 ToothyMaw
ToothyMaw         
          Devans99
Devans99         
          ToothyMaw
ToothyMaw         
          Devans99
Devans99         
         I'm trying to determine whether or not not believing in god is tantamount to denying god's commands after granting that divine command theory is infallible. — Aleph Numbers
 ToothyMaw
ToothyMaw         
          Devans99
Devans99         
         Consequently, is it true that if one says that another is amoral for denying judeo-christian values, which are revelation, then it follows that they would be amoral for merely denying god's existence because, once again, to deny god's existence is to deny revelation? — Aleph Numbers
to deny god's existence is to deny revelation — Aleph Numbers
wouldn't denying revelation (the moral disclosures made by god, which would be moral facts if god existed, albeit arbitrary moral facts) be equivalent to not believing in god — Aleph Numbers
 Banno
Banno         
          ToothyMaw
ToothyMaw         
          ToothyMaw
ToothyMaw         
          ToothyMaw
ToothyMaw         
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