SO WE HAD AN EXCELLENT CHAT ABOUT THIS IN THE CHATBOX
but I thought I'd make a thread because scrollback is pretty short. Anyway, this dude, James Rachels, argues that if you worship is immoral, or rather that worshiping precludes you from morality. here's my shitty reconstruction of his argument:
1. You must have moral agency to behave morally (can't really argue with this, if you deny it then you seem to be committed to the idea that inanimate objects have a moral code to exist by and other silliness)
2. Moral agency requires autonomy
3. Autonomy requires doing our own moral reasoning
4. Worship requires (or perhaps is defined as for the sake of argument) admission of an absolute moral authority
5. Any command from an absolute authority must trump our own reasoning
6. (from 3 and 5) if we accept an absolute moral authority we can not be autonomous
7. (from 6 and 4) if we accept worship we can not be autonomous
8. (from 7 and 2) if we worship we can not be moral agents
9. (from 1 and
if we worship we can not behave morally
Now I don't actually agree with Rachels' but I think the argument is structurally valid and I think most people will accept his premises. Thus I think most people would, if they really thought about it, realize they can't be moral and worship (for this admittedly narrow definition of worship) the divine. Thoughts? Bullshit? If so why?