Admittedly, I take issue with the title of the thread. If your position is that discussing morality is pointless, then I need not engage any further. Though I may continue to respond to your moral assertions in other threads that I come across while lurking.
Just a low brow jape at the reality of the situation. Seeing as you're someone who puts bible passages in their own signature, I'm fairly certain that no matter what I put forward, you'll always reply with 'No, because god'. It's a hard-wired defense mechanism. For me to change my mind to be more in line with your thinking, it wouldn't take a conversation about morality, but more a conversation on the existence of a god in the first place.
So far, you have only demonstrated a framework for subjective morality. By grounding morality in subjective experience, especially suffering and pain, you make it contingent on perception, which varies from person to person and society to society. For example, not all people experience the same degree of suffering and pain while kneeling. Those with knee replacements will experience more suffering and pain than those without knee replacements. Even among those with knee replacements or those without, they do not experience the same degree of suffering and pain while kneeling. Examples like this are why it is correct to state that suffering and pain are indeed subjective. An objective standard must transcend human experience, or else it is merely a relative standard.
I think I can conclude that we do not agree on the definition of objective morality. Objective morality necessarily transcends beyond experience or else it is relative. Your usage of the term is merely rhetorical rather than definitional.
Yes, levels of suffering and pain is subjective, but that's irrelevant as it's not what I've ever argued. I've argued that reducing suffering and pain is objectively morally good. Saying that reducing unwanted suffering is morally good doesn't rest on everyone feeling the same pain. It rests on the fact that suffering, by its nature, is an undesirable state of being.
That moral objectivity has never come from anything transcendent, but from the sentient experience itself. It's objectively true that beings prefer less suffering to more. Therefore, reducing suffering is morally good.
Is it circular tautology to say that bachelors are unmarried males because, definitionally, unmarried males are bachelors?
I get the analogy, but it doesn’t really work. Saying “bachelors are unmarried men” is true by definition.
In the same manner that unmarried males are bachelors by definition, good is God’s nature by definition. His commands proceed from His definitionally good nature, therefore they are not arbitrary. The ultimate standard has no higher standard to appeal to. It must appeal to itself. In my framework, that is God. In your framework, that is subjective experience.
“God
is good by definition,” is not the same kind of claim. You’re not finding out that "good" and god are identical, you’re just declaring it. It’s a stipulative definition, not an explanation.
Saying "God is good" doesn't tell us anything meaningful. It's just like saying "God's nature is god's nature". That makes it circular. If you want to say that his nature is good, then you still need to show that it's nature is good rather than evil. I mentioned before to do that, you'd need an independent concept of goodness. If not, and you want to say that anything this god does counts as good just makes it arbitrary.
The dilemma does not stand because it assumes an objective moral standard that is independent of God. The burden of justifying this objective independent standard resides on the one asserting it. All you have done so far is assert a relativistic moral framework grounded in subjective experience while using the term “objective” as mere rhetorical dressing.
In my framework, morality isn't based on personal opinion, but in objective conscious experience. Specifically, the understanding and capacity for well-being and suffering. That's not "Relativistic", it's empirical. We can measure and compare states of well-being. Those facts don't depend on anyone's beliefs, including a deity. My standard is grounded in reality itself. Yours on the other hand is grounded in divine personality, while you call it objective. That makes it contingent on whatever that deity happens to be.
Subjective? If I interpret a car owners manual differently than another person, does it logically follow that the "source" being interpreted is subjective or the car owner's manual is unreliable? These are unreasonable conclusions as the fault lies in the one interpreting rather than the source being interpreted. The Bible does assert the fallibility of humanity. I would expect disagreement on the interpretation of the Bible based upon the Bible's assertion. Do you assert the infallibility of humanity, and is this why you would expect there to be no disagreement on biblical interpretation?
I get the analogy, but it's not perfect. If two people can't agree on how to start the car, we can do a test and find out who is correct. The reliability of the manual can be tested on the car itself.
With the bible, you can't do that. You just have to appeal to more interpretation. Of course humans are fallible, but that doesn't help your case. If this book is divinely inspired to reveal ultimate truth, it MUST be written in a way that us fallible humans can reliably understand. If not, it just makes that deity imperfect for not knowing that would happen.
The sun is not the exclusive source of light in the universe. According to the Christian worldview, God can create, even be, a source of light preceding the sun. This is not inconsistent with reality.
It's not the exclusive source of light in the entire universe, but it's the main source of light for our planet. If it wasn't there, we'd be in the dark. To say that your deity is a source of light is just an assertion, nothing more. To say that's consistent with reality would need a god to test out their ability to beam light out of themselves, which we don't have.
I’m not sure of the contradiction in Judas’ death account. Closer examination of the passages shows that they are complimentary rather than contradictory. A field was purchased using the silver paid to Judas. He then hanged himself and fell to the ground, and his bowels spilled out.
If you want to say that his bowels spilled out in the field due to hanging, that's.... an interpretation..... That doesn't say why one said he bought the land with the silver, the other said he returned the silver.
Noah was first generally commanded to conserve both clean and unclean animals. He was then commanded to have seven pairs of each kind of clean animal to allow for the practice of animal sacrifice. This is an addition of detail rather than a contradiction.
If the second passage were just adding extra detail, you’d expect it to clarify in a way that’s consistent. Something like, “Take two of each, but for clean animals, take seven pairs.” But that’s not how it’s written. They’re presented as separate, self-contained commands, one general and one specific, without any mention that the first is incomplete. It just shows that it was written by different people over centuries. It goes back to the idea that a perfect deity should get these things right the first time.
It appears you are starting with your conclusion that the Bible is inconsistent. Admittedly, I’m not going to go through any future apparent contradictions that you raise. It would be more beneficial for you to investigate how these are reconciled by Christians for yourself. As I’ve already stated, all of the supposed contradictions that I’ve looked into are resolved with proper hermeneutics accounting for context, literary genre, and original language.
I can see why you wouldn't want to. I was just spit-balling ones that I could think of. There are so many others out there with a simple google search.
I agree that consistency is a necessary precondition for truth within reality. From what you have expressed, your reality is limited to subjective experience. I’m assuming that your metaphysical framework is limited to the material or temporal since your epistemology seems to be limited to empiricism. How does your framework make sense of immaterial things such as the laws of logic? Or abstract concepts such as reason, morality, and truth? They cannot be empirically proven due to their immaterial nature and they universally apply independent of subjective experience.
I don't think those "immaterial" in the way that you do. They're abstract, but that doesn't make them outside of reality or supernatural. Things like logic, reason, and morality are discovered properties of conscious and thinking beings operating in a consistent universe. The laws of logic aren't things floating around in metaphysical space. They're descriptions of how reality consistently behaves. Same goes for reason and morality. They're tools created in social species like ours to help us model reality and work together. They are from and describe the consistency of reality. The same consistency you agree is necessary for truth.
The irony is that your position actually removes logic and morality from reality and puts them into a separate "immaterial" form. Mine keeps them in the same reality we experience and test.
Yes, we do need to justify each of our starting points. According to you, we know these things naturally because we know them naturally. Is this not another one of those circular tautologies or is the criticism only applicable to my assertions due to your bias against them? I assert that we know them because God provides the necessary preconditions for the intelligibility of experience, reason, morality, the uniformity of nature, etc. In my worldview, these are not detached abstractions having no root for their justification as they are in your worldview. God is their justification.
I don’t believe it to be the case that God is an unnecessary middleman because God is the necessary originator of thought and reason. I would frame my position as “God is, therefore I think.” This is where we fundamentally differ. Your metaphysical, epistemological, logical, and ethical framework begins internally within yourself, while mine begins externally with God.
What I said isn't circular or a tautology. When I say we know things naturally, it's due to processes we can actually study. It's not asserting "We know because we know".
To say that "God provides the necessary preconditions for reason" assumes god to prove god. It's not an explanation, it's a circular presupposition.
My framework starts with the one thing that is self-evident: Conscious experience. Then it builds from there. Yours starts by assuming a deity, then uses that assumption to justify itself.