Philip wrote:In fact, the only reason we have any understanding of morality is because it comes from God. He is the measure of all things. If you accept that God exists, that He has placed all POTENTIAL for moral behavior within you, then you are not going to be able to have a greater understanding of morality than He does - that is preposterous. You can never be ANYTHING even close to what God IS. And when we speak of consequences, we have a very limited understanding of those. To truly, 100% understand whether God is just or moral, we would need to have an ETERNAL and total perspective of all things. Otherwise you are making an evaluation of the morality of a Supreme Being based upon limited data and a limited analytical capability to render judgment upon Him. Whatever one's personal verdict, to pretend to be able to pass judgment upon the character of a Holy God is the ultimate arrogance!
I am not passing moral judgment on God as everyone seems to think I am doing. I think morals are a creation of God, however, and not God himself. Can you explain why you think God is morality itself?
neo-x wrote:Beany, It is not a the question which is frightening but the logical conclusion to such a question which is unacceptable. Euthyphro's dilemma makes no room for any factors that may be outside of the two horns being presented. It is an unfair representation.
I think you have misunderstood me. See my interpretation of the dilemma below. I am not trying to claim God is evil or immoral. I am suggesting that he acts in accordance with morality (which he created) rather than morality being subject to his every word.
If God said Go and torture a small child, we might know this is immoral (as best as we can - we could perhaps be wrong). Because of that, we know God would not say this, yes? (Perhaps we are being tricked or our obedience is being tested, or perhaps we are very ignorant, I can't say) Same is true if God says something logically inconsistent since God doesn't lie. We can imagine scenarios where these aren't true and recognize them as impossible. By doing this, we can decide which is the correct horn of the dilemma, yes? Am I missing something?
jlay wrote:As my friend Jac would say, you are dealing with the epistomology, without dealing with the ontological question. Not to mention, you danced around several points i've already made regarding consequentialism.
Your example lights it own fuse. You are talking about wrong as far as culpability. The question is, "is it wrong to kill children to make milk." The answer is yes. It's wrong whether I have knowledge of the source of milk or not. Yes, knowledge plays a role in my culpability. If I know the source of milk and purchase it, then I am culpable. If I'm ignorant, I'm not culpable, but that doesn't change whether something is wrong or not. Those children and the perpetrators are moral agents. But that is an epistemological issue. In your worldview, as you just stated with this absurd example, is that it is only "wrong" if someone has the knowledge. Your example still leaves the door open that there could be some greater good that you don't have knowledge of yet.
I said it would clearly be wrong, but an ethical system seeks to influence our actions. If we don't know something is wrong we can't avoid doing it on that reason. Yes, my example leaves such a door open.
Again, I advocate for as much knowledge as we can get - that will lead to more moral societies
Man, that is littered with presumptions. More moral? Measured against what and according to what? You? You don't have the knowledge to make such a statement. It is presumptious. You've yet to account for any inherent human value, which is what you have to smuggle in.
Again. Not smuggling it in. And it's not presumptuous, you've already agreed to it. We know that perfect knowledge would lead to perfect decision and poor knowledge to poor decisions.
You've already received an explanation of the Eurypthro issue. It is a false dichotomy rooted in plantonic thinking. Why should we adopt a philosophy we reject to defend a delimma that is rooted in that philosophy? Do you still beat your wife?
It doesn't necessitate Platonic thinking even though it was originally thought up by Plato. It still holds today under most ontological views. I'm not sure which one would preclude this sort of logical thinking, but do you deny logic and uniformity of nature? I'm confused.
My own interpretation was that God created the Universe, logic, and morals. He then, while acting within the Universe, behaves in accordance with these things. If God were to say A = !A he would be false, even if logic is ultimately subject to him, God acts in accordance with it. Same with morality. While certain things God says would be immoral, he won't say them but will rather act in accordance with morality. Is this really that crazy of a suggestion?
Sorry, but I think it serves the greater good of this board.
If you can't defend your own worldview, then you are not open to honest discussion.
Pretend my world-view is one of a life-long roman catholic, since I had attended catholic school all the way up until high school and very nearly attended a jesuit university. I'm not advocating this as an atheist. This isn't about me. I've pointed out that many christians accept this line of thinking, I'm not trying to trick people into becoming atheists, much the same as I think christians should accept evolutionary biology without becoming atheists.