I expect so, but do you expect it to ever convince anybody to change their view, other than the occasional rare exception?
You sound, from the rest of your post, like a deeply religious person. Are you that way because you were convinced by dry philosophical arguments such as this, or because of personal experience and feelings, or that you were brought up to believe what you do? — andrewk
The God of the philosophers is the only interesting God. — StreetlightX
My personal feeling is that people should refrain from telling others whether they do or don't believe in God, but far too many of us seem unable to do so, thus inducing others to say yea or nay and perpetuating this tiresome debate (such as it is). When, oh when, will there be a respite? — Ciceronianus the White
The reasons may be many of course, for instance: being born into a religion, or cultural reasons, national, or other incentives. No matter the reasons, how does one justify one over the other? — InfiniteZero
I agree, however, the teachers the world needs aren't the teachers you find in academic settings generally (there are of course exceptions). — Agustino
As visitors will notice, we have, as exemplified above, at this forum, a few people whose referentless angry-noises are a reminder of our grunt-animal evolutionary heritage. — Michael Ossipoff
God, in graciously condescending to save a fallen and lost humanity through revelation of Himself is truly "Sir2u". Remember that and be grateful. And If you lack faith, then pray for it. — John Gould
What does it mean that "God is neither the architect of goodness nor is he the expert on goodness, He is the foundation of goodness"? — Πετροκότσυφας
There are some terminological ambiguities ("objective", "law-like", "constructivist" etc), which make it difficult to discuss the issue, without firstly getting rid of these. But, if you're ok with it, we can also start by discussing the exclusion of theism from your question. So, let me ask: why don't you include theists in your question? Is theism somehow free of this problem (by "theism" here, I understand some form of divine command, correct me if I'm wrong)? I'm asking since someone could level a "euthyphrean" critique, arguing that divine command is just another sort of ethical subjectivism. Just with a godly flavor. Nothing is objectively good or bad, in themselves things are not moral or immoral, what makes them such is that God commands them or forbids them. In being extrinsic to things themselves, theistic morality is not objective. So, why the distinction? — Πετροκότσυφας
I don't know how moral facts are discovered by reason. But they are. And yes, "moral laws are...part of the rational/epistemic enterprise itself". Insofar as something is intelligible, it is grounded in the rational enterprise. Thus all of morality stems from reason. This is my understanding. — Brian A
There's a lot of modern work on virtue ethics which began from Elizabeth Anscombe's paper of 1958, 'Modern moral philosophy', which you can find online. The major work I've read and thought about is 'After Virtue' by Alasdair MacIntyre, which tries to construct a virtue ethics for the present era. Pardon me if you know all this — mcdoodle
virtue ethics, a process of learning good action grounded in the interplay between your reason and experiences with the social practices you find around you — mcdoodle
Many non-non-theists try and take issue with my moral framework by claiming that "it's not objective" even while they assent to my moral propositions because they share basic human desires — VagabondSpectre
if you're asking whose reason we're speaking of, the answer is our reasoning; our shared human reasoning — VagabondSpectre
Any tips about comprehending concepts and playing with them would help me! — Abeills
I appreciate this criticism. But I'm not rejecting the authority of reason, reason is all we have to fall back on as philosophers. I'm making the point that placing the building of moral objectivity on the foundations of human reason is constructivist, because surely the moral realm existed before humans did. If morality came into existence with man, how can it be objectively binding (i.e. law-like).trying to rationally justify divine command while rejecting the authority of reason is incoherent. — Πετροκότσυφας
But ultimately Buddhist ethics are grounded in the reality of karma — Wayfarer
Says you. No argument here, only bald assertion. — Wayfarer
Buddhist morality is grounded in the original Buddhist teachings — Wayfarer