A Light in the Darkness wrote:For example, if you think and act as though objective ethical norms exist, then you must presuppose God exists lest your worldview collapse into incoherence. See William Lane Craig explain this here: http://atheismsucks.blogspot.com/2007/1 ... r-god.html (This link also contains some adept refutations of potential atheist objections in the Q and A). So when an atheist objects to God on the basis of moral "problems" with God, this objection actually reveals the futility of unbelief; without God there are no real ethical objections to anything.
A few thoughts come to mind. One is that people often hold contradictory views without realizing it. I think likely that many Western atheists still view the world through somewhat Christian lenses because of the prevelance of Christianity in the West. I would think that atheists from the East would more likely view the world through Buddhist or other such lenses except where they are influenced by Western atheists.
The logical outline at the beginning of William Lane Craig's talk says that
1) If God does not exist, then objective moral values and duties do not exist.
2) Objective moral values and duties do exist.
Therefore: God exists. (Modus Tollens)
An example he gives of objective moral values is of the Holocaust. Even if the Nazis won and killed everyone who disagreed with them, killing the Jews would still have been wrong. That is how he defines objective moral values.
I think that's actually trickier for someone to really understand than it first seems. I think most people just wouldn't recognize how to view it such that one can deny objective moral values and yet say that killing the Jews would still have been wrong. Even if you, an objector wouldn't exist in that world, you do exist in this one and can still subjectively condemn those heinous acts. That you wouldn't exist in that world does not erase your condemnations of those actions in said hypothetical world from your view in this world.
I may have to finish listening to it (and maybe listen to cksalmon's link too).