Religion and Morality Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the three key questions regarding religion and morality?

A

1) What is the origin of morality? (does it depend upon God?)
2) Is religion moral itself?
3) Can morality prove God’s existence?

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2
Q

What is Divine Command Theory?

A

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)

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3
Q

Are there any problems arising for Divine Command Theory?

A
  • 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  • The divine commands seem outdated/arbitrary
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4
Q

What are the origins of the Euthyphro Dilemma?

A
  • 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
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5
Q

Socrates comes up with two horns to this dilemma. What are these questions?

A

1) Is x good because God commands it?
2) Does God command x because it is good?

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6
Q

What are the implications of the first horn?

A
  • 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)
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7
Q

What are the implications of the second horn?

A
  • God has to appeal to a higher moral authority before commanding (losing his omnipotence)
  • God becomes redundant in moral decision-making
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8
Q

Overall, what is conscience considered to be generally?

A

The intuitive sense of what is morally good (can be viewed as an external voice that can help with decision-making)

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9
Q

Although people may choose to ignore their conscience, why can it tell us to be moral as well?

A
  • Intuitive (innate sense)
  • Overrides our rational decisions, as if it’s the ‘voice’ of another person
  • It can also be learned through experience.
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10
Q

Define these key terms:
- Morality
- Innate
- Intuition
- Rationality/reason

A
  • 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
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11
Q

What are some of the common strands regarding conscience?

A
  • Voice of God (Newman, Butler)
  • Learned (Durkheim, Freud)
  • Dependent upon reason (Newman, Aquinas)
  • Effective with grace (Augustine, Jerome)
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12
Q

Why does Nietzsche claim that “God is dead”?

A
  • Modern society would have no use to these outdated commandments
  • No difference between presence/absence of God in everyday life
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13
Q

What does Nietzsche say we should do instead of relying on God’sc commandments?

A

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”]

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14
Q

Why does Nietzsche argue that Christianity is slave morality?

A
  • 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
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15
Q

Provide some criticisms regarding Nietzsche’s views on religion.

A
  • 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
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