More on Euthyphro

April 11, 2008

I’ve never really felt all that threatened by the Euthyphro “dilemma,” despite the fact that some atheists I have debated seem to cling to it as either a comfort blanket or supposed “clincher” argument. The “dilemma” is an interesting thought experiment, I suppose, but being that it was initially asked from within a polytheistic framework — and in large measure depends on certain internal contradictions in the in order to actually set up the aspect of it which presents a “dilemma” to believers — it is far less applicable to the Christian situation than adherents of might hope for.

As is roughly the same case with the “problem” of suffering/evil (), I basically regard Euthyphro as a non-issue, and tend to view dimly anyone who injects it into an argument.

And I see that has also had a (much more comprehensive) go at deconstructing the (non-)dilemma, in two parts (one and two). What’s really amusing is that, in similar fashion to how he dismantles the reasoning of the likes of or , Vox dismantles the “dilemma” not only from without (by pointing out its inherent non-applicability to ), but from within. It is a most amusing thing to see skewered on his own .