(June 2, 2020 at 9:44 am)The Grand Nudger Wrote: The notion that morality changes when the subject changes is the definition of moral subjectivism.
You didn't ask me if God changed His mind about His moral values. You asked me if God had different moral values, then would He have different moral values.
That being said, part of the definition of God is necessary existence (cannot fail to exist). This means He exists in all possible worlds, including the actualized world, and that He is intrinsically the same in each one of these worlds.
Quote:Then there's nothing bad about murder. The good or bad making property is whether a subject has told you to do so, or refrain from doing so.
Wow you're really bad at reasoning.
If objective moral values and duties are indeed ontologically grounded in God, then of course "murder is wrong" would flow from Him through commands and the conscience that He has given us.
Quote:Which, again, is not an epistemological framework
You don't know what epistemology is then. Epistemology is the study of the nature of knowledge. Ontology is the study of the nature of existence. An epistemological framework is way of obtaining knowledge. Moral intuition, or conscience, is how we come to know objective moral values and duties which are ontologically grounded in God's nature.
Quote:I want you to take a breath here and consider something.
Honestly, I think I'm done talking to pseudo-intellectuals. I'm going to go watch my stocks.