No *purely *ethical consideration does matter without God.
What’s the rationale for this assertion?
If you can do wrong in secrecy without penalty, they you are permitted to do wrong, in the most absolute sense of “permitted”.
Apparently, I don’t share your definition of “permitted” or at least not in its “most absolute sense.” If I do something and I am punished for it, the circumstances still permitted the action. Quite frankly, the external world doesn’t give a hoot if I suffer or not, so it doesn’t care if I “get away with it.” Again, the action was prohibited by people, but permitted by the world. You MUST provide a context or permissibility is meaningless.
By the way, speaking of getting away with things, how does one objectively determine whether one has “gotten away with” an action? Keep in mind that there is no such thing as a “punishment” in the world of objects; there are only events. Your emotions allow you to deem certain events as punishments or rewards, but without emotions, those labels are meaningless.
Is this a dangerous thought? Well, yes, of course. But if people do not realize this thought consciously, it still operates on them unconsciously; better to have it all out in the open. And I, after all, am seeking for the truth. Not for “safe” thoughts.
Apparently you aren’t seeking to substantiate your thoughts either.
They won’t dismiss rule-following, but I don’t see why they should hold onto morality-as-such.
What’s the difference between “morality” and “morality-as-such?”
If they’re left in a room with a thousand dollars that aren’t theirs, and no one will ever know they took it, how would it be rational (absent God) for them to leave the money on the table?
You’ll have to rephrase the question or define “rational.” We were talking about ethics, not rationality.
Assuming that you pose your question in such a way that it’s relevant to ethics, I would first ask why the money won’t be missed by its owner. If the owner will never realize it’s gone, I would suppose they didn’t plan on returning for it. From there, I can also speculate that they will never need the money. If I need the money more than they, then I will benefit from possessing it more than they would, no? Of course, if you’re looking for the best course of action, I might consider donating a decent portion of it.
I know you frown on utilitarianism and ethical philosophies that regard consequences in general, so I don’t know if you would consider my reasoning to be an appreciation for morality-as-such. Personally, I don’t believe anyone does good for the sake of good, but I guess that depends on your definition of “good.” It’s a bit like cooking for the sake of cooking–who does that?

If we can’t eat the food, and if we don’t derive enjoyment from cooking, why would anyone ever cook?
There are more things in heaven and earth, Oreoracle, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
Actually, I pride myself in having a philosophy devoid of dreams; that is, lacking nonsensical or otherwise unlikely fantasies. You have no evidence that your consciousness will exist after your body decays in the ground. Is it sad to think it’s game over after you die? Yes. Is it true? Seems like it.
Why, on your account, should there be a purpose to death?
I meant to say, rather, that knowing we have eternal life would reduce the perceived significance of death. What reason would we have to cry at funerals, after all? I know that the members of my family, religious though they are, don’t cry because they fear their fallen friend will be in hell. No, they realize that the deceased may wink out of existence after their deaths, and that terrifies them.
But verification amounts to the same thing as proof; I see no difference.
The difference, I would say, is that proof produces certainties while verification is merely suggestive. Verification “allows for induction,” as you might say. If I wake up smelling smoke, coughing, and feeling heat in my face, there’s a good chance my house is on fire. It could be that the perceived danger is just an elaborate dream, but that seems unlikely. Proof, on the other hand, isn’t dependent on the relatively unreliable senses. As you say, proof only occurs in things such as math and logic.
There is no way I can verify any significant position about the meaning of life, not even the hypothesis that there are people who really love me. The most important beliefs – if not all beliefs about the external world – are impossible to verify.
Or rather, impossible to
prove. The verifying evidence may be abundant, however.
*Why *does he prefer one set of circumstances to another? What is a value? If value is simply a thing that a person prefers, then the statement “those things people prefer are valuable to them” simply means “those things people prefer, they prefer”. How can that tautology be a truth about ethics?!?
You’re panicking over something that is common to most systems. For example, a hexagon is defined as a six-sided polygon. With this we can infer that if a postulated shape, “A,” is a polygon composed of six sides, it’s a hexagon. Alas, a hexagon is a polygon composed of six sides! Therefore, if A is a polygon composed of six sides, then A is a polygon composed of six sides. Whatever will we do with this tautology?! How can it possibly be a geometrical truth?!

