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FFT: Seversky and the IS-OUGHT gap

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In the ongoing AJ vs ID discussion thread, major tangential debates have developed. One of these is on the IS-OUGHT gap, and it is worth headlining due to its pivotal worldviews importance (and yes, this is a philosophy issue). Let us start with Seversky, highlighting his key contention — which is commonly asserted:

Sev, 261: >>Origenes @ 258

The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

You cannot logically derive “ought” from “is”. No one can, not even God. So, if our morality is God-given, how did He – or, indeed, any other being – derive it? Did He toss a coin?>>

Origines, 262 (to EA but relevant): >>Eric Anderson @259

Thank you for pointing out the typical materialistic response wrt morality.

EA: However, the squirming can eventually follow the direction it does for the rest of the materialist creation story: namely, at some point Characteristic X didn’t exist, and then at some later point Characteristic X “evolved.”

The majority of materialists fails to understand that materialism can only take us to the illusion of effective moral laws. Suppose that by ‘Characteristic X’ is meant organismal behavior which is consistent with the moral law “thou shall not steal”. Now, in a purely material universe, all sorts of physical stuff can contribute to X, but X can never be caused by the moral law “thou shall not steal”. The consistency with a moral law is happenstantial and not an intended result. There cannot be a moral law who is telling atoms how to behave. In a materialistic world the moral law “though shall not steal” has no power to reach down in the brain and rearrange neuronal behavior so as to comply with that moral law.

Illusion.

Given materialism, it can only be the case that it is as if a moral law is being respected. So, no, naturalism cannot get us to morality. It can only get us to the illusion of morality. It can result in behavior which, incidentally, is consistent with a moral law. But noticing this consistency is nothing more than the occasional observation of temporal happenstantial synchronicity between two totally unrelated things.>>

KF, 263: >>Seversky, if you have been keeping track that is not what is at stake. The issue is, we are patently inescapably morally governed, as for instance you implied by trying to correct and by expecting us to have a sense of duty to the truth and the right. Either that speaks truly or mindedness collapses into grand delusion. As, if such is a delusional perception in an actually utterly amoral world then delusion is at the heart of attempts to reason and be responsible — as Rosenberg implies but tries to put a rosy picture on. Absurd. So, we need to ask, what sort of world must we be in for such moral government not to be rooted in grand delusion. This points to world-roots that cannot be infinite regress or a chicken-egg loop. Finitely remote, necessary being root. As, were there ever utter non-being (which can have no causal powers) such would forever obtain. The premise that, on pain of grand delusion and absurdity, we are responsibly and rationally significantly free and morally governed, self-moved creatures then leads to the world root being a necessary being that is at the same time inextricably the root of moral government. Where, if we are not self-moved initiating causal agents, we have no true freedom to draw a LOGICAL, meaningful inference from grounds and/or evidence to the consequent or a warranted conclusion, we would be trapped in a delusion of rationality while actually being the GIGO-limited playthings of our computational substrates and their blind, mechanically driven and/or stochastic cause effect chains. We must be free and self-moved to be rational or responsible. Is and ought are not IS–> OUGHT, but instead that they are inherently inextricably entangled and utterly fused at the world-root. There is one serious candidate (if you doubt, kindly provide a coherent alternative: _____ ) i.e. the inherently good creator God, a necessary and maximally great being, worthy of loyalty and the reasonable, responsible service of doing the good in accord with our evident nature.>>

The immediate context for this is also well worth excerpting as a part of the spark for onward discussion:

HP, 256: >>The [subjective moralists] I have read . . .  don’t say that “moral values and obligations are totally subjective.”, they claim that the individual values are subjective. A small distinction I realize, but an important one. And, I apologize in advance for not phrasing this as well as I would like.

My own personal belief is that our system of morality is a combination of objective and subjective. The most obvious objective aspect of our morality system is that the existance of this system appears to be universal amongst humans. Even psychopaths and sociopaths have a morality system. They just happen to be very different than that of the majority of the population. Of the other values (not killing, lying, stealing…) some may be objective and others subjective. Frankly, I don’t know. And I don’t really care. But the one thing that makes logical sense is that if there are objective morals, they are not independent of subjectivity. They are either strengthened by our experiences or they are weakened. Thus explaining the variations that we see in their application amongst different cultures.>>

Origines, 258:>>

hammaspeikko: The ones I have read, which I admit are limited, are more nuanced than that. They don’t say that “moral values and obligations are totally subjective.”, they claim that the individual values are subjective. A small distinction I realize, but an important one.

I have never heard about such a moral system. Individual values are subjective and non-individual values are not? Can you provide some more info?
The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

Here is atheistic philosopher Alex Rosenberg:

Scientism can’t avoid nihilism. We need to make the best of it….

First, nihilism can’t condemn Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, or those who fomented the Armenian genocide or the Rwandan one. If there is no such thing as “morally forbidden,” then what Mohamed Atta did on September 11, 2001, was not morally forbidden. Of course, it was not permitted either. But still, don’t we want to have grounds to condemn these monsters? Nihilism seems to cut that ground out from under us. …

To avoid these outcomes, people have been searching for scientifically respectable justification of morality for least a century and a half. The trouble is that over the same 150 years or so, the reasons for nihilism have continued to mount. Both the failure to find an ethics that everyone can agree on and the scientific explanation of the origin and persistence of moral norms have made nihilism more and more plausible while remaining just as unappetizing.

[A. Rosenberg, ‘The Atheist’s Guide To Reality’, ch. 5]>>

EA, 259: >>Origenes:

The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

I think your point is well made, and should be sufficient to make any materialist squirm.

However, the squirming can eventually follow the direction it does for the rest of the materialist creation story: namely, at some point Characteristic X didn’t exist, and then at some later point Characteristic X “evolved.”

This may not seem very intellectually satisfactory to the objective observer, but the materialist is perfectly happy to argue that morality evolved as a result of [insert made-up reason here]. It isn’t fundamentally different than any other system or characteristic evolving. No details. No particular reason or direction. It just did.

So while I agree with your general point, and Rosenberg’s frank admission, the entire issue becomes lost on the committed materialist. After all, the entire view of history and creation and all that this entails, is just — as you aptly noted — nothing more than a long accidental sequence of particles bumping into each other.

And those particles, so the thinking does, don’t have to ground anything. Not design, not functional complexity, not information. Nothing. Just wait long enough for the particles to bump into each other enough times, and — Ta Da! — here we are. Whether we are talking about molecular machines or morality, it is all the same in the materialist creation story.

Remember, this is all right in line with the Great Evolutionary Explanation for all things:

Stuff Happens.

It is really no more substantive than that.>>

So, how then do we come to be morally governed, and what does this imply about us and the world? END

Comments
hammaspeikko,
All I know is that DaveS has made a very good point. And even without a higher education I know that arguing that we couldn’t be governed by a moral “sense” without God is a non-argument. The world has seen thousands of cultures, with thousands of religious beliefs, many of which are incompatible with each other. Yet I am not aware of any that did not feel that they were morally governed. Are you suggesting that they were all morally governed by the same God? That doesn’t seem reasonable considering that some believed in human sacrifices, child sacrifices, slavery, witchcraft, and so on.
You are making an inductive argument for moral relativity, aren’t you? I mean, if as you say there are “thousands of cultures, with thousands of religious beliefs, [with thousands of different moral beliefs] many of which are incompatible with each other,” how could anyone claim that one system of morality was better than any other?john_a_designer
May 1, 2017
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Kairosfocus, I am only a high school graduate so you will have to use words other than "antinomies" if you want to convince me of anything. All I know is that DaveS has made a very good point. And even without a higher education I know that arguing that we couldn't be governed by a moral "sense" without God is a non-argument. The world has seen thousands of cultures, with thousands of religious beliefs, many of which are incompatible with each other. Yet I am not aware of any that did not feel that they were morally governed. Are you suggesting that they were all morally governed by the same God? That doesn't seem reasonable considering that some believed in human sacrifices, child sacrifices, slavery, witchcraft, and so on.hammaspeikko
May 1, 2017
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KF,
DS, how do you get TO a world at all? (As opposed to there “being” utter non-being?) Then, TO a world in which we have morally governed, responsibly and rationally free creatures? KF
Well, I don't know how you get to a world, starting from ... elsewhere. I can at least understand the notion that a world-root is required for the universe to exist. I can also understand that this world-root/God could will the universe into existence in a particular arrangement, e.g. Earth, having a water ocean, &c. But I do find it hard to understand "[A] Mind that eternally contemplates these things and through a deep rationality builds the logic of structure and quantity into this or any other possible world". How could a Mind possibly have any influence on the world by contemplating, for example, the statement "1 + 1 = 2"? Isn't that statement already true in every possible world? It all seems rather unnecessary (and ineffective) to me.daveS
May 1, 2017
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HP (& attn, DS), do you see that we are not dealing with just a math property but a world, in a context where were there ever utter nothing, true non-being, as such has no causal powers such would forever obtain? It can be seen at once that if a world now is, something always was, leading to the three options and resulting antinomies so the conclusion, a finitely remote necessary being is the world-root. Then, ponder distinct identity (equivalent to two-ness, A and ~A), which happens to be intimately involved in 1 + 1 = 2. Can a world exist without such distinct identity? No, it is a necessary framework reality. Necessary being, with no beginning and no end (as can be shown). So, we are back to a world root necessary being that frames any possible world. Then, our world includes morally governed creatures, where as already explained, on pain of collapse of mindedness into grand delusion, such can only be grounded in the world root. We then need to address what sort of world root is adequate for such beings to exist. And, in all of this we must also recognise that reasoning -- as opposed to blind computation -- requires freedom, self-moved agency, which is necessarily regulated through responsible moral government. Indeed, notice the implicit appeal to duty to truth and to sound reasoning in the exchanges above. So, one may indeed take something in isolation from the world context and rhetorically suggest, what does this have to do with morality, but when we pull back and look at the big picture, a very different overview results. KFkairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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the truth
daveS, I hate to go all Pontius Pilate on you, but what are you talking about? Andrewasauber
May 1, 2017
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JDK, I think you need to be a bit more cautious, post Godel. KFkairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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DS, how do you get TO a world at all? (As opposed to there "being" utter non-being?) Then, TO a world in which we have morally governed, responsibly and rationally free creatures? KFkairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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Well, at least as far as math goes, if one accepts various definitions that are made along the way, it goes all the way to the end of math, as it all logically hangs together. Given the definitions of the constituent parts, e^(i•pi) = -1 is as true as 1 + 1 =2.jdk
May 1, 2017
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DaveS: "I would even have offered that I believe that “1 + 1 = 2” is objectively true, that is, it would be true even if there were no minds to contemplate it." DaveS, thank you for this view. It certainly raises some interesting questions. It is obvious that one hydrogen atom plus another hydrogen atom equals two hydrogen atoms. It is self evident that there is no need to impose a designer/God for this to be objectively true. The question is, how far can this logic be extended?hammaspeikko
May 1, 2017
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KF,
Mind that eternally contemplates these things and through a deep rationality builds the logic of structure and quantity into this or any other possible world.
Hmm. I'm not clear on how that works. Why can't humans discover the truth of propositions such as 1 + 1 = 2 simply by contemplating them ourselves? I don't see why it would be required for some root-mind to be contemplating them eternally. I would even have offered that I believe that "1 + 1 = 2" is objectively true, that is, it would be true even if there were no minds to contemplate it. I take it you consider that to be impossible?daveS
May 1, 2017
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Materialism is essentially an attempt to unmask the world we are familiar with. It informs us that things at the macro-level of our daily life are not at all what they seem to be. This is based on materialism’s metaphysical claim that true unitary existence is only to be found at the physical micro-level. Materialism is the claim that all of reality consists of impersonal indivisible fundamental elements —fermions and bosons— which are the source of all true causation. ‘All oneness at the macro-level is an illusion’ is the ‘great insight’ of materialism. For instance, at macro-level a rock may present itself to us as one indivisible thing, however materialism informs us that its oneness is an illusion; in fact it is nothing over and beyond the minuscule fundamental indivisible elements, which truly exists as single things. These fundamental elements that make the rock don’t have the rock in mind. They don’t care if they are part of a rock or any other conglomerate. According to materialism there are no exceptions to this rule of reduction. Similarly a robot, made from Lego blocks, which cleans the porch, may present itself to us as one indivisible thing which wants a clean porch, but in fact there is nothing over and beyond Lego blocks which care about neither robots nor porches. The illusion of a sympathetic personal robot is produced by unhelpful impersonal Lego blocks. To be clear, there is no person and there is no sympathy. Similarly a human being, made from fermions and bosons, may present itself to us as one indivisible thing with its own intentions, but in fact there is nothing over and beyond fermions and bosons which care about neither human beings nor their intentions. The illusion of an intentional personal human being is produced by unintentional impersonal fermions and bosons. To be clear, there is no person and there are no intentions. Which laws are effective? If fermions and bosons act, then it is due to the laws of physics and no other. To be clear, fermions and bosons do not do anything due to laws of logic, laws of morality or a person’s will. Surely, nothing prevents fermions and bosons to act in accord with those illusionary laws and intentions, but if they do so, then this is just coincidental, unintentional. There is absolutely no reason for this to be the case. There is nothing that wants to bring the two worlds together. The four pillars of materialism: 1. Oneness (indivisibility) equals true eternal existence — “atom” means "uncuttable" and "indivisible". 2. This oneness is only to be found at the micro-level — fermions and bosons. 3. At this level of true existence there is no personhood, no intentionality, no reason and no consciousness. 4. All action is due to the laws of physics and nothing else. There is no behavior based on intentions. Fermions and bosons ignore our intentions; they only adhere to the laws of physics. Therefore, this sentence, which you are reading right now, is, like everything else, into existence due to chemical/physical reasons only. These words are not arranged in order to convey a meaning, in order to make an argument. No, the intention to make an argument cannot cause anything, if these sentences look like an argument then it must be an illusion and/or coincidental. It can only be the case that some physical stuff happen to act as if it has the intention to make an argument.Origenes
May 1, 2017
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F/N: Do we not perceive the sense that we OUGHT to be reasonable, rational, responsible? OUGHT to seek the truth and the right? OUGHT not to yield to errors and fallacies or enmesh others in such? And so forth? KFkairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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DS, absent a sufficient root, no world, not this nor any other alternative, just non-being. The issue is the nature of that root, and you can see the alternatives, leading to a finitely remote necessary being. This is still far indeed from any God as such. What puts God on the table is the issue that we are inescapably morally governed, something that is inextricably entangled with our rationality and freedom. I outlined the sorts of moral commitments involved in consistently sound reasoning, for example. Then, we see either our sense of such government is utterly delusional, taking all of mannishness we care about down with it in an apocalypse of grand delusion, or that moral government is real. If it is (and that is the reasonable alternative), there is but one place it can find an adequate source, in a world root IS that is inherently, inextricably also the root of ought. That is Hume's inadvertent gift, and the answer to Hume's challenge. I have put up the only serious candidate for that world-root level fusion we have received after centuries of debates. If you can find one not rapidly falling to antinomies, feel free to suggest: _____ KF PS: You are back at mathematics, and it is obvious that the key abstracta are aspects of the necessary root frameworking reality of this or any world, starting with numbers and their logical relationships. As abstracta they are inherently mental objects. That points again to the core nature of the world-root. Essentially, mind. Mind that eternally contemplates these things and through a deep rationality builds the logic of structure and quantity into this or any other possible world. A deep rationality that requires both utter freedom to be self-moved and initiatory, and the utter discipline of moral government that keeps reasoning sound. (I find it astonishing that we are so blind to how deeply, broadly pervasive moral government is in rational action.) So, the issue is that the elements of 1 + 1 = 2 depend on a world being, and that alternatives as to the nature of the root of the world are constrained by the reality of our own moral government and the necessity that such be sourced at world-root level. The alternative to such rooting, is that our mindedness collapses in an avalanche of grand delusion.kairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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mike1962,
DaveS: Just as we do not need a deity/world root to do mathematics By “need” you mean, “need to know the identity of in the sense of some personal God”, I would gather. Because whatever the “world-root” is, whether it is something impersonal or “personal”, whatever that means ultimately, mathematics and every thing else is necessarily dependent on it by definition.
I actually did mean that the truth of mathematical statements such as 1 + 1 = 2 is not dependent on God/the world-root, or whatever we choose to call it. At least that's my opinion. In what way could the truth of 1 + 1 = 2 depend on anyone or anything?daveS
May 1, 2017
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DaveS: Just as we do not need a deity/world root to do mathematics By "need" you mean, "need to know the identity of in the sense of some personal God", I would gather. Because whatever the "world-root" is, whether it is something impersonal or "personal", whatever that means ultimately, mathematics and every thing else is necessarily dependent on it by definition.mike1962
May 1, 2017
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Over in the "FFT: Worldviews..." thread HeKS and I have been discussing this topic for quite a while. I started my part of the discussion at 83. kf had written:
the sort of world imagined by AJ [one in which there is a root-level IS that has no OUGHTS] is an incoherent impossible world, not a credibly possible world.
[Link below] I replied, and have been arguing the case for, the following:
But I can easily imagine a coherent and possible world where a supreme being created our universe, with all the qualities necessary to produce the physics, chemistry, and biology that we see (that is, is the ground of IS), but who is supremely indifferent to the details of how the world goes, including the actions of the life forms within it (that is, is supremely indifferent to OUGHT). I see no incoherent impossibility, no self-refutation, in believing, or at least being able to imagine, that this is the type of supreme IS-ness that underlies the world.
Those interested could read some of what HeKS and I have posted. (There is an entirely different topic intertwined with ours, so you would want to skip some of the posts.) https://uncommondescent.com/ethics/science-worldview-issues-and-society/fft-the-worldviews-level-challenge-what-the-objectors-to-design-thought-are-running-away-from/#comment-629921jdk
May 1, 2017
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"Darwin's simplistic explanations have failed, and the millions that have followed him have nothing but his outdated assumptions to stand on." Douglas Axe "Undeniable" (2016)Truth Will Set You Free
May 1, 2017
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DS, oughtness in the end is integral to the world-root. The inherent nature of that root will ground subsidiary being including rational, responsibly free self-moved beings who must choose and act aright for their thriving and that of the world. This includes things like truthfulness, diligence to reason soundly, care to be accurate and materially complete in observation, being accurate in reporting and careful in inference, the need to attend to coherence, recognition and respect of distinct identity etc. KF PS: For the expression 1 + 1 = 2 to be true it rests on numbers, operations, relationships, and more. It is self evident by direct demonstration of clustering distinct unities to form a duality but this requires experience to understand what is being said or done. Think about how we teach simple addition. The underlying reality behind the expression of course requires that at least one world is, requiring a root reality; recall, utter non being can be contemplated but not actualised. That root reality will be a necessary being of some character, and thus the numerical truth will be an integral part of that root reality. As an ethical theist, I would point out that eternal verities are eternally contemplated by the eternal mind. Where, that mind is effectively synonymous with the world root. Absent that, utter non being and we would not be here to have a discussion, indeed, nothing at all would exist.kairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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KF,
The causal-temporal order needs explanation, and three possibilities obtain. Of these, the one that does not run into antimomies is a finitely remote world-root of necessary being character. The onward question is the nature of such, where our existence as credibly morally governed creatures constrains options and forces consideration of a root-IS that is inherently root of OUGHT also.
My question boils down to, if these OUGHTs are objective, why do they need to be "rooted" in anything? Does the fact that 1 + 1 = 2 need to be rooted in the existence of some being (who obviously could have no influence on whether it is true or not)?daveS
May 1, 2017
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DS, in other threads such as the one excerpted, the need for a world root was discussed, over a fair length of time now. In the OP the reason we look at a world-root at finite remove is given in highly compressed form, and it is not based on IS-OUGHT issues. The causal-temporal order needs explanation, and three possibilities obtain. Of these, the one that does not run into antimomies is a finitely remote world-root of necessary being character. The onward question is the nature of such, where our existence as credibly morally governed creatures constrains options and forces consideration of a root-IS that is inherently root of OUGHT also. If you do not like the candidate on offer from ethical theism, simply propose another that does not run into antinomies: ______ KFkairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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KF, PS: In fact, I'm not invoking a dilemma at all here---I am explicitly assuming that what (a hypothetical) God tells us to do is moral because it is objectively moral, not simply because it's what God tells us to do. Presumably we're agreed on that?daveS
May 1, 2017
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KF, No, I don't see how it's the same. My proposal is this: Just as we do not need a deity/world root to do mathematics, we do not need a deity/world root to identify and exercise objective morality. (Of course if you assume already that a world-root exists, then you're done. But my understanding is that you are using the is/ought argument to support the existence of a world-root).daveS
May 1, 2017
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DS, pardon, you stated a form of that failed dilemma argument. KF PS: Nothing exists, apart from the necessary being world-root. the issue is, its character. And you rightly point out that thoughts need minds to contemplate them. Objective realities can be inherently mental, e.g. numbers. I tend to use the von Neumann construction and extensions therefrom.kairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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KF,
DS, observe, morality — goodness — is an integral component of God’s character, in ethical theism.
Yes.
Likewise, to be rational, a being must be self-moved and free,
Ok.
thus is in the realm of moral government inherently, with duties to truth and right — to say that God as world-root being is Reason Himself is also to imply that he is inherently morally governed, tied to his character.
Ok, true if God exists.
The Euthyphro dilemma failed to address and still fails to address the difference between a small-g god who comes along and the world-root necessary being whose character inherently is maximally great.
Ok, but I don't see how that pertains to my proposal. If a God (or perhaps any world-root) would have no role in determining objective morality (it is objective, and hence exists independently of whether there are any minds to ponder it), why do we conclude that the existence of objective morality is evidence for a God/world root?daveS
May 1, 2017
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DS, observe, morality -- goodness -- is an integral component of God's character, in ethical theism. Likewise, to be rational, a being must be self-moved and free, thus is in the realm of moral government inherently, with duties to truth and right --- to say that God as world-root being is Reason Himself is also to imply that he is inherently morally governed, tied to his character. . The Euthyphro dilemma failed to address and still fails to address the difference between a small-g god who comes along and the world-root necessary being whose character inherently is maximally great. KFkairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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KF,
The premise that, on pain of grand delusion and absurdity, we are responsibly and rationally significantly free and morally governed, self-moved creatures then leads to the world root being a necessary being that is at the same time inextricably the root of moral government.
So, how then do we come to be morally governed, and what does this imply about us and the world?
In the other thread I asked a question which I believe is on-topic here:
I take it that just as in mathematics, there are no “free parameters” in objective morality. In other words, just as even God could not arrange for e^iπ to be a number other than −1, He cannot choose to make some action moral or immoral—it just is moral or immoral, period. Could humans simply have the ability to discern (however imperfectly) this objective morality, even in the absence of a God?
daveS
May 1, 2017
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F/N: Arthur Holmes:
However we may define the good, however well we may calculate consequences, to whatever extent we may or may not desire certain consequences, none of this of itself implies any obligation of command. That something is or will be does not imply that we ought to seek it. We can never derive an “ought” from a premised “is” unless the ought is somehow already contained in the premise . . . . R. M. Hare . . . raises the same point. Most theories, he argues, simply fail to account for the ought that commands us: subjectivism reduces imperatives to statements about subjective states, egoism and utilitarianism reduce them to statements about consequences, emotivism simply rejects them because they are not empirically verifiable, and determinism reduces them to causes rather than commands . . . . Elizabeth Anscombe’s point is well made. We have a problem introducing the ought into ethics unless, as she argues, we are morally obligated by law – not a socially imposed law, ultimately, but divine law . . . . This is precisely the problem with modern ethical theory in the West . . . it has lost the binding force of divine commandments. [Arthur F. Holmes, Ethics, (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1984), p. 81. Holmes goes on to point out that certain duties arise from our particular relationships, commitments and roles in the family and wider community. We may also face situations in which we are forced to choose the lesser of evils, especially where delay or inaction is in effect to make a worse choice.]
KFkairosfocus
May 1, 2017
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