So to 'demonstrating moral facts'.
Yes in a number of posts I have made it clear that the method we go about discovering OM will depend on the account we give of it. As a theist I have given an account of OM rooted in God and I outline this in reply 196. As this account derives its understanding of OM from the flourishing of conscious beings, defined in relation to God’s purpose then we discover moral truth by improving our understanding of our flourishing. This is partly something we do through reason and observation in relation to the physical and psychological facts that allows people to live rich fulfilling lives and the virtues of character necessary to enable these, and partly by deepening our experience of God to gain an insight into his character and purposes. This, like all fields of human discovery will of course be gradual and prone to error and revision in our understanding.
So it seems to me that you 'determine moral facts' by judging an actions to see if it delivers 'flourishing of conscious beings'.
I'm still not seeing the leap to objective?
So why is "flourishing of conscious beings" good? Are you a vegetarian?
Yes, why is it good? DT said it's because it's rooted in god - defined in relation to god's purpose, but you should be able to show that it's good without invoking god because you try and use the existence of OM to conclude god, not the other way around.
I've not read through all of DT's posts since I have not been around so much as usual, so I will leave him to come back to you on that.
You only had to read what he's stated in the nest of quotes. I've put it in bold.
Ah right, got you. If I have understood DT correctly, he is saying that OM can only be rooted in God's purpose (nature?). I agree. If we recognise that OM exists, then the only valid explanation is that it is rooted in God's nature. It has to be something transcendent and the only valid transcendent thing which fits the bill is God. If you can think of anything else, please say.
I would sort of agree with you, but would rather put it that we should be able to determine that it is good without invoking God rather than to show that it is good.
Horses for courses. Whichever.
OK. Just trying to be accurate.
There are things I know / have determined to be true, but I am unable to show this to you. Examples include there being a set of earphones on my desk, me having no shoes on, my having gone for a walk with my wife, son and daughter-in-law last night. I don't need to be able to show anyone else that those are true before I am able to believe them myself.
All the things you mention have the potential to be shown, but we've moved to determine now anyway.
So let's go there. Tell me how you determine that your core values (human/conscious flourishing/well being/whatever it is etc.) should be valued without invoking god. Turn the is into an ought.
I'd go with William Lane Craig and say that our apprehension of objective morality is akin to our apprehension of things like minds outside our own. We can't prove it all the way (since, unless there is an original cause/ground) it is an infinite regress, yet there seems to be no good reason to think otherwise. We do here seem to be in general agreement that human flourishing, at least in a general sense, is good. Some of our atheist friends seem to be saying this here (or, at least, the flourishing of sentient beings), but they would seem to have no firm grounds for this apart from really, really liking the idea or wanting it to be true. For the Christian theist, the general flourishing of human beings being good finds its source in us being in the image of God and loved by him.
I'd be interested to know why our atheist friends think that human flourishing is morally good (apart from wanting it to be so). What do you think?