To paraphrase Socrates in the Euthyphro, the question most philosophers are going to want to ask is "is something morally valuable because Reason values it, or does she value it because it is morally valuable? — Bartricks
So the first thing I would say about the Euthyphro is that it seems to apply to everyone - even nihilists. Yet it is impossible for all views about moral value to be false. So something must be wrong with the objection. — Bartricks
o ask is "is something morally valuable because Reason values it, or does she value it because it is morally valuable? — Bartricks
To paraphrase Socrates in the Euthyphro ... — Bartricks
The dialogue and what came to be known as the Euthyphro problem are two different things. — Fooloso4
Do you know what 'paraphrase' means? — Bartricks
verb
express the meaning of (the writer or speaker or something written or spoken) using different words, especially to achieve greater clarity.
And have you read the actual dialogue? — Bartricks
Er, yes. And it is the Euthyphro problem that I am interested in here. Like I said!! Can you read? — Bartricks
The Euthyphro is usually posed as a question: Is something good because God wills it, or does God will it because it is good? The first option makes goodness an arbitrary choice by God, while the second subordinates God to an external principle of goodness. Like many philosophical dilemmas, it sets up a false dichotomy; something is good because it is consistent with the eternal and unchanging nature of God, and everything that God wills is consistent with His eternal and unchanging nature.And it is the Euthyphro problem that I am interested in here. — Bartricks
1. If moral values are the values of a subject, Reason, then they will be contingent, not necessary
2. Moral values are necessary, not contingent (that is, if something is valuable, it is valuable of necessity not contingently)
3. Therefore moral values are not the values of a subject, Reason — Bartricks
I don't believe you. Teaching intro to philosophy - hahahahaha. Yeah, to your bathroom mirror. — Bartricks
Believe what you want. It is not something I usually bring up on the forum since I would rather be judged by what I say rather than by my credentials. — Fooloso4
Right, I was instead addressing the problem named in the thread title. And the original was about "the pious" and "the gods," so the common version that I presented simply updates the terminology for a monotheistic context.So, not addressing the problem in the OP. — Bartricks
The first one, obviously. If moral values are the values of God, then they are necessary, not contingent, since they must be consistent with His eternal and unchanging nature.make that subject God and tell me which premise you're denying. — Bartricks
Indeed, immutability is one of the standard attributes of God in classical theism. Of course, treating God as a "subject" and a "mind" is rather anthropomorphic.So, by 'God' you mean a mind who, if he is valuing X, is incapable of valuing Y? A mind whose attitudes are fixed - whose attitudes the mind itself is incapable of changing? — Bartricks
That God always wills and acts in accordance with His eternal and immutable nature is perfectly consistent with what omnipotence means in classical theism.As well as appearing to be inconsistent with possessing omnipotence ... — Bartricks
If we're talking about a subject - a mind - then clearly any mind can value something other than what he/she is actually valuing. — Bartricks
Well, the problem is that it appears self-evident to the reason of most that if something is morally valuable it is not just morally valuable here and now, but always and everywhere. That is, moral value does not vary over time and space alone. If it is bad today to be a sadist, then it is morally bad tomorrow to be one, other things being equal. — Bartricks
2. Moral values are necessary, not contingent — Bartricks
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