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⚖️ The Euthyphro Dilemma

Is something good because God commands it, or does God command it because it's good?

Plato's Dialogue, c. 399 BCE

SOCRATES: "Consider this question: Is the pious loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved by the gods?"

EUTHYPHRO: "I do not understand what you mean, Socrates."

SOCRATES: "Then I shall try to explain more clearly..."

Choose a Horn of the Dilemma

1
📜

Good is Independent of God

Things are good independently, and God recognizes and commands them because they are already good. Morality exists as an external standard that even God follows.

OR
2

Good Because God Commands It

Things are good only because God commands them. There is no independent standard—God's will alone determines what is moral. (Divine Command Theory)

📜

🔍 Consequences of Horn 1: "Good is Independent"

✓ Preserves Moral Objectivity

Morality has a real, objective basis that can be discovered through reason. "Thou shalt not murder" is true because murder is genuinely wrong.

✓ Avoids Arbitrariness

God couldn't command torture for fun and make it good. Morality isn't subject to divine whim.

⚠️ Problem: Limits God's Sovereignty

If morality is independent, God is bound by external standards. He becomes a "moral advisor" rather than the ultimate source.

Threatens Omnipotence

⚠️ Problem: What is this Standard?

If not God, what grounds morality? Platonic Forms? Natural law? This raises further metaphysical questions.

Explanatory Gap

🔍 Consequences of Horn 2: "Divine Command Theory"

✓ Preserves God's Sovereignty

God is truly the ultimate authority. Nothing is above Him—He defines good and evil by His very nature and commands.

✓ Grounds Moral Obligation

We have clear reason to obey: because the Creator commands it. Morality has definite source and authority.

⚠️ Problem: The Arbitrariness Objection

Could God command murder, torture, or cruelty—and make them good? If He could, morality seems arbitrary and terrifying.

Moral Horror

⚠️ Problem: Empty Praise

Saying "God is good" becomes meaningless—it just means "God does what God commands," a tautology with no content.

Circular Definition

🛡️ Proposed Solutions: Escaping the Dilemma

The Third Option Aquinas, Augustine

God neither conforms to nor invents the moral order. His very nature IS the standard of goodness. Morality flows from who God essentially is— not from arbitrary commands or external rules.

Divine Simplicity Stump & Kretzmann

God and goodness are identical. There's no separation between God's nature and moral truth—they are one and the same thing. The dilemma presents a false dichotomy.

Modified Divine Command William Alston

God is the supreme standard of morality and acts according to His necessarily good character. His commands aren't arbitrary because they flow from His unchanging nature.

Necessary Goodness Robert Adams

God is necessarily loving and good—He couldn't command evil even in principle. The "what if God commanded murder?" scenario is metaphysically impossible, like a square circle.

💭 Modern Applications

Secular Ethics: If morality is independent of God, then atheists can access moral truth—challenging claims that "without God, everything is permitted."
Religious Pluralism: If God commands what's good (independently true), different religions might all be tracking the same moral reality.
Problem of Evil: If God is bound by goodness, does this help explain why He permits suffering? Or does it make theodicy harder?

📜 Historical Context

The dialogue takes place in 399 BCE, just before Socrates' trial for impiety. He encounters Euthyphro, who is prosecuting his own father for murder— believing it's the pious thing to do.

"Is the pious being loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is being loved by the gods?" — Socrates, in Plato's Euthyphro (10a)

The dilemma has been discussed for over 2,400 years and remains central to philosophy of religion and meta-ethics. It appears in:

Interestingly, Plato uses this dialogue partly to critique traditional Greek religion, where the gods often behaved immorally. The dilemma suggests their commands cannot be the ultimate source of goodness.