Then maybe we need to establish what you mean when you say you want a "principle." For in ordinary language usage, such as I have given would fit the bill; but if you have something different in mind, I should wish to provide it.Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 9:08 amThat's not a principleImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Nov 06, 2023 1:49 amIt's founded on the nature of God Himself, on the fact that God is a loving, attentive and diligent Father, not an exploiter or betrayer. And there's really no better basis on which for it to be founded.
Don't be surprised. I have been saying that all along. There is no knowledge of morality unless one first gets one's ontology straight. So says the Bible, as well. (Romans 1) God exists, and He exists as the whole basis of morality; so to reckon without that fact is actually to obscure the entire field of moral philosophy, and to deprive ourselves of the means to say anything at all about it. And this explains why subjective morality is so much more appealing to Atheists; it's all they can conceive, by way of morality. They've cut themselves off from the first premise of moral knowledge.It is also dependent on belief in God
Unfortunately for them, even on its own terms, subjective morality isn't really a coherent concept, but rather a pseudo-concept, a dodge, a stop-gap measure intended to prevent the inevitable slide into moral nihilism, one which is actually incapable of having that effect except among those that arbitrarily stop following the logic to which a godless universe compels them.
It doesn't, actually. And let us make it plain to ourselves why.Harbal wrote: I can say when I think something is morally wrong, and in most cases I can say why I think it is wrong, and that probably disqualifies me from adopting moral nihilism.
One's own subjective opinion is not binding, obligating or relevant to anybody else; and in fact, it is not any of those things even for you -- for you could change your subjective opinion to the opposite, as no more than a result of "an undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard, a crumb of cheese, a fragment of underdone potato" in your digestive system (to paraphrase Ebenezer Scrooge).
And that's why "There's more of gravy than of grave" about subjectivism: it puts a moral duty of absolutely zero weight on anyone. So moral nihilism becomes logically inevitable, unless we pretend that the stop-gap of belief in subjectivism has some gravitas to which it cannot logically make claim at all.