Moderators: jcmanson, Sly Fox, BuryYourDuke
paradox wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 3:36 pm It actually doesn't do that.
Something that resembles a moral argument for God’s existence, or at least an argument from value, can be found in the fourth of Thomas Aquinas’s “Five Ways” (Aquinas 1265–1274, I, 1, 3). Aquinas there begins with the claim that among beings who possess such qualities as “good, true, and noble” there are gradations. Presumably he means that some things that are good are better than other good things; perhaps some noble people are nobler than others who are noble. In effect Aquinas is claiming that when we “grade” things in this way we are, at least implicitly, comparing them to some absolute standard. Aquinas believes this standard cannot be merely “ideal” or “hypothetical,” and thus this gradation is only possible if there is some being which has this quality to a “maximum” extent: “so that there is something which is truest, something best, something noblest and, consequently, something which is uttermost being; for those things that are greatest in truth are greatest in being, as it is written in Metaph. Ii.” Aquinas goes on to affirm that this being which provides the standard is also the cause or explanation of the existence of these qualities, and such a cause must be God.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/mora ... gForGodExi
Purple Haize wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 2:34 pm @stokesjokes I stated I was going to make the point using a Non Christian point of View. Innocence is certainly not exclusive to Christianity. It’s certainly not exclusive to just those who practice Religion. The sense of “Right and Wrong” also are not Christian Exclusives. I know many a charitable upright and honest Atheist.I don’t mean to imply that atheists don’t have that sense, I mean that if you’re a Christian, you believe that sense is because God placed it within us. My whole thesis is that as a Christian, you can’t separate that part of you from anything else. It has to inform everything else, it’s your entire worldview.
willflop wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 3:53 pmYou are spinning your wheels. For a really good modern summation of this position, read Book One of Mere Christianity. There's really no sound argument against it. It stands the test of time.paradox wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 3:36 pm It actually doesn't do that.Something that resembles a moral argument for God’s existence, or at least an argument from value, can be found in the fourth of Thomas Aquinas’s “Five Ways” (Aquinas 1265–1274, I, 1, 3). Aquinas there begins with the claim that among beings who possess such qualities as “good, true, and noble” there are gradations. Presumably he means that some things that are good are better than other good things; perhaps some noble people are nobler than others who are noble. In effect Aquinas is claiming that when we “grade” things in this way we are, at least implicitly, comparing them to some absolute standard. Aquinas believes this standard cannot be merely “ideal” or “hypothetical,” and thus this gradation is only possible if there is some being which has this quality to a “maximum” extent: “so that there is something which is truest, something best, something noblest and, consequently, something which is uttermost being; for those things that are greatest in truth are greatest in being, as it is written in Metaph. Ii.” Aquinas goes on to affirm that this being which provides the standard is also the cause or explanation of the existence of these qualities, and such a cause must be God.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/mora ... gForGodExi
paradox wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 4:21 pmHonestly, are you trolling me here?willflop wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 3:53 pmYou are spinning your wheels. For a really good modern summation of this position, read Book One of Mere Christianity. There's really no sound argument against it. It stands the test of time.paradox wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 3:36 pm It actually doesn't do that.Something that resembles a moral argument for God’s existence, or at least an argument from value, can be found in the fourth of Thomas Aquinas’s “Five Ways” (Aquinas 1265–1274, I, 1, 3). Aquinas there begins with the claim that among beings who possess such qualities as “good, true, and noble” there are gradations. Presumably he means that some things that are good are better than other good things; perhaps some noble people are nobler than others who are noble. In effect Aquinas is claiming that when we “grade” things in this way we are, at least implicitly, comparing them to some absolute standard. Aquinas believes this standard cannot be merely “ideal” or “hypothetical,” and thus this gradation is only possible if there is some being which has this quality to a “maximum” extent: “so that there is something which is truest, something best, something noblest and, consequently, something which is uttermost being; for those things that are greatest in truth are greatest in being, as it is written in Metaph. Ii.” Aquinas goes on to affirm that this being which provides the standard is also the cause or explanation of the existence of these qualities, and such a cause must be God.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/mora ... gForGodExi
paradox wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 4:30 pm Seriously...you came after me. Blame yourself for not being able to make sense of whatever it is that you beleive.I said the classical approach reasons from moral values back to a grounding in God. You said it doesn't. I provided a quote that shows how Aquinas does this. You then counter me by referring to CS Lewis that makes the same argument as Aquinas, although differently formulated.
paradox wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 4:43 pm"It" here refers to the classical approach (approach talking about apologetical methodology, which in the previous post you brought up pressuppositionalism). Aquinas is a (or the) prime example of the classical arguments. A modern example is someone like William Lane Craig, who operates from the same principle brought up in the quote about Aquinas. This is how he structures his argument:willflop wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 3:23 pm "it still connects moral values with a necessary religious grounding."Clarify.
paradox wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 7:08 pm .btw...the Planting insertion doesn't apply. He's not telling anyone to mistrust their senses. He's questioning the materialist as to why he trusts his senses when evolution doesn't even claim true beliefs. It claims survival. Let's not get off topic again.That's the point though. Since you reject that morality is grounded in religious beliefs, you are left arguing from a naturalistic foundation. Once you do that, you inherit the same set of epistemological problems that Plantinga points out. If I'm wrong, then provide a non religious answer as to why we should trust our moral intuitions.
stokesjokes wrote: ↑November 17th, 2020, 7:34 pm Right, so if you’re claiming that abortion is universally understood as wrong, and you’re saying this universal morality is not grounded in a deity, you’re implying that it’s the consequence of the material universe, so Plantinga’s argument would apply.Never said that morality doesn't come from God. We were discussing whether a person can understand that abortion is wrong without religion. It's really not that complicated.