M
Marc_Anthony
Guest
In an earlier thread called “Objective Morality” I used arguments from Lewis’s “Mere Christianity” to try and prove there was an objective morality.
An atheist countered my arguments, and the consensus of the thread seemed to be that an objective morality is impossible to prove. And yet, my arguments were taken practically directly from Lewis’s “Mere Christinaity”! And, without a lot of thought, it seemed, an atheist had rebutted them successfully.
So do the arguments in “Mere Christinaity” fail? They might, for two reasons:
Does anybody disagree? Or, better yet, can anybody make a good argument for objective morality?
An atheist countered my arguments, and the consensus of the thread seemed to be that an objective morality is impossible to prove. And yet, my arguments were taken practically directly from Lewis’s “Mere Christinaity”! And, without a lot of thought, it seemed, an atheist had rebutted them successfully.
So do the arguments in “Mere Christinaity” fail? They might, for two reasons:
- Lewis does not present something which cannot be explained in a subjectively moral universe.
- He does not prove the existence of the source of this objective morality.
Does anybody disagree? Or, better yet, can anybody make a good argument for objective morality?