysical worldview which is more readily changed or revised if found wanting. Morality is connected to people we have to live and get along with every day - metaphysics is something more abstract and intellectual and doesn't demand our attention as much (unless you're a philosopher :)).
Yes, I agree. The sense of right and wrong is deeply embedded, thought conscience. But it's not always trustworthy, because that sense, that intuition, is corruptible and misleadable, at least in individual human beings.
Your quote here stands out:
I'm concerned that, for the secularist, no rationale connects their present actions with their first principles. It seems obvious to me that when they really start to believe their own first principles, they will find there is no reason at all for them to feel obligated to persist in believing in any particular morality, rights or responsibilities; and when incentives are big enough, they will have no reason not to abandon such beliefs immediately. And I don't think that bodes well for the future.
I think that I do understand your point here, the ‘incentives’ that you mention – we might also call them ‘temptations’ – do compete with our moral directives and a person needs to be well equipped to recognize them as such in order to properly resist them. But isn’t this an issue for everyone, not just secularists? Haven’t we seen just as many people through history who profess a religious faith also compromise it and rationalize some of the worst kinds of immoral behavior? Why did their worldview fail to rescue them?
Well, I would suggest that the cause is not hard to find: knowing the right thing, and choosing to do it...those are quite different things, aren't they?

Knowing the reasons, the premises of one's moral convictions is one thing. Caring, obeying, following through...those things require more than knowledge. Christianity has a unique solution for that problem, actually, and if we end up discussing that, we can go there. But for now, let me just say that one of most clearly-established claims in Scripture is that not everybody who says "I love God" or "I am a good person" is telling the truth when they say it. Some are just looking for an angle.
In spite of all the wrongdoings that get so much air play in the news, I think there are many more who would hold fast to their principles than the ones who don’t. In fact, I believe that many people who might call themselves ‘secular’ lead a more morally upright life than I myself do, so can only ask ‘who am I to judge?’ if I do not happen to share their worldview.
"Hold fast to their principles," you say? But is that enough?

What are those "principles"? Does that not matter to ask? What if my "principle" is that if I meet infidels on the battlefield, I should kill them? What if my principle is that I should not deny myself any pleasure I desire, no matter what the cost to anybody else? What if my principle is that the most powerful, merciless and cruel should prevail and rule in any given situation? All these things have been suggested as "principles" by various people and cultures: so how is the mere having of a "principle" a good indicator of a person being in proper moral order?

So the content matters. One needs not just "a principle," but "a right principle." To discern that, we're again going to have to have criteria, and the metaphysics return as a serious consideration.
Aquinas, in the opening of the Summa, shares the insight that “the truth about God such as reason could discover, would only be known by a few, and that after a long time, and with the admixture of many errors…. Therefore, in order that the salvation of men might be brought about more fitly and more surely, it was necessary that they should be taught divine truths by divine revelation.” I interpret this as saying that although reason has its place, it may not be the best tool for most people. And similar, I tend to see the moral sentiment that reaches and is shared by so many as a hopeful sign that God is at work in, and revealing Himself, to everyone, even those who don’t profess a faith or who are not able to produce carefully reasoned arguments for how they live.
Ah, very good.

This is the necessity of revelation. Let us be perfectly humble and honest, if we can: if God has not revealed anything about morality to us, how would we ever know it? By conscience? But then, that conscience also has to be instilled in us by our Creator, or how would we know to trust it? Some assumption about the revelation of universal morality is going to have to be taken here, because as I said earlier, we cannot put off action. Life goes on. So we're going to have to make a step of faith. For even to do nothing is, in many cases, a moral position: for example, to do nothing for my neighbour is still (arguably) to harm him, seeing as I have a duty to my neighbour -- do I not? So I can't sit on this decision: I'm going to have to assume the essential moral revelation comes from somewhere and something, and shape my life around that kind of assumptive paradigm...even if I have no conscious grasp of it. My life will not wait for me to be willing to think.

So either I can make it conscious now, by doing philosophy, and thereby reassure myself that my beliefs are well-founded, or I can persist in guessing -- and error, perhaps. And my suggestion is that it's better to make it all conscious.
I’ll wrap up by mentioning an additional area that I'm questioning. I see your point that adopting the belief that God exists (the metaphysical question) may help tell us why I should take morality seriously, but it doesn’t immediately answer the question of how we should live our life or act in a given situation (the moral/ethical question). That gap leads in turn a lot of other questions and assumptions that must be made in order to move forward from there.
That is true: we have not yet discussed the particulars of any possible objective or universal moral code. But that's not really a problem, if we're prepared to do so later.

For the moment, the urgency is merely to establish that SOME sort of metaphysical grounding is essential to moral knowledge, and that we're better to know what it is, rather than to stumble forward in blindness.
Even if we believe that there is an objective right and wrong that is given to us by a higher power and that we have a duty to consider in making my choices of how to act and live, I still rely on some form of guidance to inform help inform that choice. So to what authority do we turn to for that answer, e.g. to which scriptures, or to whose interpretations of those scriptures, to which church or authority within the church, and to what extent can we rely on our own conscience even when the authority seems to tell us that our conscience is in error, etc.? I think these are moral challenges faced by both secularists and theists alike. In short, how do you think we can traverse that gap from a metaphysical principle to specific moral precepts that are universal?
Aquinas says, "by revelation," of course. That is, we'll have to make a faith commitment about which moral code potentially is harmonious with the divine intention.

In Judaism, the answer is the same. There are 10 big commandments, plus, according to the rabbis, 613 others. I don't know if the numbering is right, but let's go with that. That's a fair bit of moral guidance to work with, of course. In mystical, gnostic, Hindu or Buddhist terms, "enlightenment" of some kind, proceeding from some divine initiator is substituted. Among pagans, the deliverances of the witch-doctor or shaman is taken to offer the same sort of information. And I have a lot more to say about all that, but we've gone on long enough. For now, let's just stop at the point that we accept the necessity of some communication from God to man on that point, or we'll all be up a creek without a paddle.
You’ve said quite beautifully that “conscience, when it's functioning aright, is the faculty God has given all of us to sense the requirements of the universal moral law.” So I ask, in light of what I’ve just said about discerning moral principles, what do you understand the ‘universal moral law’ to be? Is it something we can articulate in words, or is it something ineffable that dwells within us? I’m curious to hear your thoughts.
Is it an either-or? Or a both-and?

We've already said there's some faculty with in us, which we call "conscience" that has at least a rough sensitivity to the moral law. But that sense has to be corrected sometimes, by reference to something more stable. So I think we're still going to need some kind of a fixed code, to start with: Subjectivism won't give it to us. But beyond the fixed code, is there more? I think there is.

Behind every law there is a spirit of that law. What I mean is that if we have a precept like, "Thou shalt not murder," we can justifiably ask a question like, "Why not?" And there should be an answer, one that fills out the attitude that would induce us to recognize murder as universally wrong, and perhaps to recognize other, related actions as equally wrong.

John Locke suggested that this principle is the inherent God-ownership of every man. That each person is created by God, and intended for God's purposes, and must give an account of his life to God, means that those who deprive others of the opportunity to do so are acting against God, said Locke.

That's not bad. But I think it's less complete than it should be. I would ground the precept, "Thou shalt not commit murder" in the fact that, as Genesis says, man was made "in the image of God." That is, the human purpose is to reflect the moral glory of his Creator, and eventually to enter into harmonious relationship with God -- a goal toward which a moral code is an indicator, if only a partial one. Murder is wrong because, as Locke suggested, it interferes with the divine purposes for that individual, and also interferes with His purposes for me, since it makes me into an "ungodly" person when I murder. Thus, murder is unharmonious with the nature and purposes of God.

But all this is to open up a big can of worms, and we've gone on long enough. Thanks for your feedback: most interesting.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Sat Jun 06, 2026 3:56 pm
by MikeNovack
I think at least part of the problem is seeing "subjective" as "free to be anything/otherwise" is not understanding the implications of "evolution. In this case, not just biological but social.

Consider a band of humans and their culture. The total population is made up of many such bands. Which bands/cultures thrive and which lose out in the competition? So which elements of culture will end up dominating in the population.

Consider a band with its culture contains moral rules R1, R2, ....Rn. FOR THE MOMENT ignore where these came from (ignore "what is the basis of R1, etc."). Let's say R1 is "do not murder" where "murder" means killing another member of the band. R2 might be "when given something, show gratitude".

Now consider a second band/culture that does not have R1 and R2. What will happen in band1 different from band2? Well band2 will be losing band members to murder. If "gratitude" reinforces behavior, giving/exchanging things needed by another band member going to be more prevalent in Band1 than band2. That is all you need to expect band1 to be "fitter" than band2. We would expect to see culture like band2's to disappear from the population. If NOT R1 and not R2 are disadvantageous we do not expect to see bands/cultures without R1 and R2.

That is the "basis", just that it works. Understanding how evolution works does not require understanding where the "mutations" came from << what those insisting on a "basis" demand >> and in fact not useful/meaningful because both R1, and not R1, R2 and not R2, etc. originated as mutations of culture. It is only in the "lab" of intergroup competition that it is discovered which a good mutation and which a bad.

IT WORKS (r it doesn't work) as a way for humans to live isn't a purely subjective matter. There are real world consequences.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Sat Jun 06, 2026 4:51 pm
by Immanuel Can
MikeNovack wrote: Sat Jun 06, 2026 3:56 pm Consider a band with its culture contains moral rules R1, R2, ....Rn. FOR THE MOMENT ignore where these came from (ignore "what is the basis of R1, etc."). Let's say R1 is "do not murder" where "murder" means killing another member of the band. R2 might be "when given something, show gratitude".
Let's also consider a society where R1 is "kill all infidels," and R2 is "beat unsubmissive women with a stick." Maybe R3 can be "do not eat X meat," and R4 can be "throw homosexuals from rooftops"...because as you know, such a society does exist.

How do these rules help that culture "win," and are these rules "moral"?

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Sat Jun 06, 2026 5:42 pm
by MikeNovack
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jun 06, 2026 4:51 pm
Let's also consider a society where R1 is "kill all infidels," and R2 is "beat unsubmissive women with a stick." Maybe R3 can be "do not eat X meat," and R4 can be "throw homosexuals from rooftops"...because as you know, such a society does exist.

How do these rules help that culture "win," and are these rules "moral"?
It's not HOW but IF. And we would not YET talking about our current LARGE SCALE societies/cultures but the origin of "morality" in our cultures (something that would have taken place back when we were living in bands of 50-100 individuals.

EXCEPT -- I can give you a plausible reason for "kill all the infidels" because originally the rile about "murder" NOT applied to other bands/cultures.

So you are asking "what might be the evolutionary advantage for bands/cultures to be in a state of continuous hostility toward neighboring bands. First do note that this would be somewhat restrained with regard to the bands with which this group intermarries.<< going WAY BACK so really talking about instinct*/biological vs culture >> Note that this constant state of hostility is actually quite costly in terms of casualties because of small band size. At a band size of 50-100, losing a man in battle every 5-10 years results in a surprisingly high likely hood that a man will die in battle.

Here is the thinking --- if bands lived in peace with their neighbors, the bands would end up lving in close proximity, little/no unused habitat between them. But if hostile, each would be surrounded by a "no mans land" not exploited by and band, and this turns out to be a rather large percentage of the total habitat not being exploited, not under normal circumstances (too dangerous to hunt/gather there). But circumstances not always normal. Every so often a drought, a flood, etc. Now the resources of the home territory insufficient so the resources of the "no man's land" is utilized. In the emergency, even less dangerous as the neighbors also scrambling, everybody too busy to take time off for war.

Being a slow to recover from population crash species, that means the "peace loving" cultures lacking the reserve of being surrounded by a no man's land, take a major population hit from each crisis. If these crises once a decade or so, not going to be able to recover efore the next comes along. In any case, that's one theory why we humans are belligerent in this way.

But IC, "kill the infidels" isn't just THEIR culture. It's your own Christian culture too. If you don't recognize that, you are dishonest looking at Christian history, And not just ancient << do you imagine it was Muslim Kosovans and Bosnians attacking the Christian Serbs or the other way around -- though of course a part of the world where "ancient'" still in play as the site of "The Field of the Blackbirds" a bone of contention (14th Century battle)

* we don't know HOW encoded but we do know when. Discovered by accident. Children raised in Kibbutzim that had "children's houses" almost always later showed negative sexual attraction to those they were with as children. So we know "encoded at this life stage". This would be the situation for children raised together in the band. Unlike chimps (females move) or bonobos (males move) we humans can do it either way so some cultures one way and some the other. Again, we are NOT talking about our modern huge scale cultures.

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Sat Jun 06, 2026 5:48 pm
by Impenitent
consider a band whose leader plays accordion and changes the lyrics to popular songs...

that band sells millions and millions of records

I'd say that band has won

-Imp

Re: Religious vs non-religous bases for morality

Posted: Sat Jun 06, 2026 6:12 pm
by Immanuel Can
MikeNovack wrote: Sat Jun 06, 2026 5:42 pm So you are asking "what might be the evolutionary advantage...
I don't believe in evolution, particularly for human beings. But if I did, it would be irrelevant: for "evolved" and "moral" are not the same concept. One is a putative "fact" claim (as in, this is how we got here), and the other a "value" assessment (about what is right or wrong for us to do).
But IC, "kill the infidels" isn't just THEIR culture. It's your own Christian culture too.
Verifiably untrue. Mo was all for killing infidels. Jesus Christ said, "Love your enemies." If any follower of Mo didn't kill infidels, he was a bad Mo-ist. If anybody calling himself a Christian said "Kill your enemies," then he was no Christian, by the word of Jesus Christ Himself.