The obvious theist counter-reply is that the structure of God’s desires is logically related to the essence of God, in a way that you can’t have the goodness without the God nor more than God without the goodness, they are part of the same logical structure. (Aquinas: “God is by essence goodness itself”)
I think this is a self-consistent metaethics as metaethics goes. The problem is that God is at the same time part of the realm of abstract logical structures like “goodness”, and a concrete being that causes the world to exist, causes miracles, has desires, etc. The fault is not in the metaethics, it is in the confused metaphysics that allows for a concrete being to “exist essentially” as part of its logical structure.
ETA: of course, you could say the metaethics is self-consistent but also false, because it locates “goodness” outside ourselves (our extrapolated desires) which is where it really is. But for the Thomist I am currently emulating, “our extrapolated desires” sound a lot like “our final cause, the perfection to which we tend by our essence” and God is the ultimate final cause. The problem is again the metaphysics (in this case, using final causes without realizing they are mind projecting fallacy), not the metaethics.
Well, I said that the metaphysics is confused, so we agree. I just think the metaethics part of religious philosophy can be put in order without falling into Euthyphro, the problem is in its broader philosophical system.
Not quite how I’d put it. I meant that in my mind the whole metaethics part implies that “God” is just a shorthand term for “whatever turns out to be ‘goodness’, even if we don’t understand it yet”, and that this resolves to the fact that “God” serves no other purposes than to confuse morality with other things within this context.
Or that it is sometimes useful to tell metaphorical stories about this goodness-embodying thing as if it were sapient and had superpowers.
Or as if the ancients thought it was sapient and had superpowers. They were wrong about that, but right about enough important things that we still value their writings.
The problem is that God is at the same time part of the realm of abstract logical structures like “goodness”, and a concrete being that causes the world to exist, causes miracles, has desires, etc.
As I explained here, it’s perfectly reasonable to describe mathematical abstractions as causes.
The obvious theist counter-reply is that the structure of God’s desires is logically related to the essence of God, in a way that you can’t have the goodness without the God nor more than God without the goodness, they are part of the same logical structure. (Aquinas: “God is by essence goodness itself”)
I think this is a self-consistent metaethics as metaethics goes. The problem is that God is at the same time part of the realm of abstract logical structures like “goodness”, and a concrete being that causes the world to exist, causes miracles, has desires, etc. The fault is not in the metaethics, it is in the confused metaphysics that allows for a concrete being to “exist essentially” as part of its logical structure.
ETA: of course, you could say the metaethics is self-consistent but also false, because it locates “goodness” outside ourselves (our extrapolated desires) which is where it really is. But for the Thomist I am currently emulating, “our extrapolated desires” sound a lot like “our final cause, the perfection to which we tend by our essence” and God is the ultimate final cause. The problem is again the metaphysics (in this case, using final causes without realizing they are mind projecting fallacy), not the metaethics.
My mind reduces all of this to “God = Confusion”. What am I missing?
Well, I said that the metaphysics is confused, so we agree. I just think the metaethics part of religious philosophy can be put in order without falling into Euthyphro, the problem is in its broader philosophical system.
Not quite how I’d put it. I meant that in my mind the whole metaethics part implies that “God” is just a shorthand term for “whatever turns out to be ‘goodness’, even if we don’t understand it yet”, and that this resolves to the fact that “God” serves no other purposes than to confuse morality with other things within this context.
I think we still agree, though.
Using the word also implies that this goodness-embodying thing is sapient and has superpowers.
Or that it is sometimes useful to tell metaphorical stories about this goodness-embodying thing as if it were sapient and had superpowers.
Or as if the ancients thought it was sapient and had superpowers. They were wrong about that, but right about enough important things that we still value their writings.
As I explained here, it’s perfectly reasonable to describe mathematical abstractions as causes.