This is my present perspective, but I haven't really tested it out against anyone else's yet: If God exists and created this universe, then he created a universe where at least a few things can only be relative.Kilarin wrote:You know my answer.
Take position and veloctity for example. Suppose that God thunderously descended from the heavens and somehow communicated the absolute, divine position and velocity to us. OK, so now we finally have that sought after divine position and velocity. But now has anything really changed? Well, not really.
Has our understanding of Physics changed?
Nope, absolutely everything is the same. All of the laws still apply, including those of special and general relativity.
Has our conception of the universe changed?
Nah. There's no reason to favor the divine position for the basis of a coordinate system over any system that we're using right now, especially if the divine one is crappy, like if it is billions of lightyears away or moving quickly with respect to the earth. I guess it might just be neat knowing the divine position, but nothing's really changed other than that in our conception of the universe.
Well, I think that ethics, if they exist, would be the same way. Suppose that God thunderously descended from the heavens and somehow communicated the divine ethics. OK so now we finally have that sought after divine ethical code. Has anything really changed? I don't think so. I don't see any reason why anyone should act differently.
Suppose that one of these divine ethics includes the rule, "Under no circumstances should you lie." Now if somebody who just got a crappy haircut asks me if it looks good, why should I not lie according to the divine good when I could serve what is, perhaps, an even better good by just lying. I guess what this basically addresses is how do we really know if the divine good is good at all when the only standard to measure the divine good is against divine good?
Or let's look at something less noble. Suppose that I just wanted to tell a lie, regardless of ethical considerations, perhaps to better myself or somebody else in some way. Just why should I follow the divine ethics now, especially if I don't want to?
Just like an absolute position doesn't really apply to this universe, I don't see how an absolute ethical system can either. That's why I think that Christians and the like are getting off easy by just assuming that believing in God automatically explains how absolute good and evil exist. If none of my above hurried ramblings make any sense, then I'd at least like to see somebody thoroughly set out how God can account for absolute good and evil, just the same as the Christians and the like ask from anyone else in explaining their ethical theories on this board.