RE: The Objective Moral Values Argument AGAINST The Existence Of God
May 1, 2018 at 8:43 pm
(This post was last modified: May 1, 2018 at 9:28 pm by Edwardo Piet.)
(May 1, 2018 at 11:55 am)Khemikal Wrote: It doesn't concern me, in the least, that a condensed and more accurate counterargument to divine necessity in moral realism fails to lead to your intended conclusion. I rate that as a pro, not a con.
It's not more condensed and more accurate. It's more condensed and leads to an entirely different conclusion. Both are accurate. You have failed to demonstrate how my argument is supposedly not valid or "does not follow" despite the fact that it clearly does. And if the conclusion of your argument isn't the same as the conclusion of my argument then it's not a shorter version of my argument so I don't care if it doesn't concern you because you are being irrelevant to the OP. The conclusion is supposed to be that it's less rational to believe in God if objective moral values exist... not merely that you don't need God to believe in objective moral values. That should go without saying and is already one of the premises in my argument. You've effectively lead yourself to a conclusion that is already one of the premises in my argument. Of course you don't need God for objective moral values. The point is that if objective moral values exist it's more rational to believe in them without belief in God. And THAT is what your argument is supposed to address if you're actually going to be relevant to the OP.
(May 1, 2018 at 12:13 pm)RoadRunner79 Wrote:(May 1, 2018 at 11:14 am)Hammy Wrote:
The problem is that I don't accept any of your premises other than 4. Which means that you still have more work to do. All thought to be fair, rejection of premise 2 is mostly because of premise 1.
Well that's different to what you said before. Before you said my argument did not follow (was invalid) now you're saying it's unsound (for you at least) because you don't accept the premises.
Well that's fine. The point is if you accept the premises the conclusion follows.
What about the shorter version of my argument that I provided you with?
(May 1, 2018 at 12:45 pm)possibletarian Wrote: But most of all I never saw why it was used as an argument for god, as I never understood why morals need to be objective anyway, they simply had to be agreed upon, indoctrinated, or enforced.
Personally I believe in objective morality but I don't believe objective moral values exist. I believe in objective epistemology but not objective moral ontology.
And it has been asked of me incredulously by Neo things like, to paraphrase him "That makes no sense how can you have knowledge of something you don't believe exists?!"... but my point is that I don't believe objective moral values exist independent of our minds. What I'm saying is that moral truths are like mathematical truths: They are true but don't refer to things that actually exist in the world. I can believe it's objectively true that 2+2=4 without thinking there's an entity in the external world that represents the truth of 2+2=4. I'm not a mathematical platonist. What would it mean for mathematical truths to "exist"? What would it mean for logical truths to "exist"? What would it mean for objective moral values to "exist"? Existence is different to truth.
Of course, because unlike some (most?) people I believe in ontological subjectivity... so I'm more than happy to think that I do, if being pedantic, believe that objective moral values and mathematical truths and logical truths exist... they just exist within human minds. It's just many or most people wouldn't call that existence so I prefer to say I don't believe in moral ontology because for most people moral ontology means an external existence.