D
danserr
Guest
No, the word “objective” is not open to interpretation. To say that objective moral values and duties exist is to say that they are true independent of what people think.The definition of “objective” is open to interpretation. For instance, in the bible, God clearly prompts or condones behaviours that we would consider utterly, horribly immoral in today’s society - behaviours that he then condemns in the ten commandments.
Given this, where could we possibly get “objective” morals from? It can’t be from God, because he doesn’t practice what he preaches.
What does “objective” mean? Does it mean “immutable?” Then how come God was able to breach this “objective” moral code at will?
How do we know what this “objective” moral code states? The Bible’s “be nice to each other” is not only vague, but obvious, and is a cornerstone of societal interaction that was being practiced by human societies thousands of years before the bible was penned. It’s infinitely more likely that this fundamental social imperative was written to reflect normal human morality, than that it was mandated by some supernatural entity thousands of years after the human race would have died out were it not already practicing good citizenship.
So I think you have two options: admit that “objective” morality does not exist, at least in the sense of “immutable” and “prescribed;” or admit that it equates to “whatever God says, regardless of what God does.”
So to analyse your argument:
1 - is a false premise. There may, or may not, be “objective” morality… but if there is, there’s zero reason to ascribe its existence to God.
2 - cannot be shown to be true. In fact, all the evidence suggests that it’s false, as (a) moral standards have demonstrably changed according to era and geography, (b) nobody can describe what this “objective” moral code should be (have we reached it yet? Do you think the slave owners of the 18th century thought they were moral people?) and (c) no reasonable source for this “objective” morality has ever been suggested.
Given the inherent weakness of (1) and (2), then 3 is quite clearly unreliable.
So the argument is
- If God does not exist, objective moral values and duties do not exist.
- Objective moral values and duties do exist
- Therefore God exists.
a). It is a red herring. Michael Ruse, the agnostic philosopher of science, for instance, claims that objective morality does not exist because what we believe to be that morality is simply the result of socio-biological conditioning. The first premise accepts this idea and makes it into a counterfactual, “if God does not exist, objective moral values and duties do not exist.” Now what you are essentially trying to do, is to refute Michael Ruse by appealing to stories in the Bible. Good luck with that!
b). If you are claiming that God is behaving in a fashion that is really evil, then you are really just affirmed premise 2 of the argument, that objective moral values and duties do exist.
c). The theist could escape your objection simply by holding that the Bible writers were mistaken in attributing such commands to God. This alone, avoids your objection to the first premise, and actually, shows that you are not really objecting to the first premise, but to the doctrine of literal biblical inerrancy. Very well, do so, but it would not phase even many orthodox Christians and does not refute the first premise.
As for premise 2, you essentially claim that moral beliefs have changed over time and people don’t know perfectly this objective morality (which seems to contradict your earlier statement that “do unto others” is obvious and known by all cultures, but let that pass). here you confuse moral ontology (the existence of objective moral values) with moral epistemology (the knowledge of objective moral values), but that fact that many societies do not “know” this objective morality perfectly is hardly proof that it does not exist.
The basis for this objective morality, of course, is God’s nature. God is a greatest conceivable being, and as such is the paradigm of moral goodness. Moral duties comes from his commands. These commands flow necessarily from his just, loving, etc. nature. So to ask “what if God commanded child abuse” is a meaningless question, rather like asking “if a square circle existed, would its area be pie time r-squared”?
Given the probability of premise 1 and 2, therefore, Premise 3, God exists, logically follows.