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
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
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