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Just to clarify: I'm not saying you can't have morals without authority. (If I did then I misspoke apologies) Only that those morals will never be 'objective'. Honestly why does morality need to be 'objective' anyway? Its like searching for 'the real' meaning of life.Not a single reply acknowledging the existence of secular ethics as the answer to this question. The closest we got to it was @The best and greatest's post about morality being predicated upon argument from authority (a 101-level induction fallacy). Say what you will about deontological ethics or might-makes-right ethics - They're at least more internally consistent than the whims attributed to the god of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (itself modeled after the contemporary authority of a sultan or pasha to be appeased or provoked).
Is it a matter of Kiwi Farms posters being generally uneducated, or those who took a Philosophy 1 class knowing better than to take the bait; because you can't teach a man anything he thinks he already knows?
Just to clarify: I'm not saying you can't have morals without authority[...]Only that those morals will never be 'objective'.
When people ask for an 'objective morality' what are they really asking for?
God created secular moralityI understood; was agreeing with you, and additionally qualified your point as being a principle anyone else presumably interested in the topic could expect to encounter in a Logic 101 course dealing with distinguishing between deductive and inductive arguments, and engaging with them in accordance with Aristotelian or Boolean logic - which is otherwise conspicuously absent in these discussions.
Someone else to do their thinking for them, so they can have a pseudo-profound "answer" to pull out of their ass to invoke as a weapon at the first sign of being forced to consider something different. One can consider themselves objective or moral - But to consider themselves to be both means they can't be doing either very well.
So then why is suffering so logically inconsistent if there is supposedly a rational God behind it? Why make some people have a life of nothing but suffering when they are moral, but others who are wicked to their fellow men can endure little hardship? Having a supposedly loving entity promote suffering amongst humanity is ontologically horrifying, instead of it than just having it being a consequence of one’s own choices, or it existing because…it just does.It can not be objective with god.