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08-02-2003, 01:17 PM | #11 | |
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08-03-2003, 08:30 PM | #12 | ||
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08-03-2003, 08:45 PM | #13 | ||
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No. Moral objectivity is independent of any being's decree. Quote:
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08-03-2003, 10:57 PM | #14 | ||
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08-03-2003, 11:32 PM | #15 | ||
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What is the appeal of such a meta-rule? Why should we believe it is true? Why would any rational being accept such a rule? crc |
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08-03-2003, 11:35 PM | #16 |
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Ignore this duplicate post. It would be cool if a moderator took it away entirely.
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08-04-2003, 06:57 AM | #17 | |
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You haven't solved the Euthyphro dilemma, you've simply reformulated it. FWIW, I think morality is indeed subjective. Humans have made decisions on what is "good" and evil" for a great many years as part of the attempt to build a stable civilization. Good and evil have changed as we've added and subtracted behaviors as our moral system tries to keep up with our economic and intellectual development. A particular moral prohibition or allowance is successful when it increases the number of people who have a stake in the stability, peacefullness, and success of a society; unsuccessful moral rules cause people to opt out of a society, and often create their own. Just my $0.02. |
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08-04-2003, 09:47 AM | #18 | ||
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The question is not whether God can be wrong. The question is whether God could have formulated morality differently. Quote:
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08-04-2003, 10:00 AM | #19 | ||
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Re: A possible soultion to the Euthyphro problem
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There are two questions: 1) Does morality depend on the existence of God? 2) Can one know morality without knowing the divine? Regarding these, if the answer to 1 is Yes and 2 is Yes, then this really puts us in no different a position. An atheist can still be moral and a theist immoral, vice versa, or any other combination. Quote:
In fact arguing that the answer to (1) is Yes generally gets one back into a Euthypro like problem regarding (2). That is, if I show that (1) is true its hard not to do so without demonstrating that the arguer knows what good is apart for God. Thus its hard to argue for (1) being Yes without implying that the answer to (2) is also Yes. DC |
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08-04-2003, 10:23 AM | #20 | |||
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Good and evil can exist objectively while still being dependent upon the structure that God created. Since God is omniscient, what He arbitrarily decides is also objective. Existing in the omniscient creator's mind and according to his bias (which of course he can't have if he's omniscient) can still make morality objective. Quote:
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