- Objective morality cannot exist unless God exists.
- Objective morality exists.
- Therefore, God exists.
1. “But I’m a moral person and I don’t believe in God. Are you saying that atheists can’t be moral?”
The moral argument has nothing to do with belief in God. No proponent of the moral argument has ever argued that an individual cannot be moral unless they hold belief in God. Rather, the argument deals with grounding, or substantiating, objective morality. If God does not exist, then there can be no basis for objective morality. Sure, atheists can be moral. In fact, I know several atheists who are more moral than some theists! The issue of belief is not pertinent to the argument. The argument simply highlights the fact that there must be a basis– some kind of standard–that is outside of ourselves, in order for there to be objective morality. This objection makes a category error of confusing a question of moral ontology (Is there a moral reality?) with moral epistemology (How do we come to know or believe in the moral reality?).
2. “But what if you needed to lie in order to save someone’s life? It seems that morality is not absolute as you say it is.”
We’re not talking about absolute morality here. There is an important difference between absolute and objective. Absolutism requires that something will, or must, always be the case. Objectivity simply means ‘mind-independent’ or ‘judgement-independent’. When I argue for objective morality, I’m not arguing that it is always the case that lying or killing are wrong; the moral argument does not defend absolute morality. Rather, it contends that there is a standard of morality that transcends human opinions, judgments, biases, and proclivities. Let’s suppose that some nation today decreed that everyone of its homosexual citizens would be tortured to death simply for being homosexual; it would still be the case that, ‘It is wrong to torture homosexuals to death simply for being homosexual’.
The statement, ’It is wrong to torture homosexuals to death simply for being homosexual’ is true, regardless of whether or not anyone believes it to be true. This is what is meant by objective.
3. ‘Where’s your evidence for objective morality? I won’t believe in anything unless I have evidence for it.’
Well in that case, you shouldn’t believe that I exist. You shouldn’t believe that your parents gave birth to you. You shouldn’t believe that your closest loved ones are real, actual persons who matter and have feelings. You shouldn’t believe that the external world around you is actually there. After all, how do you know that you are not a brain in a vat being electrically stimulated by a crazy scientist who wants you to think that all of this is real? You could be in the matrix, for all you know (take the blue pill)! How do you know that you weren’t created a couple minutes ago and implanted with memories of your entire past life? How could you possibly prove otherwise?
See where this is going? Denying the existence of something on the basis of, ‘I will not believe unless I have evidence for it’ leaves you with solipsism. We believe in the reality of the external world on the basis of our experience of the external world, and we are justified in believing that the external world is real unless we had good evidence to think otherwise. There is no way to prove (empirically or otherwise) that the external world is real, or that the past wasn’t created 2 minutes ago with the appearance of age, and yet we all believe these to be true and are justified in doing so. In the absence of defeating evidence, we are justified in trusting our experience of the external world. In the same way, I think we can know that objective morality exists on the basis of our moral experience. We have access to moral facts about the universe through our moral intuition. Unless we have good reason to distrust our moral experience, we are justified in accepting the reality of the objective moral framework that it presents us with.
4. ‘If morality is objective, then why do some cultures practice female genital mutilation, cannibalism, infanticide, and other atrocities which we, in the West, deem unacceptable?’
There can be two responses given here:
The first response is that even though not all cultures share the exact same moral facts, most embrace the same, underlying moral values. For example, there are certain tribes that practice senicide (authorized killing of the elderly) due to their belief that everyone in the afterlife will continue living on in the same body that they died with. Thus, in order to ensure that those in the afterlife are capable of hunting, swimming, building houses, etc., the elderly are killed before they become too old to take care of themselves. This act is done with the well-being of the elderly in mind. The moral value that we hold in the West- ”The elderly are valuable and must be taken care of”- is also accepted by these tribes, even though their facts are slightly (well, maybe more than slightly) off.
The second response is that some cultures do, in fact, practice certain things that are straight up morally abominable. Cultures that practice infanticide, female circumcision, widow burning, child prostitution, etc. are practicing acts that are repulsive and morally abhorrent. When a man decides to have his 6-year old daughter circumcised or sold into prostitution, that is not a cultural or traditional difference that we should respect and uphold, rather these are atrocities that need to be advocated against and ended. The existence of multiple moral codes does not negate the existence of objective morality. Are we to condone slavery and segregation since they were once allowed under our country’s moral code? Of course not. We condemn those actions, and rightly so.
Take the example of Nazi Germany: the Nazi ideology consented to the slaughter of millions, but their actions were wrong despite them thinking that they were right. Tim Keller summarizes this point succintly:
The Nazis who exterminated Jews may have claimed that they didn’t feel it was immoral at all. We don’t care. We don’t care if they sincerely felt they were doing a service to humanity. They ought not to have done it. We do not only have moral feelings, but we also have an ineradicable belief that moral standards exist, outside of us, by which our internal moral feelings are evaluated.Simply because a society practices acts that are contrary to what is moral does not mean that all moral codes are equal. Moral disagreements do not nullify moral truths.
5. ‘But God carried out many atrocities in the Old Testament. He ordered the genocide of the Canaanites.’
For starters, this isn’t really an objection to the moral argument. It does not attack either premise of the argument. It is irrelevant, but let’s entertain this objection for a second. By making a judgement on God’s actions and deeming them immoral, the objector is appealing to a standard of morality that holds true outside of him/herself and transcends barriers of culture, context, time period, and social norms. By doing this, he/she affirms the existence of objective morality! But if the skeptic wants to affirm objective morality after throwing God out the window, then there needs to be an alternate explanation for its basis. If not God, then what is it? The burden is now on the skeptic to provide a naturalistic explanation for the objective moral framework.
About Paul Rezkalla
Paul graduated from NYU with degrees in Religious Studies and History. He is now studying for an MA in Philosophy of Religion & Ethics at the University of Birmingham in England. He enjoys history, philosophy, and theology.
This is a guest post from the Christian Apologetics Alliance: answering seekers, equipping Christians & demonstrating the truth of the Christian worldview.
9 comments :
Great overview - I learnt something, thanks
Paul,
Thank you for the article. Very brief and concise. I plan on recommending it to my Sunday School class !
I featured it here with Brian's permission.
Godspeed
The first point is "Objective morality cannot exist unless God exists." I think this applies not only to morality but to everything else too. We could just as well say, "The world cannot exist unless God exists." After all, the creator must exist in order for the created to exist.
Would you agree?
The moral argument is a good "side argument" in that it does not stand alone well, although it still helpfully adds to the overall evidence for God. There must be a great deal of agreement between parties on term definitions for it to work, and there are other potential causes for general moral values than God. They just aren't as likely as God in my opinion.
Thanks,
Jason
Hey John,
Yes, the universe, too, is evidence for God. The moral argument takes one feature of the universe (morality) and uses that to point men to God. In the same way, some apologists utilize biological complexity as evidence for God.
Hey Jason,
I'd be interested to hear your 'other potential causes' for objective morality. I think that the moral argument is the strongest argument for the existence of God.
Of course the popular form of the argument looks like a deductive argument, i.e., it seems at first glance to be formulated such that if the premises are true, the conclusion follows necessarily.
Premise 1: Objective morality cannot exist unless God exists.
Premise 2: Objective morality exists.
Conclusion: Therefore, God exists.
The difficulty here is with the first premise. It is stated negatively in order to make morality the antecedent (cause) and God the consequent (result). If restated positively the argument becomes:
Premise 1: God is the reason morality exists.
Premise 2: Objective morality exists.
Conclusion: Therefore, God exists.
It now becomes clear that this argument affirms the consequent and is circular, that is, it presumes the very thing it is trying to prove.
The logical structure of the original argument is valid. I think anonymous has reframed the argument incorrectly.
"Let’s suppose that some nation today decreed that everyone of its homosexual citizens would be tortured to death simply for being homosexual; it would still be the case that, ‘It is wrong to torture homosexuals to death simply for being homosexual’."
thats not what your god says, he thinks its objectively okay to do that to gays or else he wouldnt have told that to the ancient jews,
Ahm, no, objective morality does not exist and our intuition is an incredibly bad argument for it.
There are certain unethical behaviors that human beings instinctively shy away from and there are rational and evolutionary reasons for some of them. There are rational arguments against certain things that we don't shy away from and there are evolutionary reasons why we shy away from others even though no rational reasons exist; that is all.
Nothing of that forces me to deny your existence, which I have evidence for simply by the fact that this post exists. There's a difference between "proof" and "evidence". I can't prove that I didn't exist five minutes ago, but given the fact that everything seems to be perfectly consistent with the assumption that I was born 27 years ago in a universe that has existed for 13.7 billion years (which I have a huge amount of evidence for, even if no proof) and I have no experiment to distinguish between both hypotheses, it makes no sense to adopt the position that I was created 5 minutes ago, since it doesn't lead to any falsifiable or useful expectations.
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