The problem with god of course is that god cannot speak for itself so when declaring an entity that cannot speak for itself the sole final arbiter on human morality all you've really done is just kick the can down the road. Also there is an inherent weakness to declaring an eternal standard to human morality anyway since it precludes the need or desire for growth or change. Why grow or change if you presume to be perfect?
I’ll leave aside the theological arguments for God speaking for himself for a moment. I will also admit that I’m not a philosopher and my own conceptions on the subject don’t address every issue. Although I personally find it more compelling than the alternative.
My point is, absent a foundational objective standard, morality as a term becomes utterly meaningless without it being fully defined, and those definitions themselves vary wildly to the point where I find it difficult to accept claims of universal natural moral law without a God to apply it.
“Good” and “Evil” just become pithy shorthand for a combination of vague standards; a mix of values that have seismically shifted over time. Is “good” always happiness? Freedom? Survival? Truth? Beauty? The need for humanity’s enduring legacy? And that’s even setting aside the fact that each of those concepts have disputed and widely varied interpretations.
How much of our own interpretation of these qualities is defined by culture or biology? What is the general priority they should take when they’re in conflict? What timeline for each should be considered? For example is temporary unhappiness always “immoral” or is it moral when it serves lasting happiness? What happens when individual access to these components of “good” conflict? Who takes priority? Do intentions matter, or just outcomes?
Compound this discussion with the fact that it’s applied constantly to every decision of every sentient being on the planet and we approach a dizzying level of complexity. And with no consistent standard to judge the outcome, morality reverts to a made-up term to describe a configuration of matter.
I’m saying that standards defined by consensus are not morality, and they shouldn’t be treated and discussed as such. They are arbitrary. A snapshot in time of how an evolved animal’s brain chemistry reacts to the stimuli provided by its surroundings and its previous conditioning. If you deny a metaphysical component, you deny the concept all together. A man being tortured is no longer evil, just an act detrimental to his happiness and detrimental to a society full of apes that would rather not also experience that pain. The mass that makes up the victim’s body is indifferent to it, and will be forever no matter what the eternal destination of his remains may be.
I’m not opposed to this thinking, even if I don’t agree with it (the no actual morality thing, not the torturing thing). I just wish people would be more up front about it. I wish arbitrary proposed changes to policy and cultural values weren’t hailed as unequivocally moral without us really taking the time to define the term in secular language. It almost always ends up being presented dogmatically, even if it’s dressed up otherwise. I’m aware this is a folly done by both the religious and irreligious, and often such definition isn’t practical given the limits of human communication, but it’s so rarely discussed that those impracticalities almost never matter. We just rely on assumed shared cultural values to make our way, even when we’re inconsistent in their application and never take the time to attempt to quantify them. And often when they’re not even shared!
This moral shorthand is not entirely useless, in fact it’s often the reason we can coexist at all. But the reality is that for a society supposedly progressing ever onward along the path of universal natural morality, it’s obvious we lack the tools and will to explore exactly what that means.
“This is just.” “It’s the right thing to do”. Okay, how? Does it maximize happiness? How is happiness defined? The release of dopamine? A complex interaction of biological and physiological systems? The feeling itself, or the capacity to achieve it consistently? How is it measured? Is happiness all that matters? More questions, fewer answers, and no practical way to even measure these things effectively in a form that can’t be abused or used to manipulate.
In short, how can you claim a consensus model of morality where there’s no consensus?
Terms like “Justice” are “the right side of history” are pushed so fucking hard without stopping to examine what that even means. The idea of a constant metaphysical morality is invoked by people who would admit they don’t consciously believe in it, even though they act as they do. Part of the reason for the cultural gulf we’re experiencing is that we’re so stunted in our definitions of morality that we can’t even communicate with each other anymore. And disturbingly often are those definitions tied to specific forms of short-sighted popular policy.
If there’s one thing I’ll actually give credit to the modern left for it’s the willingness to explore moral implications of previously unchallenged social structures. It’s just so often done without similar scrutiny to the standards of morality on which they base their analysis.
In general though, more thinking about the morality of a connected world is a step forward. The step backwards comes from the embracing a both a moral framework that has the potential to justify atrocities and a structure of government that is remarkably efficient at perpetrating them.
I do believe we
should work together to build a well-defined consensus on morality as a society, and attempt to preserve those values. I just also believe personally that it’s not a natural process and my own contributions are based on my best interpretations of what I consider to be eternal principles. And I think using that consensus itself to define morality is dumb. No matter where society ends up, it’s going to look back smugly and say “well gang, we made it!” even if by every metric of general human welfare the Brave New World is a hellish nightmare made up of clueless, unfulfilled drones.
I’m gonna try to wrap this up with a few more points that have been on my mind.
First, if you do believe in consensus as a basis for morality, you have to be willing to actively build that consensus, including being willing to change your own mind and compromise. That said, I’m sick of the attitude of people who think that behaving “morally” despite not believing God somehow makes them more moral. Because, like I just spent over a dozen paragraphs ranting about, an absence of objective morality means that what your doing is not moral at all, it’s organizing matter in response to stimuli, and being an asshole while you do it.
Second, a belief in God as a moral arbiter does not kick the can down the road. Acknowledging our flawed, limited capacity to act morally does not preclude us from the responsibility to act anyway, according to that limited capacity. That includes our own personal actions and our attempts to contribute to a more moral society. As a personal religious philosophy, I believe it is moral to act in an attempt to do right as opposed to passively standing by. I have not said that it’s impossible to discern good from evil. Again, I personally believe that there
is in fact an ability to do so inherent to all humans, tied to the existence of the divine. I’m only stating that our ability to do so is imperfect, as our knowledge is imperfect and our ability to grasp how actions impact a complex and interconnected world is limited. That does
not mean that is pointless to try. Most religions would consider that the whole purpose of existence.
Lastly, addressing your second point (finally), I hope I’ve demonstrated how a perfect standard of morality does not mean we have no need to progress towards it. The opposite is true: an objective standard of morality is so overwhelmingly complex and out of reach that the only possible outcome is for us to fall short. The fact that perfection exists does not mean we have no reason to improve in pursuit of it. Think of your most deeply held convictions about what you perceive as “moral”. For argument’s sake, let’s pretend you’re the one that’s 100% right about it. Now think about your actions and how often they don’t conform to those ideals. There is always a need to do better, and failing to do so is itself an immoral act.
Anyway I wasted way too much of my life writing that but there you go.