Ram
Michael
It's a slight variation of the Euthyphro Dilemma. — Ram
Prove me wrong...
... by actually discussing the topic
JerseyFlight
EricH
Whether you're Christian, Taoist, Muslim, Hindu, etc.- all these groups believe in an underlying natural law. The only dispute is over the details but the existence of an inherent natural law is a premise that is common to all of them. — Ram
Wayfarer
praxis
The result was a self-conscious spectator of a disenchanted universe: the modern subject—liberated from dogma yet exiled from a cosmos stripped of inherent meaning. — Wayfarer
'Revealed truths' are said to arise from insight into a larger domain which transcends the subject-object division, to put it in modern philosophical terms - not as private psychological states, but as disclosures accessible in principle through shared forms of practice and understanding. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer
That seems to mean that meaning can only be found in religious dogma. — praxis
Joshs
The result was a self-conscious spectator of a disenchanted universe: the modern subject—liberated from dogma yet exiled from a cosmos stripped of inherent meaning.
— Wayfarer
That seems to mean that meaning can only be found in religious dogma — praxis
Wayfarer
Analytic (i.e. 'Anglo') philosophy as a historical movement has not done much to provide an alternative to the consolations of religion. This is sometimes made a cause for reproach, and it has led to unfavorable comparisons with the continental tradition of the twentieth century, which did not shirk that task. I believe this is one of the reasons why continental philosophy has been better received by the general public: it is at least trying to provide nourishment for the soul, the job by which philosophy is supposed to earn its keep. — Thomas Nagel, Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament
Herg
it is at least trying to provide nourishment for the soul, the job by which philosophy is supposed to earn its keep. — Thomas Nagel, Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament
praxis
It's not a matter of religion, per se, but notice that as soon as the presumed soveriegnty of objective fact is called into question, it provokes the question 'is this religious dogma'? That says something about the cultural dynamics. — Wayfarer
praxis
'Revealed truths' are said to arise from insight into a larger domain which transcends the subject-object division, to put it in modern philosophical terms - not as private psychological states, but as disclosures accessible in principle through shared forms of practice and understanding. — Wayfarer
BenMcLean
BenMcLean
One's personal moral convictions are always, always opinions about what the objective moral truths are and nothing else. They cannot avoid being so by definition. This question assumes that one's personal moral convictions are somehow about something else when they aren't.I'm asking you if you will commit to being moral regardless of what the moral facts actually are. — Michael
Michael
praxis
BenMcLean
Herg
His situation is worse than that. If moral facts are dictated by God, then two things follow:The context of my comment was as a response to someone claiming that moral facts must be dictated by some God. I was asking what he would do if his God were to dictate that everyone is morally obligated to kill blasphemers. Would he obey his God? — Michael
Tom Storm
AmadeusD
I think it is much more reasonable to hold that moral facts, if there are any, are entailed by natural facts, so that you cannot have a universe in which there are such things as rape, torture and murder without those things being morally bad or wrong. — Herg
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