Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Re: Euthyphro


Plato, through a conversation that Socrates has with Euthyphro demonstrates that morality based on God and his commandments can run into problems beyond unraveling whether God exists or not.  In Euthyphro, Socrates does not take on the task of arguing against the existence of God at all; he poses questions regarding piety and its relation with the nature of God.  In order to respond to Socrates’ challenge, we must first take a look at the challenge that is posed, and then take a deeper look at the nature of God and what it entails.

            The conversation takes place when Euthyphro decides to report his father to the authorities for killing his slave, and Socrates asks him questions about being pious – being moral.  Euthyphro gives him an answer that being pious is about following what Gods love.  Socrates jumps on this after making some clarification to the statement by asking the following: do the gods love holiness because it is holy or is it holy because they love it?  This dichotomy brings about a challenge to how morality would come about with regards to it coming from God.  If we were to pick the former, then it is not God who decides what morality is: God is aware of it and he merely conveys it to us his knowledge.  This would imply that there is something beyond God – holiness that is not from him.  In this case, we would have to ask if there is another god who created this order.  If we choose the latter, then we have to question the definition of what holiness is.  What does it mean to be holy and how can we be certain of the morality that God decided.  In such a case, if God were to command that we ought to torture a baby for fun, it would be true just because of his command.  Holiness and the moral command almost become moot points as it was simply his whim that decided what good and evil is for us.  It simply becomes his preference and there is an element of randomness to what we ought to follow.

            To wrestle with such a question, we need to know more about God.  We shall look at Judeo-Christian God as that is what is familiar to the writer.  Among other natures of God, three of the defining characteristics of God are as follows: He is omniscient, omnipotent and omnibenevolent.  In other words, he is all knowing, all powerful and perfectly good, respectively.  Omniscience can often be read as all seeing as his knowledge is understood as transcending the boundaries of time – he sees all that has been, is and will be.  Does this entail that he obtains knowledge just as he may have obtained the knowledge of holiness, or good and evil?  It can, yes, but this seems inconsistent with how he is portrayed in the bible, or rather how he portrays himself if we want to be technical.  There are some parts of the bible (Christian) that gives some description of God and they describe him as being the beginning and the end.  When God addresses himself, he simply says, “I am”.  He seems to emphasize over and over that there is nothing beyond him.  I would argue that the problem of accepting that “holiness simply comes from his command” derives from the uncertainty of the nature of God.  It seems odd to us to call him “perfectly good” if what is good simply came from whatever he deemed to be good.  It would be completely circular in nature.  However, we have to consider the nature of knowledge and morality themselves.  If we were to consider that there is absolutely nothing outside of God, it would seem that even a notion of knowledge and morality would not exist in such an order.  We must carefully contemplate this absolute void and what it entails.  Something as fundamental as what we consider consciousness must be created.   If we can imagine that these things had to be created, we can see how it is almost irrelevant to talk about morality or knowledge outside of God.  The way we reason and the way we judge what is good and evil along with the concept of morality were all set in order by God.  On top of that, if we consider him being perfectly good by the standard that he set as being “good”, there isn’t anything inconsistent – it almost seems necessary for him to be leading by example.

            One might ask, if this were true, would I torture a baby for fun if God commanded it?  I would ask whether he created a universe and the order of the universe to ensure that torturing a baby for fun is morally permissible.  It is asking whether I would follow the command if God commanded what is clearly evil.  However, this goes against the very nature of God – perfectly good.  The circularity of his nature prevents command of an “evil” thing.  He would only command what he deemed to be good and what he created to be good.  As unimaginable and abhorrent as it is, the only way that God would command torturing a baby for fun is to create a universe, the way of the universe, and the behavioral order of our rationality that would somehow deem such an act to be good.

            It is hard to imagine with accuracy what God is like.  We speak of such a thing as being infinitely powerful but that is not something we can put into our calculation.  We can have a general idea through our imagination what this might be like but I am unsure how I would put into words to describe such a being.  Perhaps that is why he addresses himself with “I am” since there is nothing outside of his existence – a sort of pantheistic notion but only when we think of physical matter.  When we consider our thought processes and intuition being something that was created, it seems to address some issues that Socrates points out in Euthyphro.

Thursday, 29 March 2012

The Meaning of Life - Richard Taylor

Preface:

Sometimes people ask me why I study Philosophy or how it affects me as a religious person.  I am a Christian and a large part of what I study is secular, and in many writings, there will be some aggressive and blatant anti-religious sentiments.  Richard Taylor’s book Good and Evil contains those thoughts, and in many ways, when I read through them, there are some parts that I feel slightly offended when my views seem misrepresented in his writings but at the same time, there are many views that I misrepresent on many things.  My answer is that studying philosophy has given me a better perspective on why people believe what they believe and has taught me to be more humble in approaching such debates or discussions.  As I encourage those of different beliefs to try and get a better understanding of the worldview based on Christianity, I try my best to get a better understanding of others.


Summary:

Richard Taylor (1919-2003) in a selection from his book Good and Evil talks about a way to address the ever-looming question of whether life has any meaning.  He addresses that the question may itself be an unintelligible question but he says that it is important to contemplate and arrive at a significant answer.  Taylor goes about this task by discussing the ancient myth of Sisyphus.  He talks about what the myth is trying to convey to us and brings up some interesting variations he comes up with to alter our views on the meaningless existence of Sisyphus.

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

The Thought Experiment Against Hedonism


If you know what film this is from, good for you!
Robert Nozick (1938-2002) in his book Anarchy, State and Utopia (1974), attempts to demonstrate that there are more things in life than the pursuit of happiness, as hedonists would have you believe.  He tries to isolate the process of achieving happiness with a thought experiment and in turn, shows that there are other aspects of life that we value aside from happiness.  This is rather difficult to show in a real life situation since many things we do cause happiness and it is easy to reduce all of them down to the pursuit of happiness.  Nozick, instead, uses an aspect of complete virtual reality to make his point.

In his thought experiment, you’re given a choice to enter a machine that would give you any experience you desired.  In this world, the neuropsychologists have invented a machine that could “stimulate your brain so that you would think and feel you were writing a great novel, or making a friend, or reading an interesting book.”  You can choose any experience you wish to have and you won’t know that you’re in an experience machine while you’re in it: it will seem completely real to you.  You can choose the experience that you’ll have for the next 2 years and after the 2 years, you can have a short amount of time to come out and choose the experience you’ll have for the next 2 years, and so on.  Nozick asks the reader if we would plug into such a machine, after all, it is a life of complete bliss except for the few moments you come out to decide the next few years of life.

Hedonism - Epicurus


Epicurus (341-270 BCE) is a hedonist.  For those not familiar with the word, hedonists are those that value happiness above all else.  Hedonism puts pleasure as what we ought to ultimately pursue in life.  This can easily be misunderstood as to think that Epicurus encourages people to go out partying everyday and live a shallow life of shortsighted pleasures.  However, in his writing, Letter to Menoceus, he opposes this view of misrepresented hedonistic ideals and proceeds to explain what he means by pleasure-oriented life.

Epicurus starts his letter by establishing that death is something that the wise should not fear: “death, therefore, the most awful of evils, is nothing to us, seeing that, when we are, death is not come, and, when death is come, we are not.”  He says that the wise do not degrade the value of life nor does the wise try to foolishly try to elongate it.  With that in mind, this wise man would seek to enjoy the time he has on this earth rather than to try and “live well” when young and “die well” when old.  This, he says, is foolish.

Monday, 26 March 2012

Ethics

Ethics is a study of right and wrong.  Studying this subject is the reason why I entered the field of Philosophy and although studying all the different branches of Philosophy has been quite a pleasure, I do want to turn my attention to Ethics for a while.  Now, whether it's been a pleasure for everyone around me whenever I divert the conversation into a philosophical debate is questionable but we shall all persevere.  Ethics is broadly divided into 4 sub-topics, at least according to the text I'm studying but it'll have to do as the book provides us a good starting point to spark discussions: value theory, normative ethics, metaethics and moral problems.  These all just roll off your tongue and sound very exciting, but just bear with me.

Value theory has to do with determining what is good.  Before we can start to discuss what is morally good and evil, we must first lay out the foundational stones and figure out what we ought to pursue in life for its own good.  For example, is happiness good in itself?  Should we live our lives with the pursuit of happiness in mind?  We all do try to be happy (most of us) in our own way but is that ultimately what we should pursue in this life?  The most amount of happiness?  Epicurus (341-270 BCE) certainly thought so as he says, "we must exercise ourselves in things which bring happiness, since, if that be present, we have everything, and, if that be absent, all our actions are directed towards attaining it."  There are many who disagree with this stance and work to establish other things as good in their own rights.