OnlyAmbrose wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Ditocoaf wrote:Neoteny wrote:
Over-discussed it isn't, and read it I have done.
Have you ever read The End of Faith by Samuel Harris? Excellent book. The part I really like is how he puts forth the possibility of an absolute moral code that's not grounded in an external all-powerful being. If you simply start from the assumption that things that cause more happiness than suffering are good, and things that cause more suffering (physical, emotional, phsychological, or anything) than happiness are bad, then potentially a sort of "science" of good and evil could be developed. The concept has some flaws, but I like the overall idea.
I think that by defining good and evil, he seems to be establishing himself as God.
As an atheist I don't see why you would accept that basic assumption.
So we're back with the assumption that good and evil can only come from God?
Well it has to come from somewhere, and for the sake of argument I'm semantically labeling that source as "God." Personally, I am unwilling to allow anything short of an all-powerful being define good and evil for me, which is why I'm curious why someone would allow some random guy to define it for him.
But according to what standards does god define what is good and evil? Is it just because he's god? In that case he's really just making it up as he likes. And if he uses some sort of criteria to define it he's not needed to define what is good and evil, because then there's nothing to say that we can't have access to those criteria and work it out on our own.