iKotomi
[10] Knight
If I had $1 for every time God bailed me out..
People that argue that morality is subjective have to realize that that is an opinion not a fact. If there exists a universal standard of right and wrong, theoretically, an action can be either in accordance to or in violation of the universal law, aka, an objective measure. One possible way for such a universal law to exist is the existence of some God.
This for the most part is absolutely unprovable, but if God existed and if he had a universal measure, for example a set of rules like the 10 commandments, then morality is in fact objective and not subjective. This is why religions tend to insist that you are all bad people doomed to eternal suffering if you don't use your get out of jail free card.
Once you have the premise of a universal measure, there are ways to set up objective means to determining what is immoral. This is pretty much the premise of Kant's Categorical Imperative, which while creating a system of determining immorality through reason, had the necessity of some sort of god given universal law to justify that this reason based morality is actually valid.
I guess the main gist is that, if god exists, which you can't prove or disprove, then morality can in fact be objective. Though I haven't read Kant in a while, so it is probable that one can construct an argument that the Categorical Imperative applies without the necessity for the existence of god.
People that argue that morality is subjective have to realize that that is an opinion not a fact. If there exists a universal standard of right and wrong, theoretically, an action can be either in accordance to or in violation of the universal law, aka, an objective measure. One possible way for such a universal law to exist is the existence of some God.
This for the most part is absolutely unprovable, but if God existed and if he had a universal measure, for example a set of rules like the 10 commandments, then morality is in fact objective and not subjective. This is why religions tend to insist that you are all bad people doomed to eternal suffering if you don't use your get out of jail free card.
Once you have the premise of a universal measure, there are ways to set up objective means to determining what is immoral. This is pretty much the premise of Kant's Categorical Imperative, which while creating a system of determining immorality through reason, had the necessity of some sort of god given universal law to justify that this reason based morality is actually valid.
I guess the main gist is that, if god exists, which you can't prove or disprove, then morality can in fact be objective. Though I haven't read Kant in a while, so it is probable that one can construct an argument that the Categorical Imperative applies without the necessity for the existence of god.