EnterTheBowser:
So there’s some characteristic of God which is a moral justification for the moral system God approves of? Could you be a little more specific as to what this characteristic is?
No, there is no specific “characteristic” (except goodness–but that’s obviously not very specific). And what do you mean by a “moral justification”? A “justification” implies appeal to some other standard. God
is goodness. Goodness is God. The point is that the Euthyphro dilemma doesn’t apply. God commands things because they are good, but that standard of goodness to which God’s commands conform is internal to God, not separate from God.
I hope I’m not misrepresenting you, but did you argue that:
-Humans are made in God’s image
-Humans become happy when they imitate God
-Ethical behavior is imitating God in the ways that make us happy
Ethical behavior is imitating God in the ways that correspond with our nature, yes. (Rocks and tigers and stars and angels all imitate God in ways that would not be appropriate for us, and vice versa.) And acting according to our nature makes us happy.
By “our nature” I mean “the way God intends us to be,” which in Christian belief is not entirely the same as the way we currently are (though not entirely different either).
I do think that you made an unfair stipulation at the beginning, as you seem to realize now. It makes no sense to argue that theism puts us in no “better position” than atheists with regard to morality if we can’t compare theism with atheism.
Part of the problem is that both theism and atheism can mean a lot of things. Most of us here will probably not be interested in defending some abstract “theism.” And for your part, it would help to clarify what you see as the ultimate reality in the universe. I would freely grant that certain kinds of non-theists (at least, nonbelievers in the kind of God Christians believe in), such as Buddhists, Jains, Stoics, Neo-Platonists, etc., have a philosophically coherent basis for ethics. But “atheist” in our society usually translates into “materialist”–someone who thinks that matter in motion is the ultimate reality of the universe. I don’t think that someone coming from such a position can formulate a philosophically coherent basis for ethics, no. Materialist ethics is necessarily going to be utilitarian, based on what is conducive to human survival or to the order of society or something of that sort. Or it’s going to be radically subjective, amounting to no more than a personal preference that has no basis outside itself.
In other words, what I’m defending is the idea of a transcendent ground of morality that exists independently of physical evolution, of the biological characteristics of any species, or of the norms of any society. Theists of the Judaeo-Christian-Islamic tradition (and some others–many Hindus, for instance) see this ultimate reality as in some ways analogous to a human person. Hence, we speak of God commanding, acting, judging, forgiving, etc. And hence the possibility for a disjunction between divine commands and the divine nature. But such a disjunction is always a serious philosophical mistake.
Edwin