Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 14, 2025 5:04 pm
Now, when I use the term "secularism" in this context, it means the very general usage, therefore, or in specific reference to this thread, it means, "those who reject morality because of its religious roots." That seems fair, given the OP. I suggest we both use it in the way the OP chooses.
Neither you nor the OP can change the usual meaning of a word.
However, since I have no wish to let this discussion die over a disagreement about word meanings, I propose whenever you say 'secularism' to substitute in my own mind 'absence of religious belief'.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 14, 2025 5:04 pm
Possibly what you really mean to ask me is to show that moral precepts can be justified in the absence of religious belief. That is a challenge I am quite happy to meet.
I would like to see how you think we might meet that challenge.
Very well. I will defend the moral precept 'other things being equal, it is morally bad to intentionally and knowingly cause pain'. (Strictly speaking, of course, this is not a moral precept but a moral judgment. I am supposing, perhaps over-optimistically, that it would be possible to derive a precept from this judgment. This is an area I am still investigating.) When I have done so, it would be only fair for you to meet the same challenge, i.e. justify some moral precept (or judgment) on theistic grounds.
For the purposes of this demonstration, I am going to assume that there is such a thing as free will (without which there can be no such thing as moral responsibility, and hence no morality), although I do not believe this myself. I take it that you, as a Christian, would not wish to take me up on this point.
Demonstration:
1. 'X is bad' means 'X has a property or properties which provide reason to give an anti-response to X'.
2. Pain has a property (namely, dislikeability) which provides reason to give an anti-response (namely, dislike) to pain.
3. Therefore pain is bad.
4. Therefore, other things being equal, an action which causes pain is bad.
5. (On the assumption that there is free will) an agent is morally responsible for an action performed intentionally and knowingly.
6. Therefore an agent intentionally and knowingly causing pain is morally responsible for causing the pain.
7. Therefore an agent intentionally and knowingly causing pain is morally responsible for performing a bad action.
8. Therefore (other things being equal) it is morally bad to intentionally and knowingly cause pain.
QED
Notes:
1. An anti-response is any negative response. It could be dislike, disapproval, discommendation, fear, hatred, avoidance, running away from, etc..
This definition is a variant of one proposed by A.C.Ewing in
The Definition of Good. If you wish to reject it, you must either show that there is something wrong with it, or produce a better definition, or else argue, with G.E.Moore, that 'good' is indefinable.
The definition does not apply to non-evaluative uses of 'good', e.g. 'white goods.'
2. By 'pain' I mean any experienced unpleasantness.
Here I am following Goldstein (
https://philarchive.org/rec/GOLWPP) in holding that 'Pleasure presents us with reason to seek it, pain presents us reason to avoid it.'
The point is that what pleasure is like to experience provides a reason to respond to the pleasure positively, and what pain is like to experience provides a reason to respond to the pain negatively. It appears to me that the likeability of pleasure and the dislikeability of pain are not merely intrinsic properties, but essential properties. This seems to be my experience of both pleasure and pain, and I assume that it is the same for all beings capable of experiencing pleasure and pain. Of course there may be additional reasons for responding differently, e.g. one might respond positively to pain because it clears one's head; but this would not alter the fact that the pain
qua pain provides reason to respond negatively, it is just that there is a further effect of the pain which produces a pro-response in addition to the anti-response.
If you wish to reject my or Goldstein's view, you must again show that there is something wrong with it or present a better theory of the relationship between pain and responses to pain.
3. i.e. intrinsically bad. From 1 and 2.
4. i.e. instrumentally bad. From 3 plus the generally accepted notion of instrumentality.
5. I take it that this is the generally accepted notion of moral responsibility.
6. From 5.
7. From 4 and 6.
8. Generalised restatement of 7.
The reason why I said earlier that it is impossible for God to set moral values is that if pleasure is intrinsically and essentially good, and pain intrinsically and essentially bad (and if you think there are, or can be, other intrinsic goods and bads, the burden of proof is on you to show what they are), he cannot create a world in which this is not the case. He can of course (if he exists, and has this power) create a world without pleasure and pain altogether, but as long as the world contains pleasure and pain, it follows from the above demonstration that actions that knowingly and intentionally cause them must, other things being equal, be respectively morally good and morally bad, and God cannot change that.
(BTW, I apologise for the slowness of my responses to your posts. I have a very busy life, and philosophy has to fit in where it can.)