¶ … morality still exist if God did not exist?
Is something pious because it is loved by the gods -- or do the gods love all that is pious? This is the central question asked in Plato's dialogue the Euthyphro (Ross 2012). The dialogue revolves around a young man who has elected to bring charges against his father for killing a slave. To complicate matters still further, the slave was accused of murder himself before he was killed. The question is never answered in the dialogue, but this raises the question: if something is only moral because the gods approve of it, what if there is no God? Is there then no morality?
Socrates seems to suggest that morality is intrinsic to actions themselves, given his largely deflationary view of traditional myths of the Greek gods. This is one of the reasons that he was charged with impiety under Athenian law. Socrates also points out that what he sees as Euthyphro's excessive loyalty to objective codes of ethics is itself against Athenian codes of law, because sons and fathers are not obligated to bring charges against one another. He sees Euthyphro as excessively pious, to the point of absurdity, and further tries to demonstrate to the young man that Euthyphro does not really know what piety means. "It is more disturbing to Socrates, [that Euthyphro bring charges] because the basic unit of Greek religion is the home and the household...The father of the family is thus the family priest" (Ross 2012).
Socrates' view that what is loved by the gods is not necessarily moral is supported by his analysis of the often fractious behavior of the Greek Olympians, particularly the philandering Zeus, and Zeus' father Kronos, who tried to kill his own children. Clearly, if the gods behaved in such a manner they must 'love' things which no reasonable person would consider pious and which are prohibited by Athenian law. Imitating the gods does not make one moral. The polytheism of Socrates' society supports his argument to some degree, because he can...
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