The (usually) atheists and humanists who claim to be able to be moral even though they are not religious nevertheless have many of the same moral values as the religious. — baker
Whence the idea that morality can be conceived of without reference to religion? — baker
Their idea of moral behavior (as far as verbal and bodily actions go) is still the one as first modeled by religion. — baker
I'm not asking whether morality can be justified without religion. I'm asking whence the idea that it can or should be. Is this just rebellion against religion, or is there something else to it? — baker
Not that religion makes morality more clear. Just because a deity announces a moral principle to be valid does not make the moral principle itself more important or better stated. — Manuel
those things can indeed be morally obligatory just because he says so. — ToothyMaw
Thus, morality is clear as day in the context of religion - even if the principles imparted by god are arbitrary. — ToothyMaw
Sure. But it doesn't offer an explanation which isn't tautological as to why you should or should not do X, Y or Z. — Manuel
It may appear clear. Doesn't mean it is. — Manuel
It isn't a tautology: moral acts are obligatory because god commands them. However, that doesn't mean that god commands moral acts because they are moral. Those are two very different things. — ToothyMaw
How is it not crystal clear? God commands it, it is right, we should do it. I'm not saying divine command theory is infallible, but it makes ethics very simple. — ToothyMaw
But I'm assuming that people believe that the commands given by God are moral, because they are given by God. He wouldn't command me to do something immoral, surely? I suppose it depends on which religion you have in mind. — Manuel
Now back to religion. God commands something, it is right because He says it is right. Why is it right? Because God says so. This seems to me to be equivalent of asking but what's wrong with I did and a police officer replying "it's the law". Yeah, fine. I don't think that's a good reason, much less an argument. — Manuel
Yes, of course; the Euthyphro suggests why, in effect, it is necessary to do so. More prosaically, though, if people had lived in larger-than-a-few-families social groupings generations before adopting-forming a 'cultus' (and, of course, archealogy, shows that they did), then they must've had some customs (i.e. mores) of reciprocal violence avoidance, mutual aid, free-rider disincentives (like blame-stigma or expulsion), etc to which they adhered sufficiently for the social group to survive. Like, for example, the church preceded the canonic bible, the Hebrew tribes wandering for decades preceded them adopting Mosaic Law; morality, which is presupposed by eusocial group survival, precedes building institutions / monuments like religions or states (Aristotle?) The reverse order just doesn't make sense empirically or logically.There's the idea that one doesn't need religion in order to be moral.
That might well be so, as far as verbal and bodily actions go. But is it possible to conceive of morality without reference to religion to begin with? — baker
Whence the idea that morality can be conceived of without reference to religion? — baker
Yes, of course; the Euthyphro suggests why, in effect, it is necessary to do so. More prosaically, though, if people had lived in larger-than-a-few-families social groupings generations before adopting-forming a 'cultus' (and, of course, archealogy, shows that they did), then they must've had some customs (i.e. mores) of reciprocal violence avoidance, mutual aid, free-rider disincentives (like blame-stigma or expulsion), etc to which they adhered sufficiently for the social group to survive. Like, for example, the church preceded the canonic bible, the Hebrew tribes wandering for decades preceded them adopting Mosaic Law; morality, which is presupposed by eusocial group survival, precedes building institutions / monuments like relgions or states (Aristotle?) The reverse order just doesn't make sense empirically or logically. — 180 Proof
Indeed, and some religions criticize believers who obey religious laws out of fear of punishment or out of hope for a reward.If you only do the right thing because you are commanded to you are not acting morally, you are acting the slave. — DingoJones
Neither religion nor secular ethics were ever conceived in a social vacuum. There is always a social context--human desires, human needs. human weaknesses, material conditions--that are addressed in either religious or secular morality. No moral system was ever without a predecessor. — Bitter Crank
The idea that something is moral or immoral was indigenous to man — James Riley
Still, the monotheists characteristically operate with the idea that they are "right about God", that they know the truth about God and everything related to God.Religion doesn't provide a stable moral foundation. As we have all probably noticed, even within a single religious tradition, morality is whatever a believer or a particular church community subjectively determines it to be though interpretation of scripture or 'knowing' what God's will is.
/.../ — Tom Storm
Explain why.Well, like language, morals emerges in and belongs to the commons, that is, it's a social, public, process-artifact and not merely a matter of individual, or private, expression.
Your "phylogenic vs ontogenic" comparison is a non sequitur. — 180 Proof
Still, the monotheists characteristically operate with the idea that they are "right about God", that they know the truth about God and everything related to God.
The religious, generally, have the conviction, the confidence that they are right about morality, and they refer to some external source for this. They quite distinctly have no sense that their beliefs about morality are somehow to any extent of their own making.
This is enviable, don't you think? — baker
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.