[
Replying to The Tanager in post #234]
That still gets us no closer to what you
mean by "objective morality".
You state:
"Because rule following trumps all and humans were designed to be moral enforcers."
It could be said that humans are designed to bring morals into the world (and thus enforce them) but this still doesn't give us an objective designer.
Even if we accept that the human form is the human being (as it appears you are saying) there is nothing in the design you have identified as objective morality.
You state:
"God was responsible for that being the case, and
therefore, grounds objective morality."
How is that a "therefore", you do not say.
Why is it that you appear to be unable to explain how this works?
Are you simply saying that morality is objectified through the human instrument? If so, then how is that not a subjective process?
Even universally shared moral intuitions are still sourced within subjective human experiences and do not, by themselves, provide a basis for objective morality. They reflect common human tendencies, but these tendencies arise from subjective origins like biology, psychology, and socialization. For moral truths to be genuinely objective, they would need to be grounded in something external to and independent of human perception and experience.
Thus the argument is that GOD fits the bill as to that which is something external to and independent of human perception and experience.
The argument that God provides a foundation for objective morality is compelling for those who believe in a divine being who is external to and independent of human perception and experience. It offers a potential grounding for universal moral truths that transcend human subjectivity. However, it remains contingent on belief in God and the ability to interpret God’s will accurately, and it faces philosophical challenges such as the Euthyphro dilemma.
Since there is no GOD of that kind evident, if we are to assume GOD as the source of morality then we have to at least assume that GOD works through human subjectivity
If we assume that God works through human subjectivity, then moral intuitions, conscience, and collective human experience become the channels through which divine morality is expressed. This view does not require a traditional, external, and transcendent God but rather sees divine influence as intimately connected with human experience and moral development. It provides a framework where subjective moral experiences are respected as possible reflections of a deeper, objective moral order, even if this order is not directly accessible in a traditional sense.