Does Mere Christianity ultimately fail?

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  1. Guilt. (And Lewis mentions it, just like MindOverMatter2 talks about)
How so? Surely guilt is subjective in its own right? Some people would feel guilty about swatting a fly; others wouldn’t bat an eyelid. Even the concept of guilt cannot be proved to apply to everybody.
  1. If Lewis (or anyone else) could provide “proof” of God’s existence then there would be no atheists…
I say “proof” because I am talking about scientific proof. With Philosophy we can achieve a conclusion without scientific proofs, which is why I believe in God. Science only deals with a particular set of attributes.
Yes - the set of attributes that show whether something is real or not. In that respect alone, it knocks philosophy into a cocked hat.
 
There was an overwhelming consensus in Germany at the time that Hitler was right. Thus, the morality that Hitler felt judged by vindicated his action!
Hitler stirred-up hatred, mass hysteria and fear. Anyone who disagreed disappeared, he was never vindicated except in his own head. But are you arguing for me there though? I’m saying that all fundamentalism, all blind following of any dictum is dangerous, and that the idea of an unproven objective morality is in that class.
However, I believe there are underlying principles (against deception, against greed) that apply cross-culturally.
But if you were sheltering Jews by deceiving the Gestapo you would need a get-out clause.
The fact that it’s hard to tell if life exists on other planets doesn’t make you question *whether *there is an answer to the question!
You’re giving another non-political example, but OK. If we agree “maybe” to that question and to whether there’s an objective morality, that will be fine with me. As long as we maintain the doubt until there is a universally acclaimed answer (which will be a long time coming :)).
Most people believe, rightly, that killing a 1-month-old infant is morally wrong.
Without the subjective"rightly" I like that. Whatever my own view on anything, I want there to be people with doubts - certainties are dangerous.
 
I don’t believe morality is purely relative and subjective. But the moral appeal to God involves a lot of assumptions an atheist or agnostic can rightly question. Even great philosophers like Ockham denied there was a connection between morality and God’s rationality or wisdom, which moral arguments for God are often based on. What is morality based on God anyway? Is something good because God commands or wills it, or is something good because it is commanded by God and morally good? Is it possible the universe has a moral structure (i.e. a natural law) that doesn’t depend on a deity, like karma? How is this moral good connected to God? How do we know God is good and how is the good related to God?

The moral argument leading to God’s existence is attractive and has been made by thinkers as impressive as Plato, Plotinus, Augustine, Aquinas and Kant. But it does involve many assumptions that can be questioned at each step. I don’t think Lewis makes his case in a manner that is overwhelming, but it does give some reasons as to why someone may come to believe in God.
 
Hitler stirred-up hatred, mass hysteria and fear. Anyone who disagreed disappeared, he was never vindicated except in his own head. But are you arguing for me there though? I’m saying that all fundamentalism, all blind following of any dictum is dangerous, and that the idea of an unproven objective morality is in that class.
Let me list the objective moral claims you listed above: 1) Hatred, mass hysteria, and fear are bad things, 2) Fundamentalism is dangerous. I agree with both of those claims, but the key thing to notice are that they **are **claims. When you claim things, you are claiming that they are true (objectively true).

The danger of fundamentalism isn’t in people voicing their views on the truth – it’s in other people not voicing their own competing views! Who is blindly following any dictum here? To say that there is an objective truth is **not **to say that “I have the objective truth”. It’s not even to say that I *could *have the objective truth. It’s just to say that such a truth exists.
But if you were sheltering Jews by deceiving the Gestapo you would need a get-out clause.
Absolutely. This doesn’t tell us that truth telling isn’t a moral duty, however; it tells us that certain other duties (our duty to save lives) sometimes override the duty to tell the truth. This does not make morality subjective.
You’re giving another non-political example, but OK. If we agree “maybe” to that question and to whether there’s an objective morality, that will be fine with me. As long as we maintain the doubt until there is a universally acclaimed answer (which will be a long time coming :)).
Some people don’t believe there are physical objects. In other words, there is no universally acclaimed answer to whether physical objects exist. Should I wait until such a “universal” answer is given before I teach a class on physics?

(You will say that my example isn’t “political”, perhaps, but in philosophical circles the question of whether material objects exist IS political – it’s bound up in your views about morality, religion, the role of the state, etc.)
Without the subjective"rightly" I like that. Whatever my own view on anything, I want there to be people with doubts - certainties are dangerous.
But haven’t you just claimed to be certain that certainties are (objectively) dangerous? And, if you haven’t, then couldn’t it be (objectively) correct to believe that certainties aren’t dangerous? 😉

More to the point, even if I doubt that telling the truth is always a duty, does this give me any reason to doubt that some of my actions are good and others are bad? That’s all that morality amounts to, in the end. 🤷

Sorry if you feel like I’m playing games here, but I think these sorts of discussions are worth achieving clarity on. 🙂
 
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:
  1. Lewis does not present something which cannot be explained in a subjectively moral universe.
  2. He does not prove the existence of the source of this objective morality.
If Lewis did one of those two things, then the argument might work. I don’t think he does though, and thus i think Mere Christinaity ultimately fails.

Does anybody disagree? Or, better yet, can anybody make a good argument for objective morality?
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What really failed in the previous thread was a proper understanding of universal objective truth and its applications. Furthermore, objective morality is nebulous without a complete understanding of its foundation.

I do admit to learning some interesting things in the previous thread. Thank you.
So I will check in with this thread occasionally to see what else I can learn.
Nonetheless, because of the current hang-up with subjectivism and relativism, I need a break from participation.

Blessings,
granny

The human person is worthy of profound respect from the moment of conception.
 
To say that there is an objective truth is **not **to say that “I have the objective truth”. It’s not even to say that I *could *have the objective truth. It’s just to say that such a truth exists.
Having looked at your post for some considerable time, I think we probably violently agree on all the important matters unless I’ve lost the plot or there’s an elephant in the corner.

I wasn’t clear how to respond until seeing granny’s question on the other thread. I’ve posted my answer there and discussing that may resolve the differences. Feel free to tear me apart. 🙂
 
Having looked at your post for some considerable time, I think we probably violently agree on all the important matters unless I’ve lost the plot or there’s an elephant in the corner.

I wasn’t clear how to respond until seeing granny’s question on the other thread. I’ve posted my answer there and discussing that may resolve the differences. Feel free to tear me apart. 🙂
One concluding comment, then.

Your signature says the following (and a beautiful signature it is!):
Faith, hope, love - Are the sum of perfection on earth; love alone is the sum of perfection in heaven.
To say that faith, hope, and love are the sum of perfection means that faith, hope, and love are good, right? But let’s just work with love, OK?
  1. Love is a perfection.
  2. Therefore, love is a good.
#2 is a moral claim. But, if morality is subjective, then someone could rightly think that #2 is false. Thus:

2a. Love is not a good.

So far as I can tell, you are saying that #2a may be true, for some people. Are you really ready to accept that #2a is sometimes true? Isn’t that a repudiation of the Gospel?

Feel free not to respond, if you’d rather just leave it at this. I would just ask you to consider what I’m saying with humility, and I hope that I have done the same for you. I fully agree with your claim that strident and inflexible views about morality are dangerous. But I’m hoping that you understand that the view that “morality is subjective” is just another strident and inflexible view about morality.

Blessings,
Daniel
 
2a. Love is not a good.

So far as I can tell, you are saying that #2a may be true, for some people. Are you really ready to accept that #2a is sometimes true? Isn’t that a repudiation of the Gospel?
That’s an excellent point.

First, I’m worrying that on both this and the other thread we are all getting into Romans 14 territory. We are clearly both astonished at each other, but if timeless moral truths are part of the Catholic faith then I’m not trying to undo them, just argue a position.

There’s also a possible issue in the difference between objectivity and collective subjectivity, which is fertile ground for misunderstandings. The latter says that there are universal concepts that are only to be found inside our heads, and much of what we take to be objective cannot be found outside our heads.

God is love. The only difference between us as far as I can tell, is I’m saying that through love God gave us a process to decide what is good and bad. We may have a few moral instincts such as don’t bite the hand that feeds you, and much of our morality doesn’t change much, giving the appearance of being timeless.

The Rom 14 issue is that you can say I’m whittling away at the reasons why we should believe, and I can argue that science may eventually cause you a minor upset by locating morality in dynamic processes in the brain.

For me, the moral teaching of the Gospel is an exploration of love. We come closer to God not by rigidly following laws but through a deeper revelation of love. We sin when we don’t act in love. 1 Cor 13 may be chocolate box, it may be simplistically (and accidentally?) paraphrased in All You Need Is Love, but even by itself is a mighty fine moral code.

By all means let’s keep going, this has been enjoyable. I was suffering from cross-thread confusion syndrome but it’s passed.

PS: what’s the image in your sig? It reminds me of a Hockney.
 
There’s also a possible issue in the difference between objectivity and collective subjectivity, which is fertile ground for misunderstandings. The latter says that there are universal concepts that are only to be found inside our heads, and much of what we take to be objective cannot be found outside our heads.
This is a very interesting point.

My first response is a purely technical, philosophical point. I take it that “concepts” are merely mental representations that have no share in reality whatsoever. This is why we do not pursue concepts; rather, we pursue the objects *or properties *that pertain to these concepts.

To explain: when I say, “Bob is intelligent”, what needs to be true to make this statement true? Bob must exist, and he must have a certain property, “being intelligent”. Does it follow that there is an object “out there” called intelligence, perhaps a Platonic form or some such thing? No indeed. Nevertheless, Bob can still be intelligent.

Just so, if I seek to be wise, I am not seeking a thing, but rather a way of being. There are moral and immoral ways of being, I would say, but these ways of being depend on the existence of rational agents that can “be” in those ways.

Potatoes have to exist in order for “baked potatoes” to exist. This does not make us question whether baked potatoes objectively exist, does it? Just so, people have to exist in order for there to be good people. Nevertheless, the (objective) standard of goodness for a person is real, although you are right to say that it is “only to be found inside our heads”.

But what is the **ground **of this objectivity? Simply put, God. You might call this “collective subjectivity”, I suppose, if you first clarify that human nature is precisely what God thinks human nature is, and human thriving is exactly what God thinks human thriving is. Whether this system is truly objective or collectively subjective would, in my view, hinge on the answer to the Euthyphro question. (In one form, this is “Is justice good because God desires it, or does God desire justice because it’s good?”) But I’m not sure whether we want to go there.
The Rom 14 issue is that you can say I’m whittling away at the reasons why we should believe, and I can argue that science may eventually cause you a minor upset by locating morality in dynamic processes in the brain.
As for science, this is a misunderstanding. Science can never show that physical causation is the *only *cause for an event. It is certainly true that the movement of electrons is my brain corresponds exactly to the content of my decisions. But so what? This does not show that there is not a hidden cause for *both *the electron movement and the decision. No scientific experiment can ever disprove agent causation.

But the Romans 14 issue is interesting. We might take a “live and let live” reading of the passage, but this is clearly contradicted by the rest of Paul’s writings. In Romans 14, Paul seems to be saying that *certain *beliefs don’t matter much to a person’s salvation. For example, I think there are certain objectively good and bad human ends, and you think that morality is process-driven. About this, perhaps, we can agree to disagree – and actually I suspect your “process theory” carries more than a grain of truth.

However, how exactly is “a process that God gave us to decide what is good and bad” not objective? Presumably, it is one specific process, though it will manifest itself in different ways? That sounds pretty objective to me.

I mean, consider: a teacher might say that a student would be graded on the quality of the final paper, or alternately the process followed to attain a final paper. But (provided the teacher is a good judge) aren’t both grading systems objective?
For me, the moral teaching of the Gospel is an exploration of love. We come closer to God not by rigidly following laws but through a deeper revelation of love.
Absolutely! Do you think that all objectivists believe that morality is just following codes of morality? To the contrary, I think that goodness is found in love, and that love is much more than following certain rules!

But underlying all of this is an objective truth: Love is a good. For if we did not know that love was a good, then we would not know what love was, at all – since love is essentially good. And I can tell, from our discussions, that you do know that love is a good. So then why does it matter if it’s objectively or “intersubjectively” good? It’s all good. :cool:

(I unfortunately have misplaced the name of the photographer for my signature. Darn internet.)
 
There are moral and immoral ways of being, I would say, but these ways of being depend on the existence of rational agents that can “be” in those ways.
There’s an interesting difference about how properties can be seen in Spanish. It depends on which verb to be is used. “Bob está listo” just means Bob is ready (at the moment). “Bob es listo” can mean Bob is intelligent (permanently ready for anything). This makes it easier to distinguish between transient and permanent properties. Another thing happens in quantum mechanics, where the values of some pairs of properties cannot, even in principle, both be known at the same time. For these kinds of reason, I distrust the idea of properties and so on when applied to abstractions such as intelligence – I mean who gets to decide on what grounds and by what measure? This may be my personal downfall. 😦
*But what is the **ground ***of this objectivity? Simply put, God. You might call this “collective subjectivity”, I suppose
I wouldn’t, I’d say the objective truth here is we are in God’s image, not the atheist argument that God is in our image. 🙂
(In one form, this is “Is justice good because God desires it, or does God desire justice because it’s good?”)
The reference I made earlier to 1 Sam 15 is interesting in that connection. The writer may be wrestling with the issue of what would we do if we thought God is commanding us to do something we find evil. That and the Euthyphro issue disappear if God is love and sets no other moral agenda – Euthyphro isn’t EITHER/OR, it’s AND.
*Science can never show that physical causation is the *only **cause for an event.
Via an MRI scanner, neuroscience can see which areas of the brain are activated when we think. The spatial resolution needs to be improved, but in future suppose a number of people are asked the same moral questions. If different pathways light up (as I suspect), that would tend to show that our underlying reasoning varies – that we reach the same conclusions by different routes. As you say, this wouldn’t disprove an underlying moral agent, but I think it would tend to cause a retreat toward my position of love (hence God) being the prime agent.
However, how exactly is “a process that God gave us to decide what is good and bad” not objective?
When asked to summarize the law, the expert said - ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind’; and, 'Love your neighbor as yourself. – Luke 10:27 NIV.

But then he asked who was his neighbor? Biologically we care more for those close to us, but are our neighbors the folk over the street, the guys we meet on CAF, the people we see in the news of the floods in Pakistan? Jesus didn’t state a rule but gave the expert a parable instead, one that introduces a process-driven metaphor for compassion that depends on the individual’s subjective view.
So then why does it matter if it’s objectively or “intersubjectively” good? It’s all good. :cool:
Something happened yesterday on the other thread that gave me pause for thought - a moral argument was given that had not been thought through. Until then I felt like you that some of these discussions are angels on pinheads. But what if a belief in eternal moral truths actually stops us from thinking things through and leads us to wrong conclusions? Some Christians do seem to believe whatever they’re told. Of course, you could argue that my position is also problematic by diminishing authorities.

This may be a the longest post I’ve written, a new personal best (or not). 🙂
 
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