One of the arguments for the existence of God, which points out that ethics are without absolutes apart from God
The moral argument is called that because it is an argument for the existence of God based on the existence of objective moral values and duties. It suggests that the existence of moral values points towards the existence of a moral lawgiver, which is typically identified as God.
A moral argument can fail if it contains logical fallacies or if it is based on false premises. Additionally, the argument may also fail if it lacks clear reasoning or uses faulty moral principles.
The Argument was created on 2001-10-16.
Argument About Basia was created in 1959.
Das Argument was created in 1959.
A moral argument typically consists of a premise establishing a moral principle or value, followed by a premise identifying a particular situation or action, and a conclusion that applies the moral principle to the situation to assess its moral status. This structure aims to demonstrate why a certain action is right or wrong based on ethical principles.
Moral topics needn't be a necessary or essential feature of an argument. Material topics are most often very good to be argued about. Only that meaningful arguments involve some topic, moral or material.
The Kalām Cosmological Argument was created in 1979.
The main arguments for creation include the Cosmological Argument, which posits that everything that exists has a cause; the Teleological Argument, which argues for design and purpose in the universe; and the Moral Argument, which asserts that the existence of objective moral values implies a moral creator. Other arguments include the Ontological Argument, which focuses on the nature of existence itself, and the Fine-Tuning Argument, highlighting the precise conditions necessary for life. Each of these arguments offers a different perspective on the existence of a creator or ultimate cause.
Moral Mazes was created in 1988.
On Moral Fiction was created in 1978.
Moral Majority was created in 1979.