What were you trying to say? What is your off the peg criticism of divine command theory?
Do you think genocides used to be right, or were they always wrong? Clarify that first — Bartricks
Why don't you answer my question? Do you think genocides have always been wrong or that they were right sometimes even though they are wrong now? — Bartricks
I'm one of those people (along with Augustine, Aquinas) who thinks the Euthyphro dilemma is a false one. Some atheists (like Alexander Rosenberg) seem to think it poses a problem for objective morality as a whole, even without theism (See The Atheist's Guide to Reality: Enjoying Life Without Illusions).Do you think genocides have always been wrong or that they were right sometimes even though they are wrong now?
-Sam HarrisSome propositions are so dangerous that it may even be ethical to kill people for believing them... This is what the United States attempted in Afghanistan, and it is what we and other Western powers are bound to attempt, at an even greater cost to ourselves and to innocents abroad, elsewhere in the Muslim world. We will continue to spill blood in what is, at bottom, a war of ideas.
"God" is a fiction, so such reasoning / deduction is necessarily unsound.Can we reason our way to th[is] source? Is it deducible? — Agent Smith
"God" is a fiction, so such reasoning / deduction is necessarily unsound. — 180 Proof
Okay, then I misread you. Yes, nature-based moral systems (e.g. disutilitarianism / epicureanism, (modern) virtue ethics, (modern) stoicism, deep ecology, etc) can be derived by sound reasoning. — 180 Proof
"Yeah, but some people think God wants genocides. So there!" — Bartricks
Are we talking about god-based morality or nature-based morality or not nature-based morality? — 180 Proof
This was the argument I just made:
1. Morality is made of God's attitudes
2. Genocides have never been right
3. Therefore genocides have never been approved of by God — Bartricks
What I presented was an argument. — Bartricks
There's the idea that one doesn't need religion in order to be moral. — baker
My working assumption here is that morality is a complex system that a single person cannot invent and enforce on their own, and it's a complex system that requires a metaphysical, transcendental component, hence the need to tie morality to religion/spirituality.So I'd say religions and spirituality are a way to maintain strong morals, but that it's not the only way. Some people just don't need to think about why they want to be loyal for example, they just are, because that's what they've been told they should do. I know some people who have strong morals but aren't spiritual or religious at all. — Skalidris
This seems self-explanatory.However, if you don't have strong dogmatic intuitions, I don't think you'll be likely to be religious or spiritual. It's my case, I don't have strong moral principles and I've never been attracted to spirituality or religion.
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