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Euthyphro dilemma

The Euthyphro dilemma is found in Plato's dialogue Euthyphro, in which Socrates asks Euthyphro, "Is the pious (τὸ ὅσιον) loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved by the gods?" (10a)

Socrates

Although it was originally applied to the ancient Greek pantheon, the dilemma has implications for modern monotheistic religions. Gottfried Leibniz asked whether the good and just "is good and just because God wills it or whether God wills it because it is good and just".[1] Ever since Plato's original discussion, this question has presented a problem for some theists, though others have thought it a false dilemma, and it continues to be an object of theological and philosophical discussion today.

The dilemma edit

Socrates and Euthyphro discuss the nature of piety in Plato's Euthyphro. Euthyphro proposes (6e) that the pious (τὸ ὅσιον) is the same thing as that which is loved by the gods (τὸ θεοφιλές), but Socrates finds a problem with this proposal: the gods may disagree among themselves (7e). Euthyphro then revises his definition, so that piety is only that which is loved by all of the gods unanimously (9e).

At this point the dilemma surfaces. Socrates asks whether the gods love the pious because it is the pious, or whether the pious is pious only because it is loved by the gods (10a). Socrates and Euthyphro both contemplate the first option: surely the gods love the pious because it is the pious. But this means, Socrates argues, that we are forced to reject the second option: the fact that the gods love something cannot explain why the pious is the pious (10d). Socrates points out that if both options were true, they together would yield a vicious circle, with the gods loving the pious because it is the pious, and the pious being the pious because the gods love it. And this in turn means, Socrates argues, that the pious is not the same as the god-beloved, for what makes the pious the pious is not what makes the god-beloved the god-beloved. After all, what makes the god-beloved the god-beloved is the fact that the gods love it, whereas what makes the pious the pious is something else (9d-11a). Thus Euthyphro's theory does not give us the very nature of the pious, but at most a quality of the pious (11ab).

In philosophical theism edit

The dilemma can be modified to apply to philosophical theism, where it is still the object of theological and philosophical discussion, largely within the Christian, Jewish, and Islamic traditions. As German philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Leibniz presented this version of the dilemma: "It is generally agreed that whatever God wills is good and just. But there remains the question whether it is good and just because God wills it or whether God wills it because it is good and just; in other words, whether justice and Goodness are arbitrary or whether they belong to the necessary and eternal truths about the nature of things."[2]

Many philosophers and theologians have addressed the Euthyphro dilemma since the time of Plato, though not always with reference to the Platonic dialogue. According to scholar Terence Irwin, the issue and its connection with Plato was revived by Ralph Cudworth and Samuel Clarke in the 17th and 18th centuries.[3] More recently, it has received a great deal of attention from contemporary philosophers working in metaethics and the philosophy of religion. Philosophers and theologians aiming to defend theism against the threat of the dilemma have developed a variety of responses.

God commands it because it is right edit

Supporters edit

The first horn of the dilemma (i.e. that which is right is commanded by God because it is right) goes by a variety of names, including intellectualism, rationalism, realism, naturalism, and objectivism. Roughly, it is the view that there are independent moral standards: some actions are right or wrong in themselves, independent of God's commands. This is the view accepted by Socrates and Euthyphro in Plato's dialogue. The Mu'tazilah school of Islamic theology also defended the view (with, for example, Nazzam maintaining that God is powerless to engage in injustice or lying),[4] as did the Islamic philosopher Averroes.[5] Thomas Aquinas never explicitly addresses the Euthyphro dilemma, but Aquinas scholars often put him on this side of the issue.[6][7] Aquinas draws a distinction between what is good or evil in itself and what is good or evil because of God's commands,[8] with unchangeable moral standards forming the bulk of natural law.[9] Thus he contends that not even God can change the Ten Commandments (adding, however, that God can change what individuals deserve in particular cases, in what might look like special dispensations to murder or stealing).[10] Among later Scholastics, Gabriel Vásquez is particularly clear-cut about obligations existing prior to anyone's will, even God's.[11][12] Modern natural law theory saw Grotius and Leibniz also putting morality prior to God's will, comparing moral truths to unchangeable mathematical truths, and engaging voluntarists like Pufendorf in philosophical controversy.[13] Cambridge Platonists like Benjamin Whichcote and Ralph Cudworth mounted seminal attacks on voluntarist theories, paving the way for the later rationalist metaethics of Samuel Clarke and Richard Price;[14][15][16] what emerged was a view on which eternal moral standards, though dependent on God in some way, exist independently of God's will and prior to God's commands. Contemporary philosophers of religion who embrace this horn of the Euthyphro dilemma include Richard Swinburne[17][18] and T. J. Mawson[19] (though see below for complications).

Criticisms edit

  • Sovereignty: If there are moral standards independent of God's will, then "[t]here is something over which God is not sovereign. God is bound by the laws of morality instead of being their establisher. Moreover, God depends for his goodness on the extent to which he conforms to an independent moral standard. Thus, God is not absolutely independent."[20] 18th-century philosopher Richard Price, who takes the first horn and thus sees morality as "necessary and immutable", sets out the objection as follows: "It may seem that this is setting up something distinct from God, which is independent of him, and equally eternal and necessary."[21]
  • Omnipotence: These moral standards would limit God's power: not even God could oppose them by commanding what is evil and thereby making it good. This point was influential in Islamic theology: "In relation to God, objective values appeared as a limiting factor to His power to do as He wills... Ash'ari got rid of the whole problem by denying the existence of objective values which might act as a standard for God's action."[22] Similar concerns drove the medieval voluntarists Duns Scotus and William of Ockham.[23] As contemporary philosopher Richard Swinburne puts the point, this horn "seems to place a restriction on God's power if he cannot make any action which he chooses obligatory... [and also] it seems to limit what God can command us to do. God, if he is to be God, cannot command us to do what, independently of his will, is wrong."[24]
  • Freedom of the will: Moreover, these moral standards would limit God's freedom of will: God could not command anything opposed to them, and perhaps would have no choice but to command in accordance with them.[25] As Mark Murphy puts the point, "if moral requirements existed prior to God's willing them, requirements that an impeccable God could not violate, God's liberty would be compromised."[26]
  • Morality without God: If there are moral standards independent of God, then morality would retain its authority even if God did not exist. This conclusion was explicitly (and notoriously) drawn by early modern political theorist Hugo Grotius: "What we have been saying [about the natural law] would have a degree of validity even if we should concede that which cannot be conceded without the utmost wickedness, that there is no God, or that the affairs of men are of no concern to him"[27] On such a view, God is no longer a "law-giver" but at most a "law-transmitter" who plays no vital role in the foundations of morality.[28] Nontheists have capitalized on this point, largely as a way of disarming moral arguments for God's existence: if morality does not depend on God in the first place, such arguments stumble at the starting gate.[29]

Responses to criticisms edit

Contemporary philosophers Joshua Hoffman and Gary S. Rosenkrantz take the first horn of the dilemma, branding divine command theory a "subjective theory of value" that makes morality arbitrary.[30] They accept a theory of morality on which, "right and wrong, good and bad, are in a sense independent of what anyone believes, wants, or prefers."[31] They do not address the aforementioned problems with the first horn, but do consider a related problem concerning God's omnipotence: namely, that it might be handicapped by his inability to bring about what is independently evil. To this they reply that God is omnipotent, even though there are states of affairs he cannot bring about: omnipotence is a matter of "maximal power", not an ability to bring about all possible states of affairs. And supposing that it is impossible for God not to exist, then since there cannot be more than one omnipotent being, it is therefore impossible for any being to have more power than God (e.g., a being who is omnipotent but not omnibenevolent). Thus God's omnipotence remains intact.[32]

Richard Swinburne and T. J. Mawson have a slightly more complicated view. They both take the first horn of the dilemma when it comes to necessary moral truths. But divine commands are not totally irrelevant, for God and his will can still effect contingent moral truths.[33][34][18][19] On the one hand, the most fundamental moral truths hold true regardless of whether God exists or what God has commanded: "Genocide and torturing children are wrong and would remain so whatever commands any person issued."[24] This is because, according to Swinburne, such truths are true as a matter of logical necessity: like the laws of logic, one cannot deny them without contradiction.[35] This parallel offers a solution to the aforementioned problems of God's sovereignty, omnipotence, and freedom: namely, that these necessary truths of morality pose no more of a threat than the laws of logic.[36][37][38] On the other hand, there is still an important role for God's will. First, there are some divine commands that can directly create moral obligations: e.g., the command to worship on Sundays instead of on Tuesdays.[39] Notably, not even these commands, for which Swinburne and Mawson take the second horn of the dilemma, have ultimate, underived authority. Rather, they create obligations only because of God's role as creator and sustainer and indeed owner of the universe, together with the necessary moral truth that we owe some limited consideration to benefactors and owners.[40][41] Second, God can make an indirect moral difference by deciding what sort of universe to create. For example, whether a public policy is morally good might indirectly depend on God's creative acts: the policy's goodness or badness might depend on its effects, and those effects would in turn depend on the sort of universe God has decided to create.[42][43]

It is right because God commands it edit

Supporters edit

The second horn of the dilemma (i.e. that which is right is right because it is commanded by God) is sometimes known as divine command theory or voluntarism. Roughly, it is the view that there are no moral standards other than God's will: without God's commands, nothing would be right or wrong. This view was partially defended by Duns Scotus, who argued that not all Ten Commandments belong to the Natural Law in the strictest sense.[44] Scotus held that while our duties to God (the first three commandments, traditionally thought of as the First Tablet) are self-evident, true by definition, and unchangeable even by God, our duties to others (found on the second tablet) were arbitrarily willed by God and are within his power to revoke and replace (although, the third commandment, to honour the Sabbath and keep it holy, has a little of both, as we are absolutely obliged to render worship to God, but there is no obligation in natural law to do it on this day or that). Scotus does note, however that the last seven commandments "are highly consonant with [the natural law], though they do not follow necessarily from first practical principles that are known in virtue of their terms and are necessarily known by any intellect [that understands their terms. And it is certain that all the precepts of the second table belong to the natural law in this second way, since their rectitude is highly consonant with first practical principles that are known necessarily".[45][46][47][48] Scotus justifies this position with the example of a peaceful society, noting that the possession of private property is not necessary to have a peaceful society, but that "those of weak character" would be more easily made peaceful with private property than without.

William of Ockham went further, contending that (since there is no contradiction in it) God could command us not to love God[49] and even to hate God.[50] Later Scholastics like Pierre D'Ailly and his student Jean de Gerson explicitly confronted the Euthyphro dilemma, taking the voluntarist position that God does not "command good actions because they are good or prohibit evil ones because they are evil; but... these are therefore good because they are commanded and evil because prohibited."[51] Protestant reformers Martin Luther and John Calvin both stressed the absolute sovereignty of God's will, with Luther writing that "for [God's] will there is no cause or reason that can be laid down as a rule or measure for it",[52] and Calvin writing that "everything which [God] wills must be held to be righteous by the mere fact of his willing it."[53] The voluntarist emphasis on God's absolute power was carried further by Descartes, who notoriously held that God had freely created the eternal truths of logic and mathematics, and that God was therefore capable of giving circles unequal radii,[54] giving triangles other than 180 internal degrees, and even making contradictions true.[55] Descartes explicitly seconded Ockham: "why should [God] not have been able to give this command [i.e., the command to hate God] to one of his creatures?"[56] Thomas Hobbes notoriously reduced the justice of God to "irresistible power"[57] (drawing the complaint of Bishop Bramhall that this "overturns... all law").[58] And William Paley held that all moral obligations bottom out in the self-interested "urge" to avoid Hell and enter Heaven by acting in accord with God's commands.[59] Islam's Ash'arite theologians, al-Ghazali foremost among them, embraced voluntarism: scholar George Hourani writes that the view "was probably more prominent and widespread in Islam than in any other civilization."[60][61] Wittgenstein said that of "the two interpretations of the Essence of the Good", that which holds that "the Good is good, in virtue of the fact that God wills it" is "the deeper", while that which holds that "God wills the good, because it is good" is "the shallow, rationalistic one, in that it behaves 'as though' that which is good could be given some further foundation".[62] Today, divine command theory is defended by many philosophers of religion, though typically in a restricted form (see below).

Criticisms edit

This horn of the dilemma also faces several problems:

  • No reasons for morality: If there is no moral standard other than God's will, then God's commands are arbitrary (i.e., based on pure whimsy or caprice). This would mean that morality is ultimately not based on reasons: "if theological voluntarism is true, then God's commands/intentions must be arbitrary; [but] it cannot be that morality could wholly depend on something arbitrary... [for] when we say that some moral state of affairs obtains, we take it that there is a reason for that moral state of affairs obtaining rather than another."[63] And as Michael J. Murray and Michael Rea put it, this would also "cas[t] doubt on the notion that morality is genuinely objective."[64] An additional problem is that it is difficult to explain how true moral actions can exist if one acts only out of fear of God or in an attempt to be rewarded by him.[65]
  • No reasons for God: This arbitrariness would also jeopardize God's status as a wise and rational being, one who always acts on good reasons. As Leibniz writes: "Where will be his justice and his wisdom if he has only a certain despotic power, if arbitrary will takes the place of reasonableness, and if in accord with the definition of tyrants, justice consists in that which is pleasing to the most powerful? Besides it seems that every act of willing supposes some reason for the willing and this reason, of course, must precede the act."[66]
  • Anything goes:[67] This arbitrariness would also mean that anything could become good, and anything could become bad, merely upon God's command. Thus if God commanded us "to gratuitously inflict pain on each other"[68] or to engage in "cruelty for its own sake"[69] or to hold an "annual sacrifice of randomly selected ten-year-olds in a particularly gruesome ritual that involves excruciating and prolonged suffering for its victims",[70] then we would be morally obligated to do so. As 17th-century philosopher Ralph Cudworth put it: "nothing can be imagined so grossly wicked, or so foully unjust or dishonest, but if it were supposed to be commanded by this omnipotent Deity, must needs upon that hypothesis forthwith become holy, just, and righteous."[71]
  • Moral contingency: If morality depends on the perfectly free will of God, morality would lose its necessity: "If nothing prevents God from loving things that are different from what God actually loves, then goodness can change from world to world or time to time. This is obviously objectionable to those who believe that claims about morality are, if true, necessarily true."[67] In other words, no action is necessarily moral: any right action could have easily been wrong, if God had so decided, and an action which is right today could easily become wrong tomorrow, if God so decides. Indeed, some have argued that divine command theory is incompatible with ordinary conceptions of moral supervenience.[72]
  • Why do God's commands obligate?: Mere commands do not create obligations unless the commander has some commanding authority. But this commanding authority cannot itself be based on those very commands (i.e., a command to obey commands), otherwise a vicious circle results. So, in order for God's commands to obligate us, he must derive commanding authority from some source other than his own will. As Cudworth put it: "For it was never heard of, that any one founded all his authority of commanding others, and others [sic] obligation or duty to obey his commands, in a law of his own making, that men should be required, obliged, or bound to obey him. Wherefore since the thing willed in all laws is not that men should be bound or obliged to obey; this thing cannot be the product of the meer [sic] will of the commander, but it must proceed from something else; namely, the right or authority of the commander."[73] To avoid the circle, one might say our obligation comes from gratitude to God for creating us. But this presupposes some sort of independent moral standard obligating us to be grateful to our benefactors. As 18th-century philosopher Francis Hutcheson writes: "Is the Reason exciting to concur with the Deity this, 'The Deity is our Benefactor?' Then what Reason excites to concur with Benefactors?"[74] Or finally, one might resort to Hobbes's view: "The right of nature whereby God reigneth over men, and punisheth those that break his laws, is to be derived, not from his creating them (as if he required obedience, as of gratitude for his benefits), but from his irresistible power."[75] In other words, might makes right.
  • God's goodness: If all goodness is a matter of God's will, then what shall become of God's goodness? Thus William P. Alston writes, "since the standards of moral goodness are set by divine commands, to say that God is morally good is just to say that he obeys his own commands... that God practises what he preaches, whatever that might be;"[68] Hutcheson deems such a view "an insignificant tautology, amounting to no more than this, 'That God wills what he wills.'"[76] Alternatively, as Leibniz puts it, divine command theorists "deprive God of the designation good: for what cause could one have to praise him for what he does, if in doing something quite different he would have done equally well?"[77] A related point is raised by C. S. Lewis: "if good is to be defined as what God commands, then the goodness of God Himself is emptied of meaning and the commands of an omnipotent fiend would have the same claim on us as those of the 'righteous Lord.'"[78] Or again Leibniz: "this opinion would hardly distinguish God from the devil."[79] That is, since divine command theory trivializes God's goodness, it is incapable of explaining the difference between God and an all-powerful demon.
  • The is-ought problem and the naturalistic fallacy: According to David Hume, it is hard to see how moral propositions featuring the relation ought could ever be deduced from ordinary is propositions, such as "the being of a God."[80] Divine command theory is thus guilty of deducing moral oughts from ordinary ises about God's commands.[81] In a similar vein, G. E. Moore argued (with his open question argument) that the notion good is indefinable, and any attempts to analyze it in naturalistic or metaphysical terms are guilty of the so-called "naturalistic fallacy."[82] This would block any theory which analyzes morality in terms of God's will: and indeed, in a later discussion of divine command theory, Moore concluded that "when we assert any action to be right or wrong, we are not merely making an assertion about the attitude of mind towards it of any being or set of beings whatever."[83]
  • No morality without God: If all morality is a matter of God's will, then if God does not exist, there is no morality. This is the thought captured in the slogan (often attributed to Dostoevsky) "If God does not exist, everything is permitted." Divine command theorists disagree over whether this is a problem for their view or a virtue of their view. Many argue that morality does indeed require God's existence, and that this is in fact a problem for atheism. But divine command theorist Robert Merrihew Adams contends that this idea ("that no actions would be ethically wrong if there were not a loving God") is one that "will seem (at least initially) implausible to many", and that his theory must "dispel [an] air of paradox."[84]

Restricted divine command theory edit

One common response to the Euthyphro dilemma centers on a distinction between value and obligation. Obligation, which concerns rightness and wrongness (or what is required, forbidden, or permissible), is given a voluntarist treatment. But value, which concerns goodness and badness, is treated as independent of divine commands. The result is a restricted divine command theory that applies only to a specific region of morality: the deontic region of obligation. This response is found in Francisco Suárez's discussion of natural law and voluntarism in De legibus[85] and has been prominent in contemporary philosophy of religion, appearing in the work of Robert M. Adams,[86] Philip L. Quinn,[87] and William P. Alston.[88]

A significant attraction of such a view is that, since it allows for a non-voluntarist treatment of goodness and badness, and therefore of God's own moral attributes, some of the aforementioned problems with voluntarism can perhaps be answered. God's commands are not arbitrary: there are reasons which guide his commands based ultimately on this goodness and badness.[89] God could not issue horrible commands: God's own essential goodness[81][90][91] or loving character[92] would keep him from issuing any unsuitable commands. Our obligation to obey God's commands does not result in circular reasoning; it might instead be based on a gratitude whose appropriateness is itself independent of divine commands.[93] These proposed solutions are controversial,[94] and some steer the view back into problems associated with the first horn.[95]

One problem remains for such views: if God's own essential goodness does not depend on divine commands, then on what does it depend? Something other than God? Here the restricted divine command theory is commonly combined with a view reminiscent of Plato: God is identical to the ultimate standard for goodness.[96] Alston offers the analogy of the standard meter bar in France. Something is a meter long inasmuch as it is the same length as the standard meter bar, and likewise, something is good inasmuch as it approximates God. If one asks why God is identified as the ultimate standard for goodness, Alston replies that this is "the end of the line," with no further explanation available, but adds that this is no more arbitrary than a view that invokes a fundamental moral standard.[97] On this view, then, even though goodness is independent of God's will, it still depends on God, and thus God's sovereignty remains intact.

This solution has been criticized by Wes Morriston. If we identify the ultimate standard for goodness with God's nature, then it seems we are identifying it with certain properties of God (e.g., being loving, being just). If so, then the dilemma resurfaces: is God good because he has those properties, or are those properties good because God has them?[98] Nevertheless, Morriston concludes that the appeal to God's essential goodness is the divine-command theorist's best bet. To produce a satisfying result, however, it would have to give an account of God's goodness that does not trivialize it and does not make God subject to an independent standard of goodness.[99]

Moral philosopher Peter Singer, disputing the perspective that "God is good" and could never advocate something like torture, states that those who propose this are "caught in a trap of their own making, for what can they possibly mean by the assertion that God is good? That God is approved of by God?"[100]

False dilemma in classical theistic perspective edit

Augustine, Anselm, and Aquinas all wrote about the issues raised by the Euthyphro dilemma, although, like William James[101] and Wittgenstein[62] later, they did not mention it by name. As philosopher and Anselm scholar Katherin A. Rogers observes, many contemporary philosophers of religion suppose that there are true propositions which exist as platonic abstracta independently of God.[102] Among these are propositions constituting a moral order, to which God must conform in order to be good.[103] Classical Judaeo-Christian theism, however, rejects such a view as inconsistent with God's omnipotence, which requires that God and what he has made is all that there is.[102] "The classical tradition," Rogers notes, "also steers clear of the other horn of the Euthyphro dilemma, divine command theory."[104] From a classical theistic perspective, therefore, the Euthyphro dilemma is false. As Rogers puts it, "Anselm, like Augustine before him and Aquinas later, rejects both horns of the Euthyphro dilemma. God neither conforms to nor invents the moral order. Rather His very nature is the standard for value."[102] Another criticism raised by Peter Geach is that the dilemma implies you must search for a definition that fits piety rather than work backwards by deciding pious acts (i.e. you must know what piety is before you can list acts which are pious).[105] It also implies something can not be pious if it is only intended to serve the Gods without actually fulfilling any useful purpose.

Jewish thought edit

The basis of the false dilemma response—God's nature is the standard for value—predates the dilemma itself, appearing first in the thought of the eighth-century BC Hebrew prophets, Amos, Hosea, Micah and Isaiah. (Amos lived some three centuries before Socrates and two before Thales, traditionally regarded as the first Greek philosopher.) "Their message," writes British scholar Norman H. Snaith, "is recognized by all as marking a considerable advance on all previous ideas,"[106] not least in its "special consideration for the poor and down-trodden."[107] As Snaith observes, tsedeq, the Hebrew word for righteousness, "actually stands for the establishment of God's will in the land." This includes justice, but goes beyond it, "because God's will is wider than justice. He has a particular regard for the helpless ones on earth."[108] Tsedeq "is the norm by which all must be judged" and it "depends entirely upon the Nature of God."[109]

Hebrew has few abstract nouns. What the Greeks thought of as ideas or abstractions, the Hebrews thought of as activities.[110] In contrast to the Greek dikaiosune (justice) of the philosophers, tsedeq is not an idea abstracted from this world of affairs. As Snaith writes:

Tsedeq is something that happens here, and can be seen, and recognized, and known. It follows, therefore, that when the Hebrew thought of tsedeq (righteousness), he did not think of Righteousness in general, or of Righteousness as an Idea. On the contrary, he thought of a particular righteous act, an action, concrete, capable of exact description, fixed in time and space.... If the word had anything like a general meaning for him, then it was as it was represented by a whole series of events, the sum-total of a number of particular happenings.[109]

The Hebrew stance on what came to be called the problem of universals, as on much else, was very different from that of Plato and precluded anything like the Euthyphro dilemma.[111] This has not changed. In 2005, Jonathan Sacks wrote, "In Judaism, the Euthyphro dilemma does not exist."[112] Jewish philosophers Avi Sagi and Daniel Statman criticized the Euthyphro dilemma as "misleading" because "it is not exhaustive": it leaves out a third option, namely that God "acts only out of His nature."[113]

St. Thomas Aquinas edit

Like Aristotle, Aquinas rejected Platonism.[114] In his view, to speak of abstractions not only as existent, but as more perfect exemplars than fully designated particulars, is to put a premium on generality and vagueness.[115] On this analysis, the abstract "good" in the first horn of the Euthyphro dilemma is an unnecessary obfuscation. Aquinas frequently quoted with approval Aristotle's definition, "Good is what all desire."[116][117] As he clarified, "When we say that good is what all desire, it is not to be understood that every kind of good thing is desired by all, but that whatever is desired has the nature of good."[118] In other words, even those who desire evil desire it "only under the aspect of good," i.e., of what is desirable.[119] The difference between desiring good and desiring evil is that in the former, will and reason are in harmony, whereas in the latter, they are in discord.[120]

Aquinas's discussion of sin provides a good point of entry to his philosophical explanation of why the nature of God is the standard for value. "Every sin," he writes, "consists in the longing for a passing [i.e., ultimately unreal or false] good."[121] Thus, "in a certain sense it is true what Socrates says, namely that no one sins with full knowledge."[122] "No sin in the will happens without an ignorance of the understanding."[123] God, however, has full knowledge (omniscience) and therefore by definition (that of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle as well as Aquinas) can never will anything other than what is good. It has been claimed – for instance, by Nicolai Hartmann, who wrote: "There is no freedom for the good that would not be at the same time freedom for evil"[124] – that this would limit God's freedom, and therefore his omnipotence. Josef Pieper, however, replies that such arguments rest upon an impermissibly anthropomorphic conception of God.[125] In the case of humans, as Aquinas says, to be able to sin is indeed a consequence,[126] or even a sign, of freedom (quodam libertatis signum).[127] Humans, in other words, are not puppets manipulated by God so that they always do what is right. However, "it does not belong to the essence of the free will to be able to decide for evil."[128] "To will evil is neither freedom nor a part of freedom."[127] It is precisely humans' creatureliness – that is, their not being God and therefore omniscient – that makes them capable of sinning.[129] Consequently, writes Pieper, "the inability to sin should be looked on as the very signature of a higher freedom – contrary to the usual way of conceiving the issue."[125] Pieper concludes: "Only the will [i.e., God's] can be the right standard of its own willing and must will what is right necessarily, from within itself, and always. A deviation from the norm would not even be thinkable. And obviously only the absolute divine will is the right standard of its own act"[130][131] – and consequently of all human acts. Thus the second horn of the Euthyphro dilemma, divine command theory, is also disposed of.

Thomist philosopher Edward Feser writes, "Divine simplicity [entails] that God's will just is God's goodness which just is His immutable and necessary existence. That means that what is objectively good and what God wills for us as morally obligatory are really the same thing considered under different descriptions, and that neither could have been other than they are. There can be no question then, either of God's having arbitrarily commanded something different for us (torturing babies for fun, or whatever) or of there being a standard of goodness apart from Him. Again, the Euthyphro dilemma is a false one; the third option that it fails to consider is that what is morally obligatory is what God commands in accordance with a non-arbitrary and unchanging standard of goodness that is not independent of Him... He is not under the moral law precisely because He is the moral law."[132]

William James edit

William James, in his essay "The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life", dismisses the first horn of the Euthyphro dilemma and stays clear of the second. He writes: "Our ordinary attitude of regarding ourselves as subject to an overarching system of moral relations, true 'in themselves,' is ... either an out-and-out superstition, or else it must be treated as a merely provisional abstraction from that real Thinker ... to whom the existence of the universe is due."[133] Moral obligations are created by "personal demands," whether these demands[134] come from the weakest creatures, from the most insignificant persons, or from God. It follows that "ethics have as genuine a foothold in a universe where the highest consciousness is human, as in a universe where there is a God as well." However, whether "the purely human system" works "as well as the other is a different question."[133]

For James, the deepest practical difference in the moral life is between what he calls "the easy-going and the strenuous mood."[135] In a purely human moral system, it is hard to rise above the easy-going mood, since the thinker's "various ideals, known to him to be mere preferences of his own, are too nearly of the same denominational value;[136] he can play fast and loose with them at will. This too is why, in a merely human world without a God, the appeal to our moral energy falls short of its maximum stimulating power." Our attitude is "entirely different" in a world where there are none but "finite demanders" from that in a world where there is also "an infinite demander." This is because "the stable and systematic moral universe for which the ethical philosopher asks is fully possible only in a world where there is a divine thinker with all-enveloping demands", for in that case, "actualized in his thought already must be that ethical philosophy which we seek as the pattern which our own must evermore approach." Even though "exactly what the thought of this infinite thinker may be is hidden from us", our postulation of him serves "to let loose in us the strenuous mood"[135] and confront us with an existential[137] "challenge" in which "our total character and personal genius ... are on trial; and if we invoke any so-called philosophy, our choice and use of that also are but revelations of our personal aptitude or incapacity for moral life. From this unsparing practical ordeal no professor's lectures and no array of books can save us."[135] In the words of Richard M. Gale, "God inspires us to lead the morally strenuous life in virtue of our conceiving of him as unsurpassably good. This supplies James with an adequate answer to the underlying question of the Euthyphro."[138]

In philosophical atheism edit

Atheistic resolutions edit

Atheism challenges the assumption of the dilemma that God exists (or in the original formulation, that the many gods in Greek religion existed). This eliminates the need to decide whether God is either non-omniscient or arbitrary, and also eliminates the possibility of God as the source of morality.

Secular humanism takes the positive stance that morality is not dependent on religion or theology, and that ethical rules should be developed based on reason, science, experience, debate, and democracy. Some secular humanists believe in ethical naturalism, that there are objective, discoverable laws of morality inherent to the human condition, of which humans may have imperfect knowledge. Others have adopted ethical subjectivism in the sense of meta-ethics – the idea that ethics are a social construct – but nonetheless by way of utilitarianism advocate imposing a set of universal ethics and laws that create the type of society in which they wish to live, where people are safe, prosperous, and happy. These competing resolutions represent different answers to a question similar to the original dilemma: "Is something inherently ethical or unethical, or is something ethical or unethical because a person or society says it is so?"

Rejection of universal morality edit

The other assumption of the dilemma is that there is a universal right and wrong, against which a god either creates or is defined by. Moral nihilism challenges that assumption by rejecting the concept of morality entirely. This conflicts with the teachings of most religions (and thus is usually accompanied by atheism) but is theoretically compatible with the notion of a powerful God or gods who have opinions about how people should behave.

Alexander Rosenberg uses a version of the Euthyphro dilemma to argue that objective morality cannot exist and hence an acceptance of moral nihilism is warranted.[139] He asks, is objective morality correct because evolution discovered it or did evolution discover objective morality because it is correct? If the first horn of the dilemma is true then our current morality cannot be objectively correct by accident because if evolution had given us another type of morality then that would have been objectively correct. If the second horn of dilemma is true then one must account for how the random process of evolution managed to only select for objectively correct moral traits while ignoring the wrong moral traits. Given the knowledge that evolution has given us tendencies to be xenophobic and sexist it is mistaken to claim that evolution has only selected for objective morality as evidently it did not. Because both horns of the dilemma do not give an adequate account for how the evolutionary process instantiated objective morality in humans, a position of Moral nihilism is warranted.

Moral relativism accepts the idea of morality, but asserts that there are multiple potential arbiters of moral truth. This opens the possibility of disagreeing with God about the rules of ethics, and of creating multiple societies with different, equally valid sets of ethics (just as different countries have different sets of laws). "Normative moral relativism" asserts that behavior based on alternative systems of morality should be tolerated. In the context of religious pluralism, strong relativism it also opens the possibility that different gods and different belief systems produce different but equally valid moral systems, which may apply only to adherents of those faiths.

In popular culture edit

In the song "No Church in the Wild" from the album Watch the Throne, rapper Jay Z references the dilemma with the line, "Is pious pious 'cause God loves pious? Socrates asked whose bias do y'all seek."[140]

In American legal thinking edit

Yale Law School Professor Myres S. McDougal, formerly a classicist, later a scholar of property law, posed the question, "Do we protect it because it's a property right, or is it a property right because we protect it?"[141] The dilemma has also been restated in legal terms by Geoffrey Hodgson, who asked: "Does a state make a law because it is a customary rule, or does law become a customary rule because it is approved by the state?"[142]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ G.W. Leibniz stated, in Reflections on the Common Concept of Justice (circa 1702): "It is generally agreed that whatever God wills is good and just. But there remains the question whether it is good and just because God wills it or whether God wills it because it is good and just; in other words, whether justice and Goodness are arbitrary or whether they belong to the necessary and eternal truths about the nature of things."
  2. ^ Leibniz 1702(?), p. 516.
  3. ^ Irwin 2006.
  4. ^ Wolfson 1976, p. 579.
  5. ^ Hourani 1962, pp. 13–40.
  6. ^ Haldane 1989, p. 40.
  7. ^ Irwin 2007, I, pp. 553–556.
  8. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, 2a2ae 57.2.
  9. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, 2a1ae 94.5.
  10. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, 1a2ae 100.8.
  11. ^ Pink 2005.
  12. ^ Irwin 2007, II, pp. 6–10.
  13. ^ See esp. Grotius 1625, 1.1.10 and Leibniz 1702(?); see also Leibniz 1706, pp. 64–75.
  14. ^ Gill 1999, esp. pp. 272–74.
  15. ^ Mackie 1980, Chapters 2, 8.
  16. ^ Gill 2011.
  17. ^ Swinburne 1993, pp. 209–216.
  18. ^ a b Swinburne 2008.
  19. ^ a b Mawson 2008.
  20. ^ Murray & Rea 2008, p. 247.
  21. ^ Price 1769, Chapter 5.
  22. ^ Hourani 1960, p. 276.
  23. ^ Haldane 1989, pp. 42–43.
  24. ^ a b Swinburne 1993, p. 210.
  25. ^ See Adams 1999, pp. 47–49 for a detailed discussion of this problem; also see Suárez 1872, 2.6.22–23.
  26. ^ Murphy 2012, Metaethical theological voluntarism: Considerations in Favor.
  27. ^ Grotius 1625, Prolegomenon, 11.
  28. ^ Kretzmann 1999, p. 423.
  29. ^ Oppy 2009, pp. 352–356.
  30. ^ Hoffman & Rosenkrantz 2002, pp. 143–145.
  31. ^ Hoffman & Rosenkrantz 2002, pp. 145–147.
  32. ^ Hoffman & Rosenkrantz 2002, pp. 166, 173–176.
  33. ^ Swinburne 1974.
  34. ^ Swinburne 1993, Chapter 11.
  35. ^ Swinburne 1993, p. 192ff.
  36. ^ Swinburne 1993, Chapter 9.
  37. ^ Swinburne 1974, pp. 217–222.
  38. ^ Mawson 2008, pp. 26–29.
  39. ^ Swinburne 1974, p. 211.
  40. ^ Swinburne 1974, pp. 211–215.
  41. ^ Swinburne 2008, pp. 10–12.
  42. ^ Swinburne 2008, p. 10.
  43. ^ Mawson 2008, pp. 29–32.
  44. ^ Scotus, John Duns (2017). Selected Writings on Ethics. Oxford University Press. pp. Ordinatio III, D. 37, "Do all the precepts of the Decalogue belong to the natural law?". ISBN 978-0-19-967341-4.
  45. ^ Scotus, John Duns (2017). Selected Writings on Ethics. Oxford University Press. pp. Ordinatio III, D. 37, Q. UN, para. 25, 26. ISBN 978-0-19-967341-4.
  46. ^ Williams 2013, Ethics and Moral Psychology: The natural law.
  47. ^ Williams 2002, pp. 312–316.
  48. ^ See Cross 1999, p. 92 for the view that our duties to others "hold automatically [i.e., without God's commands] unless God commands otherwise."
  49. ^ William of Ockham. Quodlibeta 3.13
  50. ^ William of Ockham. Reportata 4.16; see also Osborne 2005
  51. ^ D'Ailly, Pierre. Questions on the Books of the Sentences 1.14; quoted in Wainwright 2005, p. 74, quoting Idziak 63–4; see Wainwright 2005, p. 74 for similar quotes from Gerson.
  52. ^ Luther 1525, §88.
  53. ^ Calvin 1536, 3.23.2.
  54. ^ Descartes, III 25.
  55. ^ Descartes, III 235.
  56. ^ Descartes, III 343.
  57. ^ Hobbes. "Of Liberty and Necessity" 12
  58. ^ Hobbes. "A Defense of True Liberty", 12f
  59. ^ Paley, William. "Principles" 2.3
  60. ^ Hourani 1960, p. 270.
  61. ^ See Frank 1994, pp. 32–36 for the view that al-Ghazali incorporated rationalist elements that moved him away from traditional Ash'arite voluntarism.
  62. ^ a b Janik & Toulmin 1973, p. 194. The passage is also quoted in {{harvnb|Baggett|2002}}.
  63. ^ Murphy 2012, Perennial difficulties for metaethical theological voluntarism: Theological voluntarism and arbitrariness.
  64. ^ Murray & Rea 2008, pp. 246–247.
  65. ^ Doomen 2011.
  66. ^ Leibniz 1686, II.
  67. ^ a b Murray & Rea 2008, p. 246.
  68. ^ a b Alston 2002, p. 285.
  69. ^ Adams 1973.
  70. ^ Morriston 2009, p. 249.
  71. ^ Cudworth 1731, 1.1.5.
  72. ^ Klagge 1984, pp. 374–375.
  73. ^ Cudworth 1731, 1.2.4.
  74. ^ Hutcheson 1742, I.
  75. ^ Hobbes, 31.5.
  76. ^ Hutcheson 1738, 2.7.5.
  77. ^ Leibniz 1710, p. 176.
  78. ^ Lewis 1943, p. 79.
  79. ^ Leibniz 1702(?), p. 561.
  80. ^ Hume 1739, 3.1.1.27.
  81. ^ a b Wierenga 1983, p. 397.
  82. ^ Moore 1903, Chapters 1, 2, 4.
  83. ^ Moore 1912, p. 79.
  84. ^ Adams 1979, p. 77.
  85. ^ Suárez 1872, 2.6 "Is the natural law truly a preceptive divine law?".
  86. ^ Adams 1973, esp. p. 109 and Adams 1999, esp. p. 250.
  87. ^ Quinn 2007, esp. p. 71.
  88. ^ Alston 1990, pp. 306–307.
  89. ^ Alston 1990, pp. 317–318.
  90. ^ Quinn 2007, pp. 81–85.
  91. ^ Alston 1990, p. 317.
  92. ^ Adams 1979. In this early work, Adams's view is that it is logically possible but "unthinkable" that God would issue horrible commands: "the believer's concepts of ethical rightness and wrongness would break down in the situation in which he believed that God commanded cruelty for its own sake" (p. 324). In later work, Adams contends that "God cannot be sadistic" (Adams 1999, p. 47).
  93. ^ Adams 1999, pp. 252–253.
  94. ^ For criticisms, see Chandler 1985; Morriston 2001; Shaw 2002; and Zagzebski 2004, pp. 259–261
  95. ^ See Adams 1999, pp. 47–49 on the problems of divine omnipotence and freedom of the will
  96. ^ See Adams 1999, Chapter 1; Quinn 2007; Alston 1990 distances himself from Platonism; see also Kretzmann 1999, pp. 375–376 for a similar solution, put in terms of divine simplicity.
  97. ^ Alston 1990, pp. 318–322.
  98. ^ Morriston 2001, p. 253.
  99. ^ Morriston 2001, p. 266.
  100. ^ Singer, Peter (1993). Practical Ethics (3d ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0-521-43971-8.
  101. ^ James 1891.
  102. ^ a b c Rogers 2008, p. 8.
  103. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 186.
  104. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 186; see also Rogers 2000, pp. 127–133.
  105. ^ "PLAto's "EUTHYPHRO": An Analysis and Commentary".
  106. ^ Snaith 1944, p. 59. Written over many centuries by many authors, the Old Testament displays a marked ethical evolution in its portrayal – and therefore understanding – of God. In its earliest-written books, God appears at times as no more than a nationalistic tribal deity who orders the extermination of entire peoples hostile to Israel, such as the Midianites (Numbers 31: 1–54) and Amalekites (1 Samuel 15: 1–25). By the time of Amos, however, such "primitive and immature notions" are a thing of the past (Snaith 1944, p. 52; see also pp. 61–62, 66–67). For a recent overview, see Head 2010.
  107. ^ Snaith 1944, pp. 68–69. It was this "bias towards the poor and needy" (Snaith 1944, p. 70) in the message of the Hebrew prophets and Jesus Christ that inspired the "preferential option for the poor" of late-twentieth-century Latin American liberation theology.
  108. ^ Snaith 1944, p. 70.
  109. ^ a b Snaith 1944, p. 77.
  110. ^ Snaith 1944, p. 174.
  111. ^ Snaith 1944, pp. 9, 187–188.
  112. ^ Sacks 2005, p. 164.
  113. ^ Sagi & Statman 1995, pp. 62–63.
  114. ^ Aquinas. Commentary on Aristotle's Metaphysics 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine, Bk. 1, lectio 10, n. 158.
  115. ^ McInerny 1982, pp. 122–123.
  116. ^ Aristotle, Ethics 1.1; Aquinas, Commentary on Aristotle's Ethics 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine 1, 9 and 11.
  117. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, I 5,1.
  118. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, I 6,2 ad 2.
  119. ^ Aquinas. Commentary on Aristotle's Ethics 1,10.
  120. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, I/II q24, a2.
  121. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, I/II 72,2.
  122. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, I/II 58,2 and I/II 77,2.
  123. ^ Aquinas. Summa contra Gentiles 4,92.
  124. ^ Hartmann, Nicolai. Ethik (3rd edition). Berlin, 1949, p. 378. Cited in Pieper 2001, pp. 78–79.
  125. ^ a b Pieper 2001, p. 79.
  126. ^ Aquinas. De Veritate 2012-04-19 at the Wayback Machine 24,3 ad 2.
  127. ^ a b Aquinas. De Veritate 22,6.
  128. ^ Aquinas. De Veritate 24,3 ad 2; Commentary on the Sentences of Peter Lombard 2d,44,1,1 ad 1.
  129. ^ Pieper 2001, p. 80.
  130. ^ Aquinas c. 1265–1274, I 63,1.
  131. ^ Pieper 2001, pp. 80–81.
  132. ^ Feser, Edward (26 October 2010). "God, obligation, and the Euthyphro dilemma".
  133. ^ a b James 1891, Section II.
  134. ^ Gale 1999, p. 44: In his essay, "James used 'desire', 'demand' and 'claim' interchangeably, using 'desire' and 'demand' each eleven times and 'claim' five."
  135. ^ a b c James 1891, Section V.
  136. ^ James is acutely aware of how hard it is to "avoid complete moral skepticism on the one hand, and on the other escape bringing a wayward personal standard of our own along with us, on which we simply pin our faith." He briefly discusses several notions "proposed as bases of the ethical system", but finds little to help choose among them. (James 1891, Section III)
  137. ^ Gale 1999, p. 40.
  138. ^ Gale 1999, p. 44.
  139. ^ Rosenberg, Alexander (2012). The Atheist's Guide to Reality: Enjoying Life Without Illusions. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393344110.
  140. ^ "Kanye West – No Church in the Wild Lyrics". Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  141. ^ See Richard H. Stern, Scope-of-Protection Problems With Patents and Copyrights on Methods of Doing Business 2016-05-18 at the Wayback Machine, 10 Fordham Intell. Prop., Media & Ent. L.J. 105, 128 n.100 (1999).
  142. ^ Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (2015). "Much of the 'economics of property rights' devalues property and legal rights". Journal of Institutional Economics. 11 (4): 686. doi:10.1017/S1744137414000630. hdl:2299/18849. S2CID 154894480. In Plato's dialogue Euthyphro, Socrates asks Euthyphro: 'Is the pious loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved by the gods?' ... This dilemma can be converted into matters of state and law: 'Does a state make a law because it is a customary rule, or does law become a customary rule because it is approved by the state?'

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  • Williams, Thomas (2013). "John Duns Scotus". In Edward N. Zalta (ed.). John Duns Scotus. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2013 ed.).
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  • Wolfson, Harry (1976). The Philosophy of the Kalam. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674665804.
  • Zagzebski, Linda (2004). Divine Motivation Theory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521535762.

Further reading edit

  • Jan Aertsen Medieval philosophy and the transcendentals: the case of Thomas Aquinas (2004: New York, Brill) ISBN 90-04-10585-9
  • John M. Frame Euthyphro, Hume, and the Biblical God retrieved February 13, 2007
  • Paul Helm [ed.] Divine Commands and Morality (1981: Oxford, Oxford University Press) ISBN 0-19-875049-8
  • Plato Euthyphro (any edition; the Penguin version can be found in The Last Days of Socrates ISBN 0-14-044037-2)

External links edit

  • Euthyphro by Plato from Project Gutenberg

euthyphro, dilemma, found, plato, dialogue, euthyphro, which, socrates, asks, euthyphro, pious, τὸ, ὅσιον, loved, gods, because, pious, pious, because, loved, gods, socrates, although, originally, applied, ancient, greek, pantheon, dilemma, implications, moder. The Euthyphro dilemma is found in Plato s dialogue Euthyphro in which Socrates asks Euthyphro Is the pious tὸ ὅsion loved by the gods because it is pious or is it pious because it is loved by the gods 10a Socrates Although it was originally applied to the ancient Greek pantheon the dilemma has implications for modern monotheistic religions Gottfried Leibniz asked whether the good and just is good and just because God wills it or whether God wills it because it is good and just 1 Ever since Plato s original discussion this question has presented a problem for some theists though others have thought it a false dilemma and it continues to be an object of theological and philosophical discussion today Contents 1 The dilemma 2 In philosophical theism 2 1 God commands it because it is right 2 1 1 Supporters 2 1 2 Criticisms 2 1 3 Responses to criticisms 2 2 It is right because God commands it 2 2 1 Supporters 2 2 2 Criticisms 2 2 3 Restricted divine command theory 2 3 False dilemma in classical theistic perspective 2 3 1 Jewish thought 2 3 2 St Thomas Aquinas 2 3 3 William James 3 In philosophical atheism 3 1 Atheistic resolutions 3 2 Rejection of universal morality 4 In popular culture 5 In American legal thinking 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksThe dilemma editSocrates and Euthyphro discuss the nature of piety in Plato s Euthyphro Euthyphro proposes 6e that the pious tὸ ὅsion is the same thing as that which is loved by the gods tὸ 8eofiles but Socrates finds a problem with this proposal the gods may disagree among themselves 7e Euthyphro then revises his definition so that piety is only that which is loved by all of the gods unanimously 9e At this point the dilemma surfaces Socrates asks whether the gods love the pious because it is the pious or whether the pious is pious only because it is loved by the gods 10a Socrates and Euthyphro both contemplate the first option surely the gods love the pious because it is the pious But this means Socrates argues that we are forced to reject the second option the fact that the gods love something cannot explain why the pious is the pious 10d Socrates points out that if both options were true they together would yield a vicious circle with the gods loving the pious because it is the pious and the pious being the pious because the gods love it And this in turn means Socrates argues that the pious is not the same as the god beloved for what makes the pious the pious is not what makes the god beloved the god beloved After all what makes the god beloved the god beloved is the fact that the gods love it whereas what makes the pious the pious is something else 9d 11a Thus Euthyphro s theory does not give us the very nature of the pious but at most a quality of the pious 11ab In philosophical theism editThe dilemma can be modified to apply to philosophical theism where it is still the object of theological and philosophical discussion largely within the Christian Jewish and Islamic traditions As German philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Leibniz presented this version of the dilemma It is generally agreed that whatever God wills is good and just But there remains the question whether it is good and just because God wills it or whether God wills it because it is good and just in other words whether justice and Goodness are arbitrary or whether they belong to the necessary and eternal truths about the nature of things 2 Many philosophers and theologians have addressed the Euthyphro dilemma since the time of Plato though not always with reference to the Platonic dialogue According to scholar Terence Irwin the issue and its connection with Plato was revived by Ralph Cudworth and Samuel Clarke in the 17th and 18th centuries 3 More recently it has received a great deal of attention from contemporary philosophers working in metaethics and the philosophy of religion Philosophers and theologians aiming to defend theism against the threat of the dilemma have developed a variety of responses God commands it because it is right edit Supporters edit The first horn of the dilemma i e that which is right is commanded by God because it is right goes by a variety of names including intellectualism rationalism realism naturalism and objectivism Roughly it is the view that there are independent moral standards some actions are right or wrong in themselves independent of God s commands This is the view accepted by Socrates and Euthyphro in Plato s dialogue The Mu tazilah school of Islamic theology also defended the view with for example Nazzam maintaining that God is powerless to engage in injustice or lying 4 as did the Islamic philosopher Averroes 5 Thomas Aquinas never explicitly addresses the Euthyphro dilemma but Aquinas scholars often put him on this side of the issue 6 7 Aquinas draws a distinction between what is good or evil in itself and what is good or evil because of God s commands 8 with unchangeable moral standards forming the bulk of natural law 9 Thus he contends that not even God can change the Ten Commandments adding however that God can change what individuals deserve in particular cases in what might look like special dispensations to murder or stealing 10 Among later Scholastics Gabriel Vasquez is particularly clear cut about obligations existing prior to anyone s will even God s 11 12 Modern natural law theory saw Grotius and Leibniz also putting morality prior to God s will comparing moral truths to unchangeable mathematical truths and engaging voluntarists like Pufendorf in philosophical controversy 13 Cambridge Platonists like Benjamin Whichcote and Ralph Cudworth mounted seminal attacks on voluntarist theories paving the way for the later rationalist metaethics of Samuel Clarke and Richard Price 14 15 16 what emerged was a view on which eternal moral standards though dependent on God in some way exist independently of God s will and prior to God s commands Contemporary philosophers of religion who embrace this horn of the Euthyphro dilemma include Richard Swinburne 17 18 and T J Mawson 19 though see below for complications Criticisms edit Sovereignty If there are moral standards independent of God s will then t here is something over which God is not sovereign God is bound by the laws of morality instead of being their establisher Moreover God depends for his goodness on the extent to which he conforms to an independent moral standard Thus God is not absolutely independent 20 18th century philosopher Richard Price who takes the first horn and thus sees morality as necessary and immutable sets out the objection as follows It may seem that this is setting up something distinct from God which is independent of him and equally eternal and necessary 21 Omnipotence These moral standards would limit God s power not even God could oppose them by commanding what is evil and thereby making it good This point was influential in Islamic theology In relation to God objective values appeared as a limiting factor to His power to do as He wills Ash ari got rid of the whole problem by denying the existence of objective values which might act as a standard for God s action 22 Similar concerns drove the medieval voluntarists Duns Scotus and William of Ockham 23 As contemporary philosopher Richard Swinburne puts the point this horn seems to place a restriction on God s power if he cannot make any action which he chooses obligatory and also it seems to limit what God can command us to do God if he is to be God cannot command us to do what independently of his will is wrong 24 Freedom of the will Moreover these moral standards would limit God s freedom of will God could not command anything opposed to them and perhaps would have no choice but to command in accordance with them 25 As Mark Murphy puts the point if moral requirements existed prior to God s willing them requirements that an impeccable God could not violate God s liberty would be compromised 26 Morality without God If there are moral standards independent of God then morality would retain its authority even if God did not exist This conclusion was explicitly and notoriously drawn by early modern political theorist Hugo Grotius What we have been saying about the natural law would have a degree of validity even if we should concede that which cannot be conceded without the utmost wickedness that there is no God or that the affairs of men are of no concern to him 27 On such a view God is no longer a law giver but at most a law transmitter who plays no vital role in the foundations of morality 28 Nontheists have capitalized on this point largely as a way of disarming moral arguments for God s existence if morality does not depend on God in the first place such arguments stumble at the starting gate 29 Responses to criticisms edit Contemporary philosophers Joshua Hoffman and Gary S Rosenkrantz take the first horn of the dilemma branding divine command theory a subjective theory of value that makes morality arbitrary 30 They accept a theory of morality on which right and wrong good and bad are in a sense independent of what anyone believes wants or prefers 31 They do not address the aforementioned problems with the first horn but do consider a related problem concerning God s omnipotence namely that it might be handicapped by his inability to bring about what is independently evil To this they reply that God is omnipotent even though there are states of affairs he cannot bring about omnipotence is a matter of maximal power not an ability to bring about all possible states of affairs And supposing that it is impossible for God not to exist then since there cannot be more than one omnipotent being it is therefore impossible for any being to have more power than God e g a being who is omnipotent but not omnibenevolent Thus God s omnipotence remains intact 32 Richard Swinburne and T J Mawson have a slightly more complicated view They both take the first horn of the dilemma when it comes to necessary moral truths But divine commands are not totally irrelevant for God and his will can still effect contingent moral truths 33 34 18 19 On the one hand the most fundamental moral truths hold true regardless of whether God exists or what God has commanded Genocide and torturing children are wrong and would remain so whatever commands any person issued 24 This is because according to Swinburne such truths are true as a matter of logical necessity like the laws of logic one cannot deny them without contradiction 35 This parallel offers a solution to the aforementioned problems of God s sovereignty omnipotence and freedom namely that these necessary truths of morality pose no more of a threat than the laws of logic 36 37 38 On the other hand there is still an important role for God s will First there are some divine commands that can directly create moral obligations e g the command to worship on Sundays instead of on Tuesdays 39 Notably not even these commands for which Swinburne and Mawson take the second horn of the dilemma have ultimate underived authority Rather they create obligations only because of God s role as creator and sustainer and indeed owner of the universe together with the necessary moral truth that we owe some limited consideration to benefactors and owners 40 41 Second God can make an indirect moral difference by deciding what sort of universe to create For example whether a public policy is morally good might indirectly depend on God s creative acts the policy s goodness or badness might depend on its effects and those effects would in turn depend on the sort of universe God has decided to create 42 43 It is right because God commands it edit Supporters edit The second horn of the dilemma i e that which is right is right because it is commanded by God is sometimes known as divine command theory or voluntarism Roughly it is the view that there are no moral standards other than God s will without God s commands nothing would be right or wrong This view was partially defended by Duns Scotus who argued that not all Ten Commandments belong to the Natural Law in the strictest sense 44 Scotus held that while our duties to God the first three commandments traditionally thought of as the First Tablet are self evident true by definition and unchangeable even by God our duties to others found on the second tablet were arbitrarily willed by God and are within his power to revoke and replace although the third commandment to honour the Sabbath and keep it holy has a little of both as we are absolutely obliged to render worship to God but there is no obligation in natural law to do it on this day or that Scotus does note however that the last seven commandments are highly consonant with the natural law though they do not follow necessarily from first practical principles that are known in virtue of their terms and are necessarily known by any intellect that understands their terms And it is certain that all the precepts of the second table belong to the natural law in this second way since their rectitude is highly consonant with first practical principles that are known necessarily 45 46 47 48 Scotus justifies this position with the example of a peaceful society noting that the possession of private property is not necessary to have a peaceful society but that those of weak character would be more easily made peaceful with private property than without William of Ockham went further contending that since there is no contradiction in it God could command us not to love God 49 and even to hate God 50 Later Scholastics like Pierre D Ailly and his student Jean de Gerson explicitly confronted the Euthyphro dilemma taking the voluntarist position that God does not command good actions because they are good or prohibit evil ones because they are evil but these are therefore good because they are commanded and evil because prohibited 51 Protestant reformers Martin Luther and John Calvin both stressed the absolute sovereignty of God s will with Luther writing that for God s will there is no cause or reason that can be laid down as a rule or measure for it 52 and Calvin writing that everything which God wills must be held to be righteous by the mere fact of his willing it 53 The voluntarist emphasis on God s absolute power was carried further by Descartes who notoriously held that God had freely created the eternal truths of logic and mathematics and that God was therefore capable of giving circles unequal radii 54 giving triangles other than 180 internal degrees and even making contradictions true 55 Descartes explicitly seconded Ockham why should God not have been able to give this command i e the command to hate God to one of his creatures 56 Thomas Hobbes notoriously reduced the justice of God to irresistible power 57 drawing the complaint of Bishop Bramhall that this overturns all law 58 And William Paley held that all moral obligations bottom out in the self interested urge to avoid Hell and enter Heaven by acting in accord with God s commands 59 Islam s Ash arite theologians al Ghazali foremost among them embraced voluntarism scholar George Hourani writes that the view was probably more prominent and widespread in Islam than in any other civilization 60 61 Wittgenstein said that of the two interpretations of the Essence of the Good that which holds that the Good is good in virtue of the fact that God wills it is the deeper while that which holds that God wills the good because it is good is the shallow rationalistic one in that it behaves as though that which is good could be given some further foundation 62 Today divine command theory is defended by many philosophers of religion though typically in a restricted form see below Criticisms edit This horn of the dilemma also faces several problems No reasons for morality If there is no moral standard other than God s will then God s commands are arbitrary i e based on pure whimsy or caprice This would mean that morality is ultimately not based on reasons if theological voluntarism is true then God s commands intentions must be arbitrary but it cannot be that morality could wholly depend on something arbitrary for when we say that some moral state of affairs obtains we take it that there is a reason for that moral state of affairs obtaining rather than another 63 And as Michael J Murray and Michael Rea put it this would also cas t doubt on the notion that morality is genuinely objective 64 An additional problem is that it is difficult to explain how true moral actions can exist if one acts only out of fear of God or in an attempt to be rewarded by him 65 No reasons for God This arbitrariness would also jeopardize God s status as a wise and rational being one who always acts on good reasons As Leibniz writes Where will be his justice and his wisdom if he has only a certain despotic power if arbitrary will takes the place of reasonableness and if in accord with the definition of tyrants justice consists in that which is pleasing to the most powerful Besides it seems that every act of willing supposes some reason for the willing and this reason of course must precede the act 66 Anything goes 67 This arbitrariness would also mean that anything could become good and anything could become bad merely upon God s command Thus if God commanded us to gratuitously inflict pain on each other 68 or to engage in cruelty for its own sake 69 or to hold an annual sacrifice of randomly selected ten year olds in a particularly gruesome ritual that involves excruciating and prolonged suffering for its victims 70 then we would be morally obligated to do so As 17th century philosopher Ralph Cudworth put it nothing can be imagined so grossly wicked or so foully unjust or dishonest but if it were supposed to be commanded by this omnipotent Deity must needs upon that hypothesis forthwith become holy just and righteous 71 Moral contingency If morality depends on the perfectly free will of God morality would lose its necessity If nothing prevents God from loving things that are different from what God actually loves then goodness can change from world to world or time to time This is obviously objectionable to those who believe that claims about morality are if true necessarily true 67 In other words no action is necessarily moral any right action could have easily been wrong if God had so decided and an action which is right today could easily become wrong tomorrow if God so decides Indeed some have argued that divine command theory is incompatible with ordinary conceptions of moral supervenience 72 Why do God s commands obligate Mere commands do not create obligations unless the commander has some commanding authority But this commanding authority cannot itself be based on those very commands i e a command to obey commands otherwise a vicious circle results So in order for God s commands to obligate us he must derive commanding authority from some source other than his own will As Cudworth put it For it was never heard of that any one founded all his authority of commanding others and others sic obligation or duty to obey his commands in a law of his own making that men should be required obliged or bound to obey him Wherefore since the thing willed in all laws is not that men should be bound or obliged to obey this thing cannot be the product of the meer sic will of the commander but it must proceed from something else namely the right or authority of the commander 73 To avoid the circle one might say our obligation comes from gratitude to God for creating us But this presupposes some sort of independent moral standard obligating us to be grateful to our benefactors As 18th century philosopher Francis Hutcheson writes Is the Reason exciting to concur with the Deity this The Deity is our Benefactor Then what Reason excites to concur with Benefactors 74 Or finally one might resort to Hobbes s view The right of nature whereby God reigneth over men and punisheth those that break his laws is to be derived not from his creating them as if he required obedience as of gratitude for his benefits but from his irresistible power 75 In other words might makes right God s goodness If all goodness is a matter of God s will then what shall become of God s goodness Thus William P Alston writes since the standards of moral goodness are set by divine commands to say that God is morally good is just to say that he obeys his own commands that God practises what he preaches whatever that might be 68 Hutcheson deems such a view an insignificant tautology amounting to no more than this That God wills what he wills 76 Alternatively as Leibniz puts it divine command theorists deprive God of the designation good for what cause could one have to praise him for what he does if in doing something quite different he would have done equally well 77 A related point is raised by C S Lewis if good is to be defined as what God commands then the goodness of God Himself is emptied of meaning and the commands of an omnipotent fiend would have the same claim on us as those of the righteous Lord 78 Or again Leibniz this opinion would hardly distinguish God from the devil 79 That is since divine command theory trivializes God s goodness it is incapable of explaining the difference between God and an all powerful demon The is ought problem and the naturalistic fallacy According to David Hume it is hard to see how moral propositions featuring the relation ought could ever be deduced from ordinary is propositions such as the being of a God 80 Divine command theory is thus guilty of deducing moral oughts from ordinary ises about God s commands 81 In a similar vein G E Moore argued with his open question argument that the notion good is indefinable and any attempts to analyze it in naturalistic or metaphysical terms are guilty of the so called naturalistic fallacy 82 This would block any theory which analyzes morality in terms of God s will and indeed in a later discussion of divine command theory Moore concluded that when we assert any action to be right or wrong we are not merely making an assertion about the attitude of mind towards it of any being or set of beings whatever 83 No morality without God If all morality is a matter of God s will then if God does not exist there is no morality This is the thought captured in the slogan often attributed to Dostoevsky If God does not exist everything is permitted Divine command theorists disagree over whether this is a problem for their view or a virtue of their view Many argue that morality does indeed require God s existence and that this is in fact a problem for atheism But divine command theorist Robert Merrihew Adams contends that this idea that no actions would be ethically wrong if there were not a loving God is one that will seem at least initially implausible to many and that his theory must dispel an air of paradox 84 Restricted divine command theory edit One common response to the Euthyphro dilemma centers on a distinction between value and obligation Obligation which concerns rightness and wrongness or what is required forbidden or permissible is given a voluntarist treatment But value which concerns goodness and badness is treated as independent of divine commands The result is a restricted divine command theory that applies only to a specific region of morality the deontic region of obligation This response is found in Francisco Suarez s discussion of natural law and voluntarism in De legibus 85 and has been prominent in contemporary philosophy of religion appearing in the work of Robert M Adams 86 Philip L Quinn 87 and William P Alston 88 A significant attraction of such a view is that since it allows for a non voluntarist treatment of goodness and badness and therefore of God s own moral attributes some of the aforementioned problems with voluntarism can perhaps be answered God s commands are not arbitrary there are reasons which guide his commands based ultimately on this goodness and badness 89 God could not issue horrible commands God s own essential goodness 81 90 91 or loving character 92 would keep him from issuing any unsuitable commands Our obligation to obey God s commands does not result in circular reasoning it might instead be based on a gratitude whose appropriateness is itself independent of divine commands 93 These proposed solutions are controversial 94 and some steer the view back into problems associated with the first horn 95 One problem remains for such views if God s own essential goodness does not depend on divine commands then on what does it depend Something other than God Here the restricted divine command theory is commonly combined with a view reminiscent of Plato God is identical to the ultimate standard for goodness 96 Alston offers the analogy of the standard meter bar in France Something is a meter long inasmuch as it is the same length as the standard meter bar and likewise something is good inasmuch as it approximates God If one asks why God is identified as the ultimate standard for goodness Alston replies that this is the end of the line with no further explanation available but adds that this is no more arbitrary than a view that invokes a fundamental moral standard 97 On this view then even though goodness is independent of God s will it still depends on God and thus God s sovereignty remains intact This solution has been criticized by Wes Morriston If we identify the ultimate standard for goodness with God s nature then it seems we are identifying it with certain properties of God e g being loving being just If so then the dilemma resurfaces is God good because he has those properties or are those properties good because God has them 98 Nevertheless Morriston concludes that the appeal to God s essential goodness is the divine command theorist s best bet To produce a satisfying result however it would have to give an account of God s goodness that does not trivialize it and does not make God subject to an independent standard of goodness 99 Moral philosopher Peter Singer disputing the perspective that God is good and could never advocate something like torture states that those who propose this are caught in a trap of their own making for what can they possibly mean by the assertion that God is good That God is approved of by God 100 False dilemma in classical theistic perspective edit Augustine Anselm and Aquinas all wrote about the issues raised by the Euthyphro dilemma although like William James 101 and Wittgenstein 62 later they did not mention it by name As philosopher and Anselm scholar Katherin A Rogers observes many contemporary philosophers of religion suppose that there are true propositions which exist as platonic abstracta independently of God 102 Among these are propositions constituting a moral order to which God must conform in order to be good 103 Classical Judaeo Christian theism however rejects such a view as inconsistent with God s omnipotence which requires that God and what he has made is all that there is 102 The classical tradition Rogers notes also steers clear of the other horn of the Euthyphro dilemma divine command theory 104 From a classical theistic perspective therefore the Euthyphro dilemma is false As Rogers puts it Anselm like Augustine before him and Aquinas later rejects both horns of the Euthyphro dilemma God neither conforms to nor invents the moral order Rather His very nature is the standard for value 102 Another criticism raised by Peter Geach is that the dilemma implies you must search for a definition that fits piety rather than work backwards by deciding pious acts i e you must know what piety is before you can list acts which are pious 105 It also implies something can not be pious if it is only intended to serve the Gods without actually fulfilling any useful purpose Jewish thought edit The basis of the false dilemma response God s nature is the standard for value predates the dilemma itself appearing first in the thought of the eighth century BC Hebrew prophets Amos Hosea Micah and Isaiah Amos lived some three centuries before Socrates and two before Thales traditionally regarded as the first Greek philosopher Their message writes British scholar Norman H Snaith is recognized by all as marking a considerable advance on all previous ideas 106 not least in its special consideration for the poor and down trodden 107 As Snaith observes tsedeq the Hebrew word for righteousness actually stands for the establishment of God s will in the land This includes justice but goes beyond it because God s will is wider than justice He has a particular regard for the helpless ones on earth 108 Tsedeq is the norm by which all must be judged and it depends entirely upon the Nature of God 109 Hebrew has few abstract nouns What the Greeks thought of as ideas or abstractions the Hebrews thought of as activities 110 In contrast to the Greek dikaiosune justice of the philosophers tsedeq is not an idea abstracted from this world of affairs As Snaith writes Tsedeq is something that happens here and can be seen and recognized and known It follows therefore that when the Hebrew thought of tsedeq righteousness he did not think of Righteousness in general or of Righteousness as an Idea On the contrary he thought of a particular righteous act an action concrete capable of exact description fixed in time and space If the word had anything like a general meaning for him then it was as it was represented by a whole series of events the sum total of a number of particular happenings 109 The Hebrew stance on what came to be called the problem of universals as on much else was very different from that of Plato and precluded anything like the Euthyphro dilemma 111 This has not changed In 2005 Jonathan Sacks wrote In Judaism the Euthyphro dilemma does not exist 112 Jewish philosophers Avi Sagi and Daniel Statman criticized the Euthyphro dilemma as misleading because it is not exhaustive it leaves out a third option namely that God acts only out of His nature 113 St Thomas Aquinas edit Like Aristotle Aquinas rejected Platonism 114 In his view to speak of abstractions not only as existent but as more perfect exemplars than fully designated particulars is to put a premium on generality and vagueness 115 On this analysis the abstract good in the first horn of the Euthyphro dilemma is an unnecessary obfuscation Aquinas frequently quoted with approval Aristotle s definition Good is what all desire 116 117 As he clarified When we say that good is what all desire it is not to be understood that every kind of good thing is desired by all but that whatever is desired has the nature of good 118 In other words even those who desire evil desire it only under the aspect of good i e of what is desirable 119 The difference between desiring good and desiring evil is that in the former will and reason are in harmony whereas in the latter they are in discord 120 Aquinas s discussion of sin provides a good point of entry to his philosophical explanation of why the nature of God is the standard for value Every sin he writes consists in the longing for a passing i e ultimately unreal or false good 121 Thus in a certain sense it is true what Socrates says namely that no one sins with full knowledge 122 No sin in the will happens without an ignorance of the understanding 123 God however has full knowledge omniscience and therefore by definition that of Socrates Plato and Aristotle as well as Aquinas can never will anything other than what is good It has been claimed for instance by Nicolai Hartmann who wrote There is no freedom for the good that would not be at the same time freedom for evil 124 that this would limit God s freedom and therefore his omnipotence Josef Pieper however replies that such arguments rest upon an impermissibly anthropomorphic conception of God 125 In the case of humans as Aquinas says to be able to sin is indeed a consequence 126 or even a sign of freedom quodam libertatis signum 127 Humans in other words are not puppets manipulated by God so that they always do what is right However it does not belong to the essence of the free will to be able to decide for evil 128 To will evil is neither freedom nor a part of freedom 127 It is precisely humans creatureliness that is their not being God and therefore omniscient that makes them capable of sinning 129 Consequently writes Pieper the inability to sin should be looked on as the very signature of a higher freedom contrary to the usual way of conceiving the issue 125 Pieper concludes Only the will i e God s can be the right standard of its own willing and must will what is right necessarily from within itself and always A deviation from the norm would not even be thinkable And obviously only the absolute divine will is the right standard of its own act 130 131 and consequently of all human acts Thus the second horn of the Euthyphro dilemma divine command theory is also disposed of Thomist philosopher Edward Feser writes Divine simplicity entails that God s will just is God s goodness which just is His immutable and necessary existence That means that what is objectively good and what God wills for us as morally obligatory are really the same thing considered under different descriptions and that neither could have been other than they are There can be no question then either of God s having arbitrarily commanded something different for us torturing babies for fun or whatever or of there being a standard of goodness apart from Him Again the Euthyphro dilemma is a false one the third option that it fails to consider is that what is morally obligatory is what God commands in accordance with a non arbitrary and unchanging standard of goodness that is not independent of Him He is not under the moral law precisely because He is the moral law 132 William James edit William James in his essay The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life dismisses the first horn of the Euthyphro dilemma and stays clear of the second He writes Our ordinary attitude of regarding ourselves as subject to an overarching system of moral relations true in themselves is either an out and out superstition or else it must be treated as a merely provisional abstraction from that real Thinker to whom the existence of the universe is due 133 Moral obligations are created by personal demands whether these demands 134 come from the weakest creatures from the most insignificant persons or from God It follows that ethics have as genuine a foothold in a universe where the highest consciousness is human as in a universe where there is a God as well However whether the purely human system works as well as the other is a different question 133 For James the deepest practical difference in the moral life is between what he calls the easy going and the strenuous mood 135 In a purely human moral system it is hard to rise above the easy going mood since the thinker s various ideals known to him to be mere preferences of his own are too nearly of the same denominational value 136 he can play fast and loose with them at will This too is why in a merely human world without a God the appeal to our moral energy falls short of its maximum stimulating power Our attitude is entirely different in a world where there are none but finite demanders from that in a world where there is also an infinite demander This is because the stable and systematic moral universe for which the ethical philosopher asks is fully possible only in a world where there is a divine thinker with all enveloping demands for in that case actualized in his thought already must be that ethical philosophy which we seek as the pattern which our own must evermore approach Even though exactly what the thought of this infinite thinker may be is hidden from us our postulation of him serves to let loose in us the strenuous mood 135 and confront us with an existential 137 challenge in which our total character and personal genius are on trial and if we invoke any so called philosophy our choice and use of that also are but revelations of our personal aptitude or incapacity for moral life From this unsparing practical ordeal no professor s lectures and no array of books can save us 135 In the words of Richard M Gale God inspires us to lead the morally strenuous life in virtue of our conceiving of him as unsurpassably good This supplies James with an adequate answer to the underlying question of the Euthyphro 138 In philosophical atheism editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Atheistic resolutions edit Atheism challenges the assumption of the dilemma that God exists or in the original formulation that the many gods in Greek religion existed This eliminates the need to decide whether God is either non omniscient or arbitrary and also eliminates the possibility of God as the source of morality Secular humanism takes the positive stance that morality is not dependent on religion or theology and that ethical rules should be developed based on reason science experience debate and democracy Some secular humanists believe in ethical naturalism that there are objective discoverable laws of morality inherent to the human condition of which humans may have imperfect knowledge Others have adopted ethical subjectivism in the sense of meta ethics the idea that ethics are a social construct but nonetheless by way of utilitarianism advocate imposing a set of universal ethics and laws that create the type of society in which they wish to live where people are safe prosperous and happy These competing resolutions represent different answers to a question similar to the original dilemma Is something inherently ethical or unethical or is something ethical or unethical because a person or society says it is so Rejection of universal morality edit The other assumption of the dilemma is that there is a universal right and wrong against which a god either creates or is defined by Moral nihilism challenges that assumption by rejecting the concept of morality entirely This conflicts with the teachings of most religions and thus is usually accompanied by atheism but is theoretically compatible with the notion of a powerful God or gods who have opinions about how people should behave Alexander Rosenberg uses a version of the Euthyphro dilemma to argue that objective morality cannot exist and hence an acceptance of moral nihilism is warranted 139 He asks is objective morality correct because evolution discovered it or did evolution discover objective morality because it is correct If the first horn of the dilemma is true then our current morality cannot be objectively correct by accident because if evolution had given us another type of morality then that would have been objectively correct If the second horn of dilemma is true then one must account for how the random process of evolution managed to only select for objectively correct moral traits while ignoring the wrong moral traits Given the knowledge that evolution has given us tendencies to be xenophobic and sexist it is mistaken to claim that evolution has only selected for objective morality as evidently it did not Because both horns of the dilemma do not give an adequate account for how the evolutionary process instantiated objective morality in humans a position of Moral nihilism is warranted Moral relativism accepts the idea of morality but asserts that there are multiple potential arbiters of moral truth This opens the possibility of disagreeing with God about the rules of ethics and of creating multiple societies with different equally valid sets of ethics just as different countries have different sets of laws Normative moral relativism asserts that behavior based on alternative systems of morality should be tolerated In the context of religious pluralism strong relativism it also opens the possibility that different gods and different belief systems produce different but equally valid moral systems which may apply only to adherents of those faiths In popular culture editIn the song No Church in the Wild from the album Watch the Throne rapper Jay Z references the dilemma with the line Is pious pious cause God loves pious Socrates asked whose bias do y all seek 140 In American legal thinking editYale Law School Professor Myres S McDougal formerly a classicist later a scholar of property law posed the question Do we protect it because it s a property right or is it a property right because we protect it 141 The dilemma has also been restated in legal terms by Geoffrey Hodgson who asked Does a state make a law because it is a customary rule or does law become a customary rule because it is approved by the state 142 See also editAppeal to authority An argument that justifies the conclusion via an appeal to authorityPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Divine simplicity View of God without parts or features Ethical dilemma Type of dilemma in philosophy Morality Differentiation between right and wrong Ethics in the Bible Ideas concerning right and wrong actions that exist in the Hebrew and Christian Bibles Divine command theory Meta ethical theory of morality Deontology Class of ethical theoriesNotes edit G W Leibniz stated in Reflections on the Common Concept of Justice circa 1702 It is generally agreed that whatever God wills is good and just But there remains the question whether it is good and just because God wills it or whether God wills it because it is good and just in other words whether justice and Goodness are arbitrary or whether they belong to the necessary and eternal truths about the nature of things Leibniz 1702 p 516 Irwin 2006 Wolfson 1976 p 579 Hourani 1962 pp 13 40 Haldane 1989 p 40 Irwin 2007 I pp 553 556 Aquinas c 1265 1274 2a2ae 57 2 Aquinas c 1265 1274 2a1ae 94 5 Aquinas c 1265 1274 1a2ae 100 8 Pink 2005 Irwin 2007 II pp 6 10 See esp Grotius 1625 1 1 10 and Leibniz 1702 see also Leibniz 1706 pp 64 75 Gill 1999 esp pp 272 74 Mackie 1980 Chapters 2 8 Gill 2011 Swinburne 1993 pp 209 216 a b Swinburne 2008 a b Mawson 2008 Murray amp Rea 2008 p 247 Price 1769 Chapter 5 Hourani 1960 p 276 Haldane 1989 pp 42 43 a b Swinburne 1993 p 210 See Adams 1999 pp 47 49 for a detailed discussion of this problem also see Suarez 1872 2 6 22 23 Murphy 2012 Metaethical theological voluntarism Considerations in Favor Grotius 1625 Prolegomenon 11 Kretzmann 1999 p 423 Oppy 2009 pp 352 356 Hoffman amp Rosenkrantz 2002 pp 143 145 Hoffman amp Rosenkrantz 2002 pp 145 147 Hoffman amp Rosenkrantz 2002 pp 166 173 176 Swinburne 1974 Swinburne 1993 Chapter 11 Swinburne 1993 p 192ff Swinburne 1993 Chapter 9 Swinburne 1974 pp 217 222 Mawson 2008 pp 26 29 Swinburne 1974 p 211 Swinburne 1974 pp 211 215 Swinburne 2008 pp 10 12 Swinburne 2008 p 10 Mawson 2008 pp 29 32 Scotus John Duns 2017 Selected Writings on Ethics Oxford University Press pp Ordinatio III D 37 Do all the precepts of the Decalogue belong to the natural law ISBN 978 0 19 967341 4 Scotus John Duns 2017 Selected Writings on Ethics Oxford University Press pp Ordinatio III D 37 Q UN para 25 26 ISBN 978 0 19 967341 4 Williams 2013 Ethics and Moral Psychology The natural law Williams 2002 pp 312 316 See Cross 1999 p 92 for the view that our duties to others hold automatically i e without God s commands unless God commands otherwise William of Ockham Quodlibeta 3 13 William of Ockham Reportata 4 16 see also Osborne 2005 D Ailly Pierre Questions on the Books of the Sentences 1 14 quoted in Wainwright 2005 p 74 quoting Idziak 63 4 see Wainwright 2005 p 74 for similar quotes from Gerson Luther 1525 88 Calvin 1536 3 23 2 Descartes III 25 Descartes III 235 Descartes III 343 Hobbes Of Liberty and Necessity 12 Hobbes A Defense of True Liberty 12f Paley William Principles 2 3 Hourani 1960 p 270 See Frank 1994 pp 32 36 for the view that al Ghazali incorporated rationalist elements that moved him away from traditional Ash arite voluntarism a b Janik amp Toulmin 1973 p 194 The passage is also quoted in a href Template Harvnb html class mw redirect title Template Harvnb harvnb a Baggett 2002 Murphy 2012 Perennial difficulties for metaethical theological voluntarism Theological voluntarism and arbitrariness Murray amp Rea 2008 pp 246 247 Doomen 2011 Leibniz 1686 II a b Murray amp Rea 2008 p 246 a b Alston 2002 p 285 Adams 1973 Morriston 2009 p 249 Cudworth 1731 1 1 5 Klagge 1984 pp 374 375 Cudworth 1731 1 2 4 Hutcheson 1742 I Hobbes 31 5 Hutcheson 1738 2 7 5 Leibniz 1710 p 176 Lewis 1943 p 79 Leibniz 1702 p 561 Hume 1739 3 1 1 27 a b Wierenga 1983 p 397 Moore 1903 Chapters 1 2 4 Moore 1912 p 79 Adams 1979 p 77 Suarez 1872 2 6 Is the natural law truly a preceptive divine law Adams 1973 esp p 109 and Adams 1999 esp p 250 Quinn 2007 esp p 71 Alston 1990 pp 306 307 Alston 1990 pp 317 318 Quinn 2007 pp 81 85 Alston 1990 p 317 Adams 1979 In this early work Adams s view is that it is logically possible but unthinkable that God would issue horrible commands the believer s concepts of ethical rightness and wrongness would break down in the situation in which he believed that God commanded cruelty for its own sake p 324 In later work Adams contends that God cannot be sadistic Adams 1999 p 47 Adams 1999 pp 252 253 For criticisms see Chandler 1985 Morriston 2001 Shaw 2002 and Zagzebski 2004 pp 259 261 See Adams 1999 pp 47 49 on the problems of divine omnipotence and freedom of the will See Adams 1999 Chapter 1 Quinn 2007 Alston 1990 distances himself from Platonism see also Kretzmann 1999 pp 375 376 for a similar solution put in terms of divine simplicity Alston 1990 pp 318 322 Morriston 2001 p 253 Morriston 2001 p 266 Singer Peter 1993 Practical Ethics 3d ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 3 4 ISBN 978 0 521 43971 8 James 1891 a b c Rogers 2008 p 8 Rogers 2008 p 186 Rogers 2008 p 186 see also Rogers 2000 pp 127 133 PLAto s EUTHYPHRO An Analysis and Commentary Snaith 1944 p 59 Written over many centuries by many authors the Old Testament displays a marked ethical evolution in its portrayal and therefore understanding of God In its earliest written books God appears at times as no more than a nationalistic tribal deity who orders the extermination of entire peoples hostile to Israel such as the Midianites Numbers 31 1 54 and Amalekites 1 Samuel 15 1 25 By the time of Amos however such primitive and immature notions are a thing of the past Snaith 1944 p 52 see also pp 61 62 66 67 For a recent overview see Head 2010 Snaith 1944 pp 68 69 It was this bias towards the poor and needy Snaith 1944 p 70 in the message of the Hebrew prophets and Jesus Christ that inspired the preferential option for the poor of late twentieth century Latin American liberation theology Snaith 1944 p 70 a b Snaith 1944 p 77 Snaith 1944 p 174 Snaith 1944 pp 9 187 188 Sacks 2005 p 164 Sagi amp Statman 1995 pp 62 63 Aquinas Commentary on Aristotle s Metaphysics Archived 2011 07 26 at the Wayback Machine Bk 1 lectio 10 n 158 McInerny 1982 pp 122 123 Aristotle Ethics 1 1 Aquinas Commentary on Aristotle s Ethics Archived 2011 07 26 at the Wayback Machine 1 9 and 11 Aquinas c 1265 1274 I 5 1 Aquinas c 1265 1274 I 6 2 ad 2 Aquinas Commentary on Aristotle s Ethics 1 10 Aquinas c 1265 1274 I II q24 a2 Aquinas c 1265 1274 I II 72 2 Aquinas c 1265 1274 I II 58 2 and I II 77 2 Aquinas Summa contra Gentiles 4 92 Hartmann Nicolai Ethik 3rd edition Berlin 1949 p 378 Cited in Pieper 2001 pp 78 79 a b Pieper 2001 p 79 Aquinas De Veritate Archived 2012 04 19 at the Wayback Machine 24 3 ad 2 a b Aquinas De Veritate 22 6 Aquinas De Veritate 24 3 ad 2 Commentary on the Sentences of Peter Lombard 2d 44 1 1 ad 1 Pieper 2001 p 80 Aquinas c 1265 1274 I 63 1 Pieper 2001 pp 80 81 Feser Edward 26 October 2010 God obligation and the Euthyphro dilemma a b James 1891 Section II Gale 1999 p 44 In his essay James used desire demand and claim interchangeably using desire and demand each eleven times and claim five a b c James 1891 Section V James is acutely aware of how hard it is to avoid complete moral skepticism on the one hand and on the other escape bringing a wayward personal standard of our own along with us on which we simply pin our faith He briefly discusses several notions proposed as bases of the ethical system but finds little to help choose among them James 1891 Section III Gale 1999 p 40 Gale 1999 p 44 Rosenberg Alexander 2012 The Atheist s Guide to Reality Enjoying Life Without Illusions W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0393344110 Kanye West No Church in the Wild Lyrics Retrieved 5 November 2013 See Richard H Stern Scope of Protection Problems With Patents and Copyrights on Methods of Doing Business Archived 2016 05 18 at the Wayback Machine 10 Fordham Intell Prop Media amp Ent L J 105 128 n 100 1999 Hodgson Geoffrey M 2015 Much of the economics of property rights devalues property and legal rights Journal of Institutional Economics 11 4 686 doi 10 1017 S1744137414000630 hdl 2299 18849 S2CID 154894480 In Plato s dialogue Euthyphro Socrates asks Euthyphro Is the pious loved by the gods because it is pious or is it pious because it is loved by the gods This dilemma can be converted into matters of state and law Does a state make a law because it is a customary rule or does law become a customary rule because it is approved by the state References editAdams Robert Merrihew 1973 A Modified Divine Command Theory of Ethical Wrongness In Gene Outka John P Reeder eds Religion and Morality A Collection of Essays Anchor Adams Robert Merrihew 1979 Divine Command Metaethics Modified Again Journal of Religious Ethics 7 1 66 79 Adams Robert Merrihew 1999 Finite and Infinite Goods A Framework for Ethics New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515371 2 Alston William P 1990 Some suggestions for divine command theorists In Michael Beaty ed Christian Theism and the Problems of Philosophy University of Notre Dame Press pp 303 26 Alston William P 2002 What Euthyphro should have said In William Lane Craig ed Philosophy of Religion A Reader and Guide Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0813531212 Aquinas Thomas 1265 1274 Summa Theologica Calvin John 1536 Institutes of the Christian Religion Chandler John 1985 Divine command theories and the appeal to love American Philosophical Quarterly 22 3 231 239 JSTOR 20014101 Cross Richard 1999 Duns Scotus ISBN 978 0195125535 Cudworth Ralph 1731 A Treatise concerning eternal and immutable morality London Printed for James and John Knapton Descartes Rene 1985 John Cottingham Dugald Murdoch Robert Stoothoff eds The Philosophical Writings of Descartes Doomen Jasper 2011 Religion s Appeal Philosophy and Theology 23 1 133 148 doi 10 5840 philtheol20112316 Frank Richard M 1994 Al Ghazali and the Asharite School Duke University Press ISBN 978 0822314271 Gale Richard M 1999 The Divided Self of William James Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 64269 9 Gill Michael 1999 The Religious Rationalism of Benjamin Whichcote Journal of the History of Philosophy 37 2 271 300 doi 10 1353 hph 2008 0832 S2CID 54190387 Gill Michael 2011 British Moralists on Human Nature and the Birth of Secular Ethics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521184403 Grotius Hugo 2005 1625 Richard Tuck ed The Rights of War and Peace Liberty Fund ISBN 9780865974364 Haldane John 1989 Realism and voluntarism in medieval ethics Journal of Medical Ethics 15 1 39 44 doi 10 1136 jme 15 1 39 JSTOR 27716767 PMC 1375762 PMID 2926786 Head Ronan 9 July 2010 Missing the point about atrocities in the Bible Church Times Hobbes Thomas Leviathan Hoffman Joshua Rosenkrantz Gary S 2002 The Divine Attributes doi 10 1002 9780470693438 ISBN 978 1892941008 S2CID 55213987 Hourani George 1960 Two Theories of Value in Medieval Islam PDF Muslim World 50 4 269 278 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 1960 tb01091 x hdl 2027 42 74937 Hourani George 1962 Averroes on Good and Evil Studia Islamica 16 16 13 40 doi 10 2307 1595117 JSTOR 1595117 Hume David 1739 A Treatise of Human Nature CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 978 1479321728 Hutcheson Francis 1738 An Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue In Two Treatises London Printed for D Midwinter A Bettersworth and C Hitch Hutcheson Francis 1742 Illustrations on the Moral Sense ISBN 978 0674443266 Irwin Terence 2006 Socrates and Euthyphro The argument and its revival In Lindsay Judson V Karasmanes eds Remembering Socrates Philosophical Essays Oxford University Press Irwin Terence 2007 The Development of Ethics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199693856 James William 1891 The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life International Journal of Ethics 1 3 330 354 doi 10 1086 intejethi 1 3 2375309 JSTOR 2375309 Archived from the original on 2007 03 28 Retrieved 2011 06 01 Janik Allan Toulmin Stephen 1973 Wittgenstein s Vienna New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 21725 9 Klagge James C 1984 An alleged difficulty concerning moral properties Mind 93 371 370 380 doi 10 1093 mind xciii 371 370 JSTOR 2254416 Kretzmann Norman 1999 Abraham Isaac and Euthyphro God and the basis of morality In Eleonore Stump Michael J Murray eds Philosophy of Religion The Big Questions Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 20604 0 Leibniz Gottfried 1686 Discourse on Metaphysics Leibniz Gottfried 1989 1702 Reflections on the Common Concept of Justice In Leroy Loemker ed Leibniz Philosophical Papers and Letters Dordrecht Kluwer pp 561 573 ISBN 978 9027706935 Leibniz Gottfried 1706 Opinion on the Principles of Pufendorf In Riley ed Leibniz Political Writings Cambridge University Press pp 64 75 Leibniz Gottfried 1710 Theodicee Lewis C S 1967 1943 The Poison of Subjectivism Christian Reflections Luther Martin 1525 On the Bondage of the Will Mackie J L 1980 Hume s Moral Theory Routledge ISBN 978 0415104364 Mawson T J 2008 The Euthyphro Dilemma Think 7 20 25 33 doi 10 1017 S1477175608000171 S2CID 170806539 McInerny Ralph 1982 St Thomas Aquinas University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 978 0 268 01707 1 Moore G E 1903 Principia Ethica Moore G E 1912 Ethics Morriston Wes 2001 Must there be a standard of moral goodness apart from God Philosophia Christi 2 3 1 127 138 doi 10 5840 pc2001318 Morriston Wes 2009 What if God commanded something terrible A worry for divine command meta ethics Religious Studies 45 3 249 267 doi 10 1017 S0034412509990011 JSTOR 27750017 S2CID 55530483 Murphy Mark 2012 Theological Voluntarism In Edward N Zalta ed Theological Voluntarism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2012 ed Murray Michael J Rea Michael 2008 An Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion Cambridge Cambridge ISBN 978 0521619554 Oppy Graham 2009 Arguing about Gods Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521122641 Osborne Thomas M Jr 2005 Ockham as a divine command theorist Religious Studies 41 1 1 22 doi 10 1017 S0034412504007218 JSTOR 20008568 S2CID 170351380 Pieper Josef 2001 The Concept of Sin Translated by Edward T Oakes South Bend Indiana St Augustine s Press ISBN 978 1 890318 07 9 Pink Thomas 2005 Action Will and Law in Late Scholasticism The New Synthese Historical Library Vol 57 pp 31 50 doi 10 1007 1 4020 3001 0 3 ISBN 978 1 4020 3000 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Price Richard 1769 A Review of the Principal Questions of Morals London Printed for T Cadell Quinn Philip 2007 Theological Voluntarism In David Copp ed The Oxford Handbook of Ethical Theory doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780195325911 003 0003 Rogers Katherin A 2000 Divine Goodness Perfect Being Theology Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1012 9 Rogers Katherin A 2008 Anselm on Freedom Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 923167 6 Sacks Jonathan 2005 To Heal a Fractured World The Ethics of Responsibility New York Schocken Books ISBN 978 0 8052 1196 2 Sagi Avi Statman Daniel 1995 Religion and Morality Amsterdam Rodopi ISBN 978 90 5183 838 1 Singer Peter 1993 Practical Ethics 3d ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43971 8 Shaw Joseph 2002 Divine commands at the foundations of morality Canadian Journal of Philosophy 32 3 419 439 doi 10 1080 00455091 2002 10716525 JSTOR 40232157 S2CID 170616382 Snaith Norman H 1983 1944 The Distinctive Ideas of the Old Testament London Epworth Press ISBN 978 0 7162 0392 6 Suarez Francisco 1872 Tractatus de legibus ac deo legislatore in decem libros distributus ex typis Fibrenianis Swinburne Richard 1974 Duty and the Will of God Canadian Journal of Philosophy 4 2 213 227 doi 10 1080 00455091 1974 10716933 JSTOR 40230500 S2CID 159730360 Swinburne Richard 1993 The Coherence of Theism Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0198240709 Swinburne Richard 2008 God and morality Think 7 20 7 15 doi 10 1017 S1477175608000158 S2CID 170918784 Wainwright William 2005 Religion and Morality Ashgate ISBN 978 0754616320 Wierenga Edward 1983 A defensible divine command theory Nous 17 3 387 407 doi 10 2307 2215256 JSTOR 2215256 Williams Thomas 2013 John Duns Scotus In Edward N Zalta ed John Duns Scotus The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2013 ed Williams Thomas ed 2002 The Cambridge Companion to Duns Scotus ISBN 978 0521635639 Wolfson Harry 1976 The Philosophy of the Kalam Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674665804 Zagzebski Linda 2004 Divine Motivation Theory Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521535762 Further reading editJan Aertsen Medieval philosophy and the transcendentals the case of Thomas Aquinas 2004 New York Brill ISBN 90 04 10585 9 John M Frame Euthyphro Hume and the Biblical God retrieved February 13 2007 Paul Helm ed Divine Commands and Morality 1981 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 875049 8 Plato Euthyphro any edition the Penguin version can be found in The Last Days of Socrates ISBN 0 14 044037 2 External links editEuthyphro by Plato from Project Gutenberg Retrieved from https en 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