• spaceghoti
    +4

    Moral relativity means that morality can vary based on circumstances, not identity. Divine command theory is the concept you're reaching for and it doesn't make allowances for circumstances. It says that anything this god says or does is correct regardless of circumstances. Moral relativity doesn't work that way.

    • Wenjarich (edited 8 years ago)
      +4

      Ya, I have never really been good at remembering the name of things :P which is why I tend to write walls of text to try get my points across haha.

      Essentially the point I was trying to make is that they have a ground of absolute morality to reference which they believe in and I do not, so as long as they are happy with accepting all the actions in the bible by their source of morality as good, then I have no other means to argue with them than to start arguing the existence of that moral source they believe in.

      Edit:I just skimmed through the link you included.

      Non-standard usage of the words "good" or "moral"
      Most people have an intuitive sense of what it means for an action to be good or to have a moral obligation, and this set of moral attitudes typically pre-dates or is independent of any religious beliefs. To define a new meaning for "morality" as meaning what God wants, then to act as if this is the same as the everyday conception of morality, is to commit an equivocation fallacy. Morality is either a system for determining which actions are right or wrong, or a desire to obey the will of God. It can't mean both things at the same time, unless one first demonstrates that both meanings are equivalent.

      I don't agree with this statement. It suggests there is some set of morals that have always existed and will always exist through all communities and societies. I don't see this as true. Almost every concept we view to be evil has been at some point viewed as not evil if not good in a culture or society. We would call those communities evil but that is based on our culturally learnt "intuitive sense" where they would have been operating upon theirs. Although I personally support the morals of today's society over those that have come before, I have no objective means of saying why mine is right and theirs wasn't, just as I imagine there are things in todays society which we consider to be ok, that future societies will look upon in horror.

      • spaceghoti
        +4

        That they claim certainty doesn't grant their arguments validity. Having made the claim it then falls to them to meet the burden of proof. What does the source of all morality look like? How would the universe look different if it doesn't actually exist? How does there being a source of morality change people or circumstances? Are people who follow it demonstrably more moral or more successful than those who don't?

        It's up to them to back their claims, not you to prove them wrong.

        • Wenjarich (edited 8 years ago)
          +3

          I fully agree with you that the burden of proof lies with them. I was more trying to state that the burdnen of proof lies in the existence of the being. The original post isn't specifically trying to disprove the existence of god and jesus but rather to bring their morality into question by equating gods actions in the bible to that of dictators. This then is coming from the argument of, assuming god exists, then he is evil. I was tying to give a perspective as to why, as long as the person believes god iss the source of morality and they accept all he is said to have done but that it is still evil for humans then they the argument made in the link does not hold. This is because they are then making a definition of god and morality which is different to our definition of morality, and unless we change our focus of discussion to the existence of that god (where in our previous discussion we had implicitly accepted his existence for argument sake), we are then stuck in an argument of definition rather than an argument of morality.

          Wow text posting on your touch screen phone is not a good medium for this kind of discussion :P I really feel like this is something we'd be able to clear up quickly if we were discussing in person haha

          Edit: changed difediffe to different

          • spaceghoti
            +3

            Yeah, posting from my tablet is a hell of a lot slower.

            Even if their god were real we have no reason to assume everything claimed about it is true. We don't have to judge by its standards, we are perfectly capable of judging by our own standards and deciding for ourselves whether or not we find their claims to be true.

            Divine command theory is a scam, a cop out so believers don't have to explain why their god is justified in committing atrocities we would execute anyone else over. If we had anything concrete to go by we could examine whether or not our assumptions are wrong. Since we don't we can only go with the standards available to us, not blindly accept whatever we're told just because we have no way to disprove it.

          • Wenjarich (edited 8 years ago)
            +4
            @spaceghoti -

            Haha, it is so weird debating this side of the topic when this is actually one of the many issues that aided in me loosing my faith a while back. But that was because I could not accept the definition of morality that I would need to accept to be ok with, I find those who can accept it to be really creepy because I make sure they know they are accepting some really messed up shit about god. It's just that if that is the god they believe exists and on top of that believe is the definition of morality then I because I accept my own morality is simply an axiom rather than an absolute, I then don't feel justified arguing from that perspective anymore and change tact. The thing is I don't think there are many Christians who truly believe it because most squirm when you start pointing out some of the things they are accepting then throw in a solid "I have faith he is good." to comfort themselves.