Jeff250 wrote:Throughout the ages, there have been a lot of suggested measuring rods for ethics that do not involve God.
A standard that says how people "should" behave comes from something that is valued (morals come from values, not from thin air), and nature doesn't value anything but following the laws of physics. A standard that says "maximize happiness" comes from a shared cultural valuing of happiness, and there's no way to extend that beyond your culture to one that doesn't share that same value. You can't say "the Nazis were wrong" unless you have a transcendent basis for saying happiness should be valued the most. A standard that says to follow the Categorical Imperative ("act such that if everyone acted like you, the world would rock") comes from individual values of fairness, but you have no authority on which to extend that to someone who doesn't share that value -- if somebody else acts according to the principle "game the system and abuse the fact that everyone else acts according to the CI" you have no recourse.
But I think all of us would say, Nazi Germany really WAS wrong -- the things they chose to value really were wrong, and the standard they chose to follow because of it really was wrong. And it really IS wrong for someone to game the system and abuse people because he's figured out how to use their own ethical limits against them. This implies there has to be some transcendent authority that can define what SHOULD be valued. Again, not necessarily anything resembling the Christian conception of God, but it does have to be something transcendent.
You agree to the existance of some transcendent system when you say
"somehow we can judge that it would be wrong to murder according to its consequences in themselves without God." What I'm saying is, the "somehow" has to ultimately come from some transcendent source that has values -- it can't simply come from "nature" because nature follows the laws of physics (what "is") and doesn't give a damn about morality (what "should be"). The only possible source is some sort of God.
Notice that I haven't said "the only way to learn about that ultimate value system that leads to ethical/moral behavior is to read a religious text". I'm only saying, in principle, in order for such a value system to exist, there has to be some sort of God in existance as well. How you find out about that value system is a whole other question.
if you can't take an action and explain why it would be wrong according to the consequences themselves.....
How do you determine which consequences are good or bad, right or wrong? Again, this comes back to what you value. Many of us would disagree with each other about whether specific actions were right or wrong, even given all the same facts about the situation, simply because we value things differently from each other.
A transcendent source is necessary if we want to say "you SHOULD value X this much and Y that much." A transcendent source is necessary if we want to say "this consequence outweighs this other one." If we don't have such a source, then we can only judge our OWN behavior according to our OWN values (or, behavior within a culture according to the culture's values.) There's no way to go outside of that and say "you there, from another culture, your behavior is still wrong" without a way to say what someone from a different culture should value.
ultimately using God as the ultimate standard comes down to "because God said so."
Exactly right. Using God as the ultimate standard says "God's choice of what to value is the correct choice for all people".
If God said that murder was right, would that be ethical?
That God would have to have an ethical system based on values, in which "murder is right" fits. It's not simply a matter of saying "murder is right", but of saying "life is valued below [other things] such that murder ends up being the right thing to do whenever [other things] come in to play".
Now, I think that fictional God's value system is messed up, because it doesn't match the value system my God has given. I don't see any reason why, in principle, there couldn't exist a universe with a God that didn't strongly value life... but it's not this universe.
Earlier, I asked if absolute morality were something like "killing is always wrong," to which Diedel responded to the effect of "not quite--murder is always wrong."
I would strongly disagree with Diedel here. There is no absolute morality -- it's not that killing is ALWAYS wrong regardless of circumstance, or even that murder is ALWAYS wrong regardless of circumstance. Rather, there is a value system in which killing and murder both damage one of the things that is valued, and killing and murder only become acceptable if, in the specific circumstance, they protect or enhance other things that are valued more than they damage the value of "life".
Now, I personally think the Bible describes the real God who really exists (for a multitude of reasons), and therefore is a really good source for learning about what God values. I think every command it gives, from "do not murder" to "don't harvest your field all the way to the edge" to "love your enemy", is meant to teach people about who God is and what He values. Some of the commands are direct statements of values ("love [entity]") while some are statements of general consequences of values ("do not lie" comes from valuing truth, but when truth is not the most important value, lying becomes justified
or even righteous.)
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In summary:
- Morals and ethics all come from VALUES (and when we judge things according to consequences, we're analyzing the effect of those consequences on the things valued.)
- In order to be able to say "other cultures were wrong in their choice of values", we need a TRANSCENDENT SOURCE of values
- That transcendent source must have the capacity to actually, you know, value things. It must also have the authority to declare a value system. That makes it a GOD of some sort.
- I personally find the Bible to be a good source of information about the aforementioned God and His values, but my reasons for doing so belong in an entirely different discussion.