Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Morality: Who Needs God?
AISH ^ | N/A | by Rabbi Nechemia Coopersmith

Posted on 02/26/2003 7:19:40 AM PST by Nix 2

Morality: Who Needs God?

If there is an absolute standard of morality, then there must be a God. Disagree? Consider the alternative.

God's existence has direct bearing on how we view morality. As Dostoyevsky so famously put it, "Without God, everything is permitted."

At first glance, this statement may not make sense. Everything is permitted? Can't there be a morality without an infinite God?

Perhaps some of the confusion is due to a murky definition of morality we owe to moral relativism. Moral relativism maintains that there is no objective standard of right and wrong existing separate and independent from humanity. The creation of moral principles stems only from within a person, not as a distinct, detached reality. Each person is the source and definer of his or her subjective ethical code, and each has equal power and authority to define morality the way he or she sees fit.

Random acts of cruelty may not be your cup of tea, but who says your standards are for everyone?

The consequences of moral relativism are far-reaching. Since all moral issues are subjective, right and wrong are reduced to matters of opinion and personal taste. Without a binding, objective standard of morality that sticks whether one likes it or not, a person can do whatever he feels like by choosing to label any behavior he personally enjoys as "good." Adultery, embezzlement, and random acts of cruelty may not be your cup of tea -- but why should that stop someone from taking pleasure in them if that is what they enjoy.

Is having an intimate relationship with a 12-year-old objectively wrong just because you don't like it?

Perhaps murder makes a serial killer feel powerful and alive. A moral relativist can say he finds murder disgusting, but that does not make it wrong -- only distasteful. Hannibal, the Cannibal, is entitled to his own preferences even if they are unusual and repugnant to most.

Popularity has nothing to do with determining absolute morality; it just makes it commonplace, like the color navy.

"But this killer is hurting others!" True. But in a world where everything is subjective, hurting an innocent person is merely distasteful to some, like eating chocolate ice cream with lasagna. Just because we may not like it doesn't make it evil. Evil? By whose standard? No one's subjective opinion is more authoritative than another's.

INCONSISTENT VALUES

Although many people may profess to subscribe to moral relativism, it is very rare to find a consistent moral relativist. Just about everyone believes in some absolute truths. That absolute truth may only be that it is wrong to hurt others, or that there are no absolutes. The point is that just about everyone is convinced that there is some form of absolute truth, whatever that truth may be. Most of us, it seems, are not moral relativists.

Bertrand Russell wrote:

I cannot see how to refute the arguments for the subjectivity of ethical values but I find myself incapable of believing that all that is wrong with wanton cruelty is that I don't like it.

Not too many of us believe that killing an innocent person is just a matter of taste that can change according to whim. Most of us think it is an act that is intrinsically wrong, regardless of what anyone thinks. According to this view, the standard of morality is an unchangeable reality that transcends humanity, not subject to our approval.

THE INFINITE SOURCE

An absolute standard of morality can only stem from an infinite source. Why is that?

When we describe murder as being immoral, we do not mean it is wrong just for now, with the possibility of it becoming "right" some time in the future. Absolute means unchangeable, not unchanging.

What's the difference?

My dislike for olives is unchanging. I'll never start liking them. That doesn't mean it is impossible for my taste to change, even though it's highly unlikely. Since it could change, it is not absolute. It is changeable.

The term "absolute" means without the ability to change. It is utterly permanent, unchangeable.

Think of something absolute. Take for example an icon of permanence and stability -- the Rock of Gibraltar. "Get a piece of the rock" -- it lasts forever!

But does it really? Is it absolute?

No. It is undergoing change every second. It is getting older, it is eroding.

The nature of absolute is a bit tricky to grasp because we find ourselves running into the same problem of our finite selves attempting to perceive the infinite, a topic we have discussed in a previous article in this series. Everything that exists within time undergoes change. That's what time is -- a measurement of change. In Hebrew, shanah means "year," sharing the same root shinah, "change."

If everything in the finite universe is undergoing change, where can we find the quality of absolute?

If everything in the finite universe is undergoing change -- since it exists within time -- where can we find the quality of absolute?

Its source cannot be in time, which is constantly undergoing change. It must be beyond time, in the infinite dimension. Only God, the infinite being that exists beyond time, is absolute and unchangeable.

'I am God, I do not change.' (Malachi 3:6)

Therefore an absolute standard of morality can exist only if it stems from an infinite dimension -- a realm that is eternal, beyond time, with no beginning and no end.

THE DEATH OF EDUCATION

In addition to the demise of morality, moral relativism inevitably leads to the death of education and genuine open-mindedness. The thirst for real learning comes from the recognition that the truth is out there waiting to be discovered -- and I am all the more impoverished with its absence.

Professor Alan Bloom writes in his book "The Closing of the American Mind,"

It is the rarest of occurrences to find a youngster who has been infused by this [liberal arts] education with a longing to know all about China or the Romans or the Jews.

All to the contrary. There is an indifference to such things, for relativism has extinguished the real motive of education, the search for the good life...

...out there in the rest of the world is a drab diversity that teaches only that values are relative, whereas here we can create all the life-styles we want. Our openness means we do not need others. Thus what is advertised as a great opening is a great closing. No longer is there a hope that there are great wise men in other places and times who can reveal the truth about life...

If everything is relative, then it makes no difference what anyone thinks. Ideas no longer matter. With no absolute standard of right and wrong or truth and falsehood, the pursuit of wisdom becomes nonsensical. What are we searching for? If no idea is more valid than another, there is no purpose in re-evaluating one's belief system and being open to exploring new concepts -- since there is no possibility of ever being wrong.

A common argument often heard for supporting relativism is that in the world at large we see a plethora of differing positions on a wide range of moral issues. Try to find one issue all cultures universally agree to!

Professor Bloom addresses this contention:

History and the study of cultures do not teach or prove that values or cultures are relative ... the fact that there have been different opinions about good and bad in different times and places in no way proves that none is true or superior to others. To say that it does so prove is as absurd as to say that the diversity of points of view expressed in a college bull session proves there is no truth ... the natural reaction is to try to resolve the difference, to examine the claims and reasons for each opinion.

Only the unhistorical and inhuman belief that opinions are held for no reason would prevent the undertaking of such an exciting activity.

THE NATURE OF DEBATE

The plethora of disagreements demonstrates exactly the opposite point. If everything is relative, what on earth are we arguing about?

Imagine walking down the street and you hear a ferocious argument taking place behind a door. People are yelling at each other in a fit of rage. You ask a bystander what the commotion is all about. He tells you this is a Ben & Jerry's ice cream store and they're fighting over what is the best flavor of ice cream.

Impossible.

Heated debates occur only because we believe there are right and wrong positions.

Real debates and disagreements occur only because we believe there are right and wrong positions, not mere preferences of flavors. Think of a time you experienced moral outrage. The force behind that anger is the conviction that your position is the correct one. Matters of preference, like music and interior design, do not provoke moral outrage.

What provokes our moral outrage? Injustice? Cruelty? Oppression? There is the sense that an absolute standard of morality is being violated, an objective standard that transcends humanity, that stems from an infinite and absolute Being.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: absolutes; change; ifitfeels; immorality; leftists; moralrelativism; uneducated
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 241-260261-280281-300 ... 481-492 next last
To: rmvh
well put.
261 posted on 02/26/2003 2:10:36 PM PST by demosthenes the elder (slime will never cease to be slime... why must that be explained to anyone?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 100 | View Replies]

To: jwalsh07
rights ARE fungible.
the strong screw over the weak.
that is the way of things.
262 posted on 02/26/2003 2:11:58 PM PST by demosthenes the elder (slime will never cease to be slime... why must that be explained to anyone?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 260 | View Replies]

To: Protagoras
Unfortunately, Protagoras, you lack the ability to recognize sarcastic pathos.
263 posted on 02/26/2003 2:12:15 PM PST by LuisBasco
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 160 | View Replies]

To: Jumanji
Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God? --Epicurus

This is the question that the branch of theology called theodicy deals with. Human free will is the only defense against this challenge.

264 posted on 02/26/2003 2:12:23 PM PST by HumanaeVitae
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 249 | View Replies]

To: demosthenes the elder
rights ARE fungible.
the strong screw over the weak.
that is the way of things.

In your world, not in mine.

265 posted on 02/26/2003 2:14:37 PM PST by jwalsh07
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 262 | View Replies]

To: FourtySeven
VERY true, absolutely. This is why I "give up" when someone challenges me to "PROVE GOD". Not only is that a physical impossibility, but even if it were possible, it'd cheapen my faith, and everyone else's faith in God, if it could be done, for the reason you state.

You raise a broader point. Atheists and secularists attack God in these terms ("who designed the designer!" etc.) not to undermine the metaphysics of Christianity, but the ethics.

But here's their problem: they have an ethical system as well. And it's indefensible. I generally let them know that I'm not going to deal with any broader "existence of God" type questions in my debates with them because that's not what they're after. They want their ethical system to prevail. And because their ethical system is designed for 'this world', their burden is to prove that their ethical system is actually superior, en praxis, to Christianity (broadly defined). They cannot do this.

Therefore, secularism tried to hide itself as a "non-ideology". "Oh, we're not ideologues! We're just neutral to ideology!"

Yeah, right.

Ask them this question: "Is it possible to be neutral to the idea that we should be neutral with regards to ideology?"

Of course it isn't. That "smokes out" the idea of "tolerance" and "neutrality" as an objective belief system that must be defended. Once "smoked out", their belief systems crumble.

Cheers...

266 posted on 02/26/2003 2:18:28 PM PST by HumanaeVitae
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 248 | View Replies]

To: freeeee
Um, there are no atheists in high office....

Um, Um....how do we know that? I am relatively certain about the president, but these other people that surround him I know not.

I think we need to rethink many things. We kept getting the wakeup calls decades ago, but things seemed to hum along during the eight years the guy, whose picture hangs on my office wall, was in office. However, all the good things that we perceived to be happening during those eight years were squandered during the four that followed and then the eight long, miserable freaking years were like the dark ages for America, but we were busy watching the oval office jerkoff shoving his crooked member into the fat face of an imbecilic intern, then masturbating in the sink.

There is indeed an opportunity for reversal. Instead of waiting, the nations responsible for harboring and encouraging the disaster of 9-11 should have received their wake up call within 24 hours. The world, at large, would have been so damned amazed they could only sit back dumbfounded.

267 posted on 02/26/2003 2:20:30 PM PST by LuisBasco
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies]

To: demosthenes the elder
'scuse me: YOD HE VAU HE
loooong day.
268 posted on 02/26/2003 2:20:54 PM PST by demosthenes the elder (slime will never cease to be slime... why must that be explained to anyone?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 259 | View Replies]

To: jwalsh07
my world is the only one that exists to any verifiable degree. most of us call it the real world, where all authority comes from threat or execution of violence... including that ascribed to the God of Abraham by His PR men.
269 posted on 02/26/2003 2:23:41 PM PST by demosthenes the elder (slime will never cease to be slime... why must that be explained to anyone?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 265 | View Replies]

To: HumanaeVitae
Faith is unquestioning belief, that's the common definition. In what you say, you use "faith" in place of "truth". Reason can only confirm truth. Not everything accepted on faith is true. Reason can only confirm faith that is true. Now at the very basic levels of knowledge some things are accepted on faith, such as the law of identity and existence. I do agree with you on:

"That's the point I was trying to make. Morals come from other places, and are confirmed by reason."

Rand says morals come from what is the nature of man and you say they come from elsewhere. In either case, the morals have to be identified (or derived) by man and their whole purpose is so that man can live harmoniously within his nature. I agree with you that morals are absolute and a few things must be accepted on faith I just disagree with you on the source. I think you believe that they are revealed supernaturally and I believe they can be derived from a proper understanding of mans nature.
270 posted on 02/26/2003 2:25:32 PM PST by Barry Goldwater ("Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice!")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 156 | View Replies]

To: ThinkDifferent
What you're talking about is the "No True Scotsman" fallacy...in other words, if a Scotsman does something that isn't in accord with true Scotsman-ness, then he isn't a Scotsman and thus not truly representing Scotsmen, right?

I think we're arguing around each other, so I'm going to try to nail down exactly what you are trying to prove here.

I'm attempting to show that ethics are non-derivable from empirical facts, and thus the claim of 'objective ethics' is flawed. Please elaborate.

271 posted on 02/26/2003 2:25:50 PM PST by HumanaeVitae
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 251 | View Replies]

Comment #272 Removed by Moderator

To: greymaign
one thing - I seem to recall Jesus being quoted as saying:
"I bring not peace, but the sword"
"And any man who owns not a sword, let him go sell his shirt to buy one."

IIRC, he also opened up one hell of a can of whupass on some certain moneychangers in the temple one sunny day.

Not *exactly* what I would call a "near absolute pacifist*

Another thing: War is not murder.
War is either theft writ large or defense against the same.
War involves killing.
The killing of combatants by combatants is not "murder"
The killing of noncombatants by combatants IS murder.
Sometimes, committing murder in this way is unavoidable, as the alternative options are worse. This does not remove the taint of evil from the act, or excuse them. It merely offers a motive and a pragmatic justification.
273 posted on 02/26/2003 2:41:18 PM PST by demosthenes the elder (slime will never cease to be slime... why must that be explained to anyone?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 272 | View Replies]

Comment #274 Removed by Moderator

To: rmvh
The Incas, for example made murder an integral part of their religion... and their daily lives....The old testemant is rampant with examples of murder, human sacrifice (to appease God), incest..etc....Atheism does not have a monopoly on inhuman activity.

Interesting you bring up the Incas and human sacrifices on altars. The Christian faith had one final Sacrifice to end all sacrifices...keep looking into it. It's quite interesting.

275 posted on 02/26/2003 2:43:30 PM PST by HumanaeVitae
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 139 | View Replies]

To: greymaign
no one.
at least, none such are mentioned or alluded to either by name or inference in the nicene bible or in the apocrypha i have managed to find translations of.
So?
I have never killed a human being, and I am no pacifist.
276 posted on 02/26/2003 2:47:40 PM PST by demosthenes the elder (slime will never cease to be slime... why must that be explained to anyone?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 274 | View Replies]

To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
An Atheist Man is spiritually dead, not mentally dead. He may be Spiritually pre-disposed and tempted to violate the Moral Law (as are all men); but I don't believe he is Mentally incapable of comprehending it, and by Observation and Experimentation comprehending the Moral Law to be absolute (i.e., deducing that any breach is always attended by Consequences).

This is true, non-Christians can know the moral law as Paul noted; however, logical derivation of absolutes is impossible. Objectivists claim that their ethics are the most reasonable of the lot, not that they've detected and are conforming to a pre-existing moral order.

I still don't understand how you square Calvinist Christianity with Randian libertarianism. First, you have the denial of free will. Then you have Calvin's Geneva, which is a pretty awful example for a 'live and let live' society...

277 posted on 02/26/2003 2:50:59 PM PST by HumanaeVitae
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 158 | View Replies]

To: HumanaeVitae
I think we're arguing around each other

Agreed.

I'm attempting to show that ethics are non-derivable from empirical facts

My claim is that regardless of the source of ethics, there must be a rational way to decide among multiple incompatible ethical systems. Otherwise you can't condemn anyone's actions if they have a sincere belief that God supports them.

278 posted on 02/26/2003 2:51:15 PM PST by ThinkDifferent
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 271 | View Replies]

To: Barry Goldwater
careful...
you seem to be confusing "truth" and "fact"
the two are NOT uniformly interchangeable.

as to your point: you are correct.
There is a distinct difference between "I believe" (Credo) and "I know"(Scio), and "I think"(Cogito) is a far cry from either of them.
279 posted on 02/26/2003 2:52:28 PM PST by demosthenes the elder (slime will never cease to be slime... why must that be explained to anyone?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 270 | View Replies]

To: ThinkDifferent
sure you can: possess the power to enforce your will over them - that is the traditional human method, irrespective of all the smoke and dust thrown up to camouflage the fact.
280 posted on 02/26/2003 2:53:57 PM PST by demosthenes the elder (slime will never cease to be slime... why must that be explained to anyone?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 278 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 241-260261-280281-300 ... 481-492 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson