Do you actually have a criticism?
Not yet, — neomac
> 1. If moral imperatives are imperatives of Reason reason, then they all have a single source: Reason
> 2. Moral imperatives are imperatives of Reason reason — neomac
What are the reasons to support the first claim? — neomac
Why are moral imperatives imperatives of God and not Gods? Why can’t Reason be shared between a plurality of divine entities as much as the divine nature is shared by 3 persons of the Holy Trinity? — neomac
Why are omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent attributed to Reason as a consequence of Reason being a mind? Also humans have minds but they do not seem omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent. Besides Reason can be understood also in kantian terms, and not as a sort of divine entity. — neomac
The preposition “of” in “imperatives of Reason” is ambiguous b/c it can express both a subjective and objective genitive (i.e. “Reason issues moral imperatives”, “moral imperatives are about Reason”), but depending on how we understand “moral imperatives” (see also the other previous questions) this notion can be compatible maybe with only one of the 2 senses and not the other. — neomac
There might be logic links between the 8 premises and the way we question them, but this depends on how these 8 premises are properly spelt out and how they are questioned. So nothing we can really decide a priori just from your 4 deductions. — neomac
Conclusion: unless the claim that only 4 out of 8 premises are open to question simply means that Bartricks is open to address doubts against only 4 out of 8 premises (which I don’t care, of course), then all 8 premises (not 4, not 5, not 6, not 7, but 8, exactly all 8 premises out of 8 premises!) can be pertinently questioned. Q.E.D. — neomac
Just wondering though, wouldn't it be easier (on our egos among other things) to simply give up the idea of God, come to terms with the Sky Father being merely a figment of our imagination, a sign of our desperation? — Agent Smith
This 'criticism' is one that can be made of any analysis of morality.
— Bartricks
How can you be so sure? And if it were so, one would have to question every prescriptive moral theory. One must then not be afraid of doing so. — spirit-salamander
Oh, and Paul McCartney does have a PhD in music. You lose. — Bartricks
Paul has received honorary degrees from several universities, but he never attended college. — EricH
If only there was some kind of instrument that one could use quickly to find out about these matters - a kind of 'searching engine'.
Do your own research grandpa. Paul McCartney has a PhD in music. It's an honorary PhD. Go look at the argument I was addressing and see if the premises were qualified so as to rule out honorary PhDs. — Bartricks
There's no problem there - they come from a mind.
And they do exist - the reason (the faculty of resaon) of virtually everyone tells them that there are ways we ought to behave and ways we ought not to behave. Disagreement exists over exactly what we ought to do and ought not to do, but 'that' we ought to be doing some things and not others is beyond reasonable doubt. — Bartricks
Presumably because also the floors are worth watching.Presumably when you visit the sistine chapel you stare at the floor. — Bartricks
Just because you ought to do something does not mean there's a moral obligation. For example, if I want to be a champion chess player, then I ought to practice chess, but I'm under no moral obligation to practice chess. — RogueAI
↪neomac
Yes, and the Mona Lisa has quite a nice frame. — Bartricks
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