That is not what I've been arguing: I've been purposely choosing the torture world example just to grate against intuition. The argument has not been "torture world is evil, and God doing it would make evil good, but it can't be good because it's evil." Beings in torture world would probably not want to be tortured is the point (by definition), the example is just to give an easy instance where they might want to go against God's intention. By DCT definitions, it would be wrong of them to do so (and I'm not saying this ironically, it would literally be "wrong" by DCT definitions, as you know).
But my real question has been: so what if it's "wrong," if "wrong" only means to literally go against a creator being's intentions? Why do they have a duty not to do wrong? "Going against God's intentions" does not inherently carry a duty: if you assert it does, then that needs justification.
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God has a purpose for the world, but this is like an artist having a purpose for a piece. Other free beings don't seem to have a duty to go along with that purpose just because they're in the world any more than I have a duty to go along with a room's designation by an architect as "bedroom" just because I'm inside of it, maybe I want to use it as an office or a yoga studio. Creators imparting purpose to an environment doesn't spread that purpose to other beings even if they are in that environment, there is no duty imparted. If you assert that there is, the onus is on you to demonstrate that.
As I pointed out in a previous post, my argument was for the ontology of objective moral values - which was not intended to require establishing that one has a duty to obey the objective moral values. But merely establishes that they do objectively exist and where they come from.
I could justify why you do have a duty to obey God's purpose but that would be a separate argument.
When you say the world has a purpose imposed on it by God, I don't see how this is different from an artist having a purpose for a sculpture. We intuitively understand that an artist's purpose for their piece doesn't rub off on everyone else: I'm not bound to the artist's purpose for their piece, I don't have a duty to use their piece as the artist intended. If I buy that sculpture to use as a doorstop, I might be tacky, but I haven't broken some duty because there was never a duty.
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Quick caveat: art comes from free will. I'm wondering how you reconcile this: does the artist get to assign purpose for their art? It seems it would be equivalent to saying the artist doesn't have free will if you say "no," you might get trapped in a contradiction.
You can't assign purpose for the universe, the earth's biosphere, mankind, society, or even yourself - because you didn't create any of those things.
And while you might nominally be able to create a purpose for something you do create because you have the free will of intention - but the real question is whether or not you creating that thing fits into what God designed you to be doing.
It also may fall under the guidance of whether or not what you are doing is in line with the purpose God has for mankind, the earth, or the universe as a whole depending on how what you are doing impacts other things He created.
So you have to make a distinction between moral purpose and nominal purpose.
Only God can determine if whether or not your action is consistent with the objective purpose of His creation - how things are suppose to be.
Your nominal purpose for your invention (how it is suppose to work, and what you intend for it to do) doesn't change what the ultimate purpose of creation already is.
For example: If you invent the maxim heavy machine gun prior to world war one because you either want to make lots of money or want to increase the scale of death involved in war, what do we say of this?
You very well could say you have given purpose to this invention.
But the real question is:
Is creating this invention with this purpose in line with the purpose God has given for your life? Is this perhaps violating the purpose God has given not just for your life, but the purpose God has for mankind as well?
That is why I said, with regards to your matrix analogy, that only an uncreated/uncaused being can truly be said to assign ultimate purpose to something.
Anything that is created by a created being is subject to whether or not what they are creating lines up with the ultimate purpose of the one who created them.
Anyone who is merely caused and not created can't even make intentional choices because they are just materialistic robots.
Already clarified that I wasn't making the argument you thought I was at the beginning of this response, so skipped some stuff (I was not asserting that my moral compass tingling meant anything about the way the world ought to be outside of my hypothetical imperatives).
Why would you reference your own moral compass then as though it were relevant?
Your moral compass is only relevant to guiding you to objective moral truth if it's capable of tapping into some transcendent source of moral truth.
If not, then your moral compass doesn't mean anything for assessing whether or not something is truly right or wrong. It's just a statement of your personal preference.
Even some atheist philosophers recognize the need for this: which is why they try to argue for moral platonism whereby moral concepts are abstract objects that exist as part of the fabric of reality and there's something inside of us that is able to sense them.
They really are at that point describing something not unlike Biblical theism - they just don't want to have to acknowledge the fact that their worldview doesn't make sense without a personal being with a mind being the source of this transcendent morality.
But on this note, there are instances where my moral compass is not in line with what the Biblical God's character are supposed to be: for instance, I do not think homosexuals choosing to enter a relationship rather than remaining chaste to be bad. If God is responsible for my moral compass, and somehow it is bad, then something went wrong somewhere.
That's the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil we see in Genesis with the fall of man.
In Romans we see that people suppress Truth in order to sin.
2 Thessalonians 2:10.
You have to love truth more than you love sin in order to be saved from sin and the effect of it which is death.
You cannot expect to be able to right your moral compass if you don't first love truth more than anything else.
If you truly love truth then you'll be willing to give up any belief you hold that is a lie - no matter how much you might like that lie or think it serves to benefit you.
That is why the Bible tells people to love God more than anything else. God is also said to be Truth itself.
Without taking that first step of loving truth more than anything else, you'll never be able to uncover what lies you believe because you don't have an incentive to let go of the lies.
That is, conversely, why people believe lies in the first place: they think they get something out of it.
You can't believe the truth until you're willing to sacrifice your favored lies first.
Why doesn't God make our moral compasses register correctly so we can correctly be culpable for sins? How is someone culpable for a sin if it doesn't even register to them as bad?
Who said he didn't?
The Bible says He did. Which is precisely why no man will be without excuse in the day of judgement by appealing to ignorance. No man, literally not one. Even if no one every spoke a word of truth to them in their life - they had their inner God given witness about what is right or wrong. And they made their choices.
The Bible also tells us that when sin doesn't register as sin to someone, it's because they have chosen to sear their conscious closed by wanting to believe a lie instead of the truth.
I don't think I said anything about "commands," and if I did (I haven't scrolled up), let me be clear that it doesn't have to be anything like a verbal command. If God creates a thing with an intention and expects things to follow that intention, that is a command. If beings must do things "the way they are supposed to be," that is a duty. I would ask "why must created beings do things the way God intended," but that is a rehash of the top part of this post, so don't answer again here, just answer up there.
I wasn't implying it had to be a verbal command. I was referring to it in the sense of the existence of duties being inherently a type of command.
Oh no, not another subject! I'll shortly say that consciousness appears to be able to arise from mechanistic processes (after all, here we are) and we'll debate that some other time.
You would be using a fallacy of begging the question/circular reasoning to try to argue that way.
Premise: Consciousness arose out of mechanistic processes.
Conclusion: Consciousness can arise out of mechanistic processes.
Your premise depends on assuming it's true that humans arose out of purely mechanistic processes and therefore their consciousness must be mechanistic as well.
But you can't prove humans arose purely out of mechanistic processes. Which would be implying a worldview of materialism.
You can't prove materialism as a worldview is true nor than theism as a worldview is false.
If you can't start from the premise that materialism as a worldview is true then you can't point to the fact that mankind exists with consciousness as proof that materialistic/mechanistic processes can create consciousness.