OK, I want to put together a definitive thread that puts the "you can't be moral without God" to rest. Here's the top 10 reasons why morality and piety are, at best, separate.
1. Societal evidence against it
If it were true that morality required or at least were assisted by a belief in God, we would see the effect on a macro level as societies abandon religion in favor of secularism. In fact, we find the opposite is true. Dr. Gregory Paul did a study on this very subject.
http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2005/2005-11.pdf
2. Individual evidence against it
Atheists have lower rates of incarceration and divorce.
3. The scriptures aren't moral
The Bible utterly fails to deal positively with even the simplest of moral issues. Rape, slavery and genocide are all commanded, regulated and condoned by the Biblical god.
See Numbers Chapter 31 for just one example.
4. Euthephro's Dilemma
Do we say things are good because God wills them or does God will them because they are good?
If the former, this is not objective morality but a being setting rules. Saying this is what defines morality is appealing to a "might-makes-right" mentality, which is hardly a healthy basis for absolute standards of morality.
If the latter, morality then exists outside of and independent to God. That which is wrong would continue to be wrong without God.
5. The circular reasoning of defining God as good
Christians attempting to answer the above dilemma try to babble about how "goodness is grounded in the very nature of God" (WTF does that even mean?) and so that's how we know God is good because God is good.
Bare assertion meets circular reasoning in an orgy of fallacious thinking and incoherent babble.
6. "GodWillsIt" doesn't explain anything
Just saying "GodWillsIt" doesn't help us understand why something is right or wrong. It's not any more satisfying to our curiosity than when our parents told us "cause I said so" when we were children. In fact, the statement basically boils down to "cause the big man in the sky said so".
Compare this to secular answers, that say murder is wrong because it offends our innate sense of empathy and compassion which we have as social animals that form communities and depend on one another for survival? Or how about the "social contract" where we treat others and we would wish to be treated ourselves? There are far more satisfying answers that can be had without any invocation of God.
7. The "easy out" of salvation
The Christian apologizes to his imaginary friend for things he/she has done wrong. The atheist apologizes to those they have wronged and seek to set things right.
How does a religion that tells us we're all sinners and can't change that about our nature encourage us to improve ourselves? It seems rather defeatist. What is stopping you from sinning, confessing and then sinning again?
A great example of this are various "family values" Republicans who are known adulterers. Atheists laugh at their hypocrisy while Christians don't seem to understand why this is a problem. "We're all sinners" one Christian once said to me. As long as they've apologized to Jesus, it's all good, apparently.
8. Morality from the imaginary friend
Jesus is a liberal, a conservative, a capitalist, a communist, a rebel, an authoritarian, straight, gay, bi, asexual, black, white, or whatever else you want him to be. He's the ultimate Rorschach test where people see whatever they want to see, usually a glorified reflection of their own self-image.
God always wants whatever the believer wants. Saying you get your morals from your god is like saying you get your morals from your imaginary friend. All it can do is affirm and self-validate, not direct in any non-biased way.
9. Secularism provides a clearer understanding of what morality is
Take a look at the 10 Commandments in Ex chapter 20. Notice how the first four deal with obedience to Yahweh, not how we treat our fellow people?
Read through the rest of the Bible or Koran and you see that their idea of "evil" usually refers to victimless crimes of blasphemy, idolatry and apostatacy. Ultimately a religion must be concerned first and foremost with its own agenda as a viral meme and with providing moral and spiritual guidance as a secondary priority. A religion that doesn't do so will be overrun by one that does. This means a religion is more concerned about blind obedience and gaining converts much more than encouraging moral behavior. Such a conflict of interest will inevitably muddy the waters.
Secularism clears away this clutter of ancient taboos and victimless crimes to understand that morality is a question of how we should treat our fellow sentient beings. Where our actions impact other sentient beings, questions of morality apply. The issues can be complex and the answers are not always clear but secularism offers a much shorter path to good answers.
10. Appeal to consequences is a logical fallacy
Even if it WERE true that religion promoted moral behavior, it would do nothing to validate the truth of religious claims. The entire discussion is a red herring with regards to the existence of God. One suspects that the moral argument is less about proving anything and more about giving theists a false sense of moral superiority.
1. Societal evidence against it
If it were true that morality required or at least were assisted by a belief in God, we would see the effect on a macro level as societies abandon religion in favor of secularism. In fact, we find the opposite is true. Dr. Gregory Paul did a study on this very subject.
http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2005/2005-11.pdf
2. Individual evidence against it
Atheists have lower rates of incarceration and divorce.
3. The scriptures aren't moral
The Bible utterly fails to deal positively with even the simplest of moral issues. Rape, slavery and genocide are all commanded, regulated and condoned by the Biblical god.
See Numbers Chapter 31 for just one example.
4. Euthephro's Dilemma
Do we say things are good because God wills them or does God will them because they are good?
If the former, this is not objective morality but a being setting rules. Saying this is what defines morality is appealing to a "might-makes-right" mentality, which is hardly a healthy basis for absolute standards of morality.
If the latter, morality then exists outside of and independent to God. That which is wrong would continue to be wrong without God.
5. The circular reasoning of defining God as good
Christians attempting to answer the above dilemma try to babble about how "goodness is grounded in the very nature of God" (WTF does that even mean?) and so that's how we know God is good because God is good.
Bare assertion meets circular reasoning in an orgy of fallacious thinking and incoherent babble.
6. "GodWillsIt" doesn't explain anything
Just saying "GodWillsIt" doesn't help us understand why something is right or wrong. It's not any more satisfying to our curiosity than when our parents told us "cause I said so" when we were children. In fact, the statement basically boils down to "cause the big man in the sky said so".
Compare this to secular answers, that say murder is wrong because it offends our innate sense of empathy and compassion which we have as social animals that form communities and depend on one another for survival? Or how about the "social contract" where we treat others and we would wish to be treated ourselves? There are far more satisfying answers that can be had without any invocation of God.
7. The "easy out" of salvation
The Christian apologizes to his imaginary friend for things he/she has done wrong. The atheist apologizes to those they have wronged and seek to set things right.
How does a religion that tells us we're all sinners and can't change that about our nature encourage us to improve ourselves? It seems rather defeatist. What is stopping you from sinning, confessing and then sinning again?
A great example of this are various "family values" Republicans who are known adulterers. Atheists laugh at their hypocrisy while Christians don't seem to understand why this is a problem. "We're all sinners" one Christian once said to me. As long as they've apologized to Jesus, it's all good, apparently.
8. Morality from the imaginary friend
Jesus is a liberal, a conservative, a capitalist, a communist, a rebel, an authoritarian, straight, gay, bi, asexual, black, white, or whatever else you want him to be. He's the ultimate Rorschach test where people see whatever they want to see, usually a glorified reflection of their own self-image.
God always wants whatever the believer wants. Saying you get your morals from your god is like saying you get your morals from your imaginary friend. All it can do is affirm and self-validate, not direct in any non-biased way.
9. Secularism provides a clearer understanding of what morality is
Take a look at the 10 Commandments in Ex chapter 20. Notice how the first four deal with obedience to Yahweh, not how we treat our fellow people?
Read through the rest of the Bible or Koran and you see that their idea of "evil" usually refers to victimless crimes of blasphemy, idolatry and apostatacy. Ultimately a religion must be concerned first and foremost with its own agenda as a viral meme and with providing moral and spiritual guidance as a secondary priority. A religion that doesn't do so will be overrun by one that does. This means a religion is more concerned about blind obedience and gaining converts much more than encouraging moral behavior. Such a conflict of interest will inevitably muddy the waters.
Secularism clears away this clutter of ancient taboos and victimless crimes to understand that morality is a question of how we should treat our fellow sentient beings. Where our actions impact other sentient beings, questions of morality apply. The issues can be complex and the answers are not always clear but secularism offers a much shorter path to good answers.
10. Appeal to consequences is a logical fallacy
Even if it WERE true that religion promoted moral behavior, it would do nothing to validate the truth of religious claims. The entire discussion is a red herring with regards to the existence of God. One suspects that the moral argument is less about proving anything and more about giving theists a false sense of moral superiority.
Atheist Forums Hall of Shame:
"The trinity can be equated to having your cake and eating it too."
... -Lucent, trying to defend the Trinity concept
"(Yahweh's) actions are good because (Yahweh) is the ultimate standard of goodness. That’s not begging the question"
... -Statler Waldorf, Christian apologist
"The trinity can be equated to having your cake and eating it too."
... -Lucent, trying to defend the Trinity concept
"(Yahweh's) actions are good because (Yahweh) is the ultimate standard of goodness. That’s not begging the question"
... -Statler Waldorf, Christian apologist