Religion and Morality Flashcards
What are the three key questions regarding religion and morality?
1) What is the origin of morality? (does it depend upon God?)
2) Is religion moral itself?
3) Can morality prove God’s existence?
What is Divine Command Theory?
The claim that something can be good because God commands it, and all moral truths are God-given (it is also unchanging, like God’s nature)
Are there any problems arising for Divine Command Theory?
- How can moral truths be unchanging if different religious communities disagree on what they are?
- Non-theists would have no commands to follow (therefore no moral accountability)
- The divine commands seem outdated/arbitrary
What are the origins of the Euthyphro Dilemma?
- Plato wrote down evidence of the debate
- Took place in Ancient Greece, on the steps of the townhall
- Euthyphro believed in God’s commandments, which provide a sense of morality
- However, Socrates claimed that Euthyphro’s beliefs are far-fetched
Socrates comes up with two horns to this dilemma. What are these questions?
1) Is x good because God commands it?
2) Does God command x because it is good?
What are the implications of the first horn?
- God’s commands could go against our moral intuition (e.g., Abraham) so God is not the only source of moral judgement
- God’s commands are ARBITRARY (no choice to choose one or another easily)
What are the implications of the second horn?
- God has to appeal to a higher moral authority before commanding (losing his omnipotence)
- God becomes redundant in moral decision-making
Overall, what is conscience considered to be generally?
The intuitive sense of what is morally good (can be viewed as an external voice that can help with decision-making)
Although people may choose to ignore their conscience, why can it tell us to be moral as well?
- Intuitive (innate sense)
- Overrides our rational decisions, as if it’s the ‘voice’ of another person
- It can also be learned through experience.
Define these key terms:
- Morality
- Innate
- Intuition
- Rationality/reason
- Morality: understanding of good or bad
- Innate: existing within us from birth (‘born into you’)
- Intuition: a non-rational “gut-feeling” or “sixth sense”
- Rationality/reason: the ability to deliberately think about a problem or decision
What are some of the common strands regarding conscience?
- Voice of God (Newman, Butler)
- Learned (Durkheim, Freud)
- Dependent upon reason (Newman, Aquinas)
- Effective with grace (Augustine, Jerome)
Why does Nietzsche claim that “God is dead”?
- Modern society would have no use to these outdated commandments
- No difference between presence/absence of God in everyday life
What does Nietzsche say we should do instead of relying on God’sc commandments?
Create our own norms and morals instead of relying on someone else [post modernism ~ individual chooses how to see the world, including a moral framework] [having the “will to power”]
Why does Nietzsche argue that Christianity is slave morality?
- Believers who follow the commandments are known to be “self-denying”
- Sins can limited expression of oneself
- Priests exercise their own master morality onto their followers
Provide some criticisms regarding Nietzsche’s views on religion.
- Christians can apply teachings from Gospels to their own moral framework
- Ubermensch is flawed, not everyone can exercise their own will to power (i.e., dictatorship)
- Some biblical teachings are useful