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Divine Command Theory: God's Essential Goodness and the Nature of Good, Study notes of Philosophy

Divine Command TheoryPhilosophy of ReligionTheologyEthics

The divine command theory (dct) and its historical significance in philosophical discussions about the nature of good. The author argues that a dct based on the nature of god as essentially and only good is a different argument than the socratic formulation and survives objections. A logical argument for god's essential goodness and the implications for the morality of god's commands.

What you will learn

  • What is the Divine Command Theory and how does it relate to the nature of good?
  • What objections are raised against the Divine Command Theory and how are they addressed?
  • How does the argument for God's essential goodness support the Divine Command Theory?

Typology: Study notes

2021/2022

Uploaded on 03/31/2022

anuprabha
anuprabha 🇺🇸

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Download Divine Command Theory: God's Essential Goodness and the Nature of Good and more Study notes Philosophy in PDF only on Docsity! Divine Command Theory (DCT) | 1 There has been a question in philosophical discussion since at least the time of Socrates (late 5th century BC) regarding the nature of what is good. The classic question posed by Socrates in Plato’s Euthyphro is “Is the pious loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved by the gods?” The question is whether that which is pious is pious of its own essence, its own nature, and thus the gods love it, or whether the pious is made pious because the gods love it; Socrates clearly comes down on the former view. In Socrates’ question however, the “pious” is something external to the gods. As best I know there was no sense of the Greek gods defining essential goodness; they were more about power, and they could be quite capricious. Certainly for Socrates and Plato in any case the good is something ineffable which is not directly dependent on or the nature of the gods. The Socratic question has been historically important in the discussion of what is called the Divine Command Theory. Is something good because God commands it, or does God recognize what is good and command it? When I first read this a few years ago I intuitively differed with the terms of the Socratic argument. As I have come to understand it now, the Socratic argument is not a formulation of a DCT in terms which would be considered across the various traditions of orthodox (little ‘o’) Christianity. The basic difference is this: Christianity is willing to posit a God that is essentially and only good. Thus goodness is of God’s essential nature, neither accidental or contingent, and he is solely good, with nothing evil in his nature. (Yes, this begs crucial questions of God’s existence and his nature, but so does any appeal to a cosmic good or moral principle which is external to God.) It follows from these premisses regarding God’s nature that God’s speech and his commands are good, in that they source from his essentially and solely good nature. Thus when God speaks he utters something necessarily good, and for God’s speech to be good it is sufficient that he speak. In argument form: P1) God is essentially good (i.e. his goodness is not accidental or contingent.) P2) God is good only (i.e. there is no evil in him.) C1) Therefore God’s speech and commands are necessarily and only good. An objection which is generally raised is that the DCT leaves open the possibility that God could command gratuitous evil, thus declaring something evil as if it were good. In response, Christianity posits God not only as essentially good but as good only. If God is good only, then he cannot speak evilly. If he cannot speak evilly, then the objection fails, as it then is impossible for God to command evil. Corollary to this objection, one might object that God, as absolutely free, is free to choose good or evil; thus the DCT should be rejected, as this freedom opens the possibility of God choosing and commanding evil. In response I reject that God is free to choose good and evil. If one accepts that he is essentially and only good, that precludes God’s choosing evil, from which it follows that God is not absolutely free in the sense proposed. That may run counter to other ideas about the nature of God, but so far I think it holds.
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