CaliforniaKid wrote:So I guess I'd be an anti-realist
And to think, you went to Wheaton. Look at what Claremont and MAD have done to you.
CaliforniaKid wrote:So I guess I'd be an anti-realist
MrStakhanovite wrote:And to think, you went to Wheaton.
(P2) The basis of moral facts is not natural
Stormy Waters wrote: If our sense of morality comes from a third party source shouldn't we agree on these issues?
EAllusion wrote:Only if you think everyone has an equal, unblemished ability to access the moral truths created/willed by our 3rd party subjet. No one thinks that.
Stormy Waters wrote:
I think you can make the case the Mormons believe that.
Personally I think the disagreements on morality suggest that there is no third party arbitrator of morality. Abortion, euthanasia, and capital punishment are hardly trivial issues. How can we say that there are absolute moral facts if we cannot reach a general consensus on the definition of these moral facts?
If this 3rd party arbitrator of morality doesn't make the moral code they created/willed clear then what value does it have anyway?
EAllusion wrote:I don't think so. Even if Mormons thought they had direct access to pure, uncut moral truth, which I don't think they normally do, they still would be able to recognize that not everyone is a Mormon.
EAllusion wrote:People don't agree on the nature of gravity. That doesn't mean the nature of gravity isn't ultimately a factual thing. It means that not all ideas about it are equally as good. What your thinking is trading on is the assumption that if God willed the nature of moral truths, then God would make them crystal clear to everyone. This is a flawed assumption. Think about it for a second. Why would God do that? Because it's the right thing to do? But remember, whatever God does in this view is automatically the right thing to do. Rape, torture, moral ambiguity for his creations. Whatever.
Most atheists also believe that some things are morally wrong: Child molestation, torturing people for fun, greed etc. When people in general – atheist or otherwise – see these things, we don’t just think “well that’s not in keeping with our social norms.” We actually think that as a matter of fact those things ought not to be done. And given that atheists in general believe this, they are hesitant to believe that moral facts couldn’t be natural, because a thoroughgoing atheist worldview is, I think, best construed as entirely naturalistic. There is nothing other than what is natural, so if moral facts aren’t natural, then we’d have to doubt that they exist at all, which seems enormously counter-intuitive in light of what people tend to find themselves instinctively knowing about the world.