O
o_mlly
Guest
I believe you have posted exactly that.You have said that if there was no belief in God and no objective morality (and you conflate those along with divine providence and revelation), then people would just do what they felt was right.
How does it follow that if there is objective truth about right and wrong then one looses their free will? We agree that the intentional killing of innocent human beings is evil but that did not stop the Manchester terrorist from making his personal decision. I’m sure he **felt **that he was doing the right thing.I suggest that it is your definition of objective morality that does not allow for people to make personal decisions about what is right and what is wrong. That right or wrong is somewhere and somehow fixed for all situations. And that particular somewhere and somehow is God.
Reasons that are a product of our ephemeral emotions are always suspect. Reasons that are a product of our disciplined mind are more reliable. If there are right reasons and wrong reasons then there must be objective truths about right and wrong.If reasons are to be given, then they will undoubtedly and undeniable be what each of us considers to the reasons we feel are valid.
Spare me the snipe on Catholics; you’re above that.Now on some things, there will be universal agreement (and that, by the way, doesn’t even include such atrocities as the holocaust, because there were certainly God fearin’ Catholics involved in it). But does that mean it is correct because of that universal agreement? Obviously not, because one cannot vote on matters of morality.
We agree that whether universal agreement exists or not does not exist does not change objective truths. Polls tell us only about opinions, not truth.
The terrorist in Manchester believed just as you do: if it feels right to me then it must be OK.So apart from giving our own personal reasons, which may well seem to us to be blazingly obvious, then what do you suggest? Well, you have already given your answer. A belief in God and revelation. No reasons other than God sez so.
Me? I’m going with relative morality. No requirement for God, divine providence or revelation. That comes in handy because not everyone on the planet believes in the same god. And if they do, they may interpret His word differently to you. I’m pretty certain that we can include the guy who thought it was a good idea to blow up children in Manchester earlier today.
And you will have no reason to move the next possible terrorist to believe his act is immoral.We have very good reasons why what he did was evil. Bringing God into an argument as to why it’s wrong won’t carry any weight at all if the other guy does exactly the same.