Part 2
[2]You say that if God underlies reality then goodness is “integral to reality itself.” But how does that follow? First of all, why would it follow from the fact that God values certain things and that God underlies reality that God’s values are integral to those things? I underlie my thought that 2 + 2 = 4, and I value chocolate ice cream, but my opinion of chocolate ice cream is not in any sense integral to my thought that 2 + 2 = 4.
You value both the ice cream and the arithmetic equation, but in different ways. You value the equation as meaningful and true, you value the ice cream as an appetite suppressor or taste delight. I am not completely clear what you are arguing here, but it appears that what you are claiming is that God would not or might not create things that are of value to him. Or, perhaps, that some things are, like arithmetic facts, value neutral.
Clearly, any being that is capable of creating would not waste their time or energy on things that were not of value to it. It might create some things, like mathematical truths, that are value neutral but necessary as instrumental to the creation of other things (like ice cream?) that have real value.
I would spend more time on this point, but I am unclear as to what, precisely, your point is. It is difficult to argue against loose associations of ideas.
Second, even if God’s values are integral to reality, why does that mean that things in reality have to be good as a result? Values are integral to things like plans and awards. But there are such things as bad plans and undeserved awards.
Bad plans only come from inadequate planners. If God is omniscient and omnipotent, then “bad plans” would not be concocted.
And, yes, I am familiar with dysteleological arguments, but with such a complex plan as the universe itself which has a timeline of billions of years and involving (name removed by moderator)ut from billions of free agents, it would seem a hasty conclusion to make concerning the quality of the plan, given that it is “in process” and its final end is unclear.
[3]You say that in one breath that without God “morals [can] only [be] conditional on the transitory existence of moral subjects with no absolutely obligatory aspect, except as forcibly or conditionally imposed by some yielding power over others,” but saying that morals depend on the existence of moral subjects is not the same as saying that a particular subject has to accept morals or be in fact motivated by them in order to be obligatory. My view is that ** things are good because people value them**, so in this sense I think that there need to be subjects with values in order for there to be moral goodness. But the fact that some values derive from Bob, and I am not Bob, does not mean that I am not obligated by those values, any more than the fact that on your view values derive from God and the fact that I am not God means that morality is not obligatory.
I find it interesting that you have no qualms about conceding that things are, as you say, “
good because people value them” and yet in point 4 you argue against divine command theory on the basis that if things are “
good because God values them,” that is tantamount to “might makes right.” So what is it about people that gives us a right to determine good, but God has no such right because, on his part, that would be audaciously Machiavellian?
Surely, a determination of good by people, must be inferior to a similar determination by an omniscient omnibenevolent Being independent of the power of either type of being to carry out either determination.
Furthermore, if people are creatures brought into being by God, then the means by which we can determine anything regarding good must be based upon the qualities endowed by God to us, and, therefore, are dependent upon God’s determination, in any case.
To use subordinate qualities such as humans have to make judgements against determinations made by the Superlative Being would seem to be judicially untenable since neither moral goodness, intellectual prowess, fairness of judgement nor general competency would favor human judgements over those of the Creator of all.
I did not argue that we are not obligated to moral values even if they originate in God. My point would be that since we also originate in God, as moral values do, then we are, indeed, obligated by our nature as moral beings. My point was that only beings capable of subjectivity are obligated by moral values, so an awareness of moral values arises from the fact of our “subjectivity,” from what we are, but since that subjectivity is grounded in God, we are obligated by our subjective natures to the moral truths that come from God as Supreme Subject.
Continued…