Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2015-04-26 03:36 pm
[ SECRET POST #3035 ]
⌈ Secret Post #3035 ⌋
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Re: Since it's Sunday
1): I think trying to link morality to God is maddeningly circular. Something is good because God supports it, and God supports it because it's good. I think any meaningful ethics needs to have some attempt at a reason why something is good or bad.
2): I think any statement about God's effect on the real world needs to be studied and proven. Someone told me once that we wouldn't have illnesses and natural disasters if people weren't sinful. I'd study the correlation between committing sins and having natural disasters, and look for confounding factors.
With all this setup, I eventually realized that I don't have to care! I don't have any interest in debating the true meaning of "know" or determining whether free will exists. Why should I give a crap about God if he's just as detached from my day-to-day experiences? The only philosophy I need to deal with is ethics, because it's the only one that will tell me what to do.
Yes, I know how pretentious that sounds.
Re: Since it's Sunday
(Anonymous) 2015-04-26 08:28 pm (UTC)(link)That's all that in one word
Re: Since it's Sunday
(Anonymous) 2015-04-26 08:37 pm (UTC)(link)Re: Since it's Sunday
(Anonymous) 2015-04-26 08:40 pm (UTC)(link)Re: Since it's Sunday
(Anonymous) 2015-04-26 08:58 pm (UTC)(link)Some would argue this is rather the central reason that God is important philosophically and ethically.
The central question of ethics may be said to be: What is the good life, or the good generally, or the right thing to do? This naturally involves a further question, which is, How do we know what is the good life or the good generally? Now, there is a religious answer to this question which is that we cannot know the good, that the good can only be revealed to us through the action of the divine and we must take this on faith. And this is a possibility which must be refuted - in particular, if you think that it is true that the good can be known via reason, then it follows that it must be possible to refute this possibility. It is one of the fundamental alternatives regarding the question of whether ethics is knowable through human reason.
In other words: God matters because it could be that, if God is real, it would necessarily follow that all morals depend only on God's will and that human reasoning and moral philosophy is pointless. God matters - or rather the argument concerning the existence of God and our knowledge of it matters - because it impinges on the basic question of whether there can be a meaningful ethics in the terms you've set. Like, you can say that you have no interest in debating the true meaning of know - but that's kind of a centrally important topic for ethics generally.
Re: Since it's Sunday
(Anonymous) 2015-04-26 09:01 pm (UTC)(link)This is something I've never understood about religion. Even if it were proven that God created us - so what? Scientists create microbes in laboratories all the time, it doesn't mean they give a damn if they live or die beyond the confines of the experimental data, let alone love them.
IDK. IDGI.
Re: Since it's Sunday
(Anonymous) 2015-04-26 09:02 pm (UTC)(link)But I don't think that makes the argument any less relevant. Because we're talking about the possibility of making certain arguments - so instead of "What if God were real" it's "What if God were real in this specific understanding of God".
Re: Since it's Sunday
Re: Since it's Sunday
(Anonymous) 2015-04-26 09:55 pm (UTC)(link)But, I mean, yes, they will justify anything by claiming it's God's will. But the question, to me, is: can you demonstrate that there are things that can't be justified in that way?
Re: Since it's Sunday
At the very least, I think there's some value in a "you're being ridiculous" reaction. Just as we'd look skeptically at a survey claiming the average high school student is 40 years old, we can look skeptically at a statement that God can massacre whoever he wants: http://rachelheldevans.com/blog/scandal-evangelical-heart
Personally, the way I'd respond is that morality is about the person you act upon. You don't treat people and animals exactly the same because people and animals have different needs. From that perspective, God can only teach us how to treat a god.
Re: Since it's Sunday
(Anonymous) 2015-04-27 02:05 am (UTC)(link)The problem is how you justify the "you're being ridiculous" reaction. Whether we can know that such-and-such a monstrous thing is wrong, and what the source of that knowledge is. The problem is, not pointing out the emotional monstrousness of the conclusions, but refuting them. Or on what grounds you ultimately justify the notion of morality as action appropriate to the target of that action. If you're talking to someone who's really convinced of that point of view, what reply are you able to give to them?
In other words, I suppose you could say that it's not God that's challenging, so much as the existence of people who believe in God and believe that morality can be justified only through God.
Re: Since it's Sunday