O
oldcelt
Guest
I am weak on some of the terminology being used here since I have only taken as much philosophy as I HAD to many years ago. James has started a thread about objective truth that I look forward to reading. As you point out, Deism is compatible with objective truth through reason, which is the point I was trying too make, apparently poorly, last night. No divine revelation needed.I agree with you, though the alternative is to believe in moral truths existing in the same way that mathematical truths exist. It would then be debatable whether such truths would require a creator God (just as it is a point of debate as to whether it take a creator God to have 1+1=2 or A=A).
But personally, I agree. This has nothing to do with whether or not God intervenes or answers prayers, so Deism is perfectly compatible with belief in an objective morality, as long as that objective morality would be discoverable through reason (and Catholics argue that it is, through natural law, thus would be granting that a Deist could discover that “murder is morally wrong” without the help of revelation).
The Deists with whom I associate do not exclude the possibility of an afterlife. We have had many discussions on how that might happen without the involvement of a God. Generally, we arrive at some sort of dream state created by the thoughts of the individual.
From a scientific standpoint, we are trying to determine how the electricity contained in our brains could be held together in a form that would allow this or consciousness to continue after physical death. There is some work on static attraction that might lead us there one day.