I see what you're saying but I can also see how the dilemma would be eliminated once the paradox of the situation is aknowledged. The paradox being that god doesn't need principles to base any of his actions off because he is everything represented by our concept of what those principles are. God doesn't need to command or be commanded by principles because he is those principles.Heraclius wrote:God's actions would be arbitrary because of the fact he is not basing them off of any principles. If you accept there is no moral compass outside of the actions of God, that means the actions of God cannot be based on any principles of "good" or "just" or "wise." It isn't because the moral standards change, it's because there are no moral standards before action 0 (God's action). action 1 is defined by action 0, but action 0 cannot be defined simply due to the fact it is the first action.nickle7 wrote:Just for clarification, are you saying that God's actions would be considered arbitrary in this case because moral standards have changed?Heraclius wrote:And if you take that approach to the dilemma, that god and morality are the same, then that means the actions of God are arbitrary. If the actions of God are arbitrary, he cannot be a wise and rational being.
I guess I've always thought of morality as god. Something is deemed moral because god commands it at the same time that he commands it because it's moral. Neither god nor morality are beholden to or constrained by one another because they're both the same. I see your point about how this line of thinking would dictate that gods actions are arbitrary but they'd only be arbitrary from our limited perspective. The definition of god includes a rationality beyond individual human understanding. So classifying actions of god as arbitrary seem rather narrow-sighted.
But basic moral standards have remained constant throughout history (don't kill, don't lie, don't steal, etc). This consistency seems to eliminate the possibility of gods actions being arbitrary.
There are a lot of interesting dilemmas like this for theists to take into account. There is no actual right answer, but the answer you choose often shows a lot about the worldview one has.
I'll admit, this doesn't make sense to my (i like to think) logical mind or any logical mind. This brings to mind Kierkegaard's "leap of faith."