The proof is from morality.
I’m sorry, new here. I couldn’t figure out how to leave a comment.
Anyway, I didn’t understand why if the system of moral laws was created by God, then it is binding on us? (By the way, was it created by God, according to the Rabbi?)
(Why can’t the existence of that theoretical system of laws be justified in the same way that the existence of its creator – God – can be justified?)
If it is a response to an existing thread or column, there is a comment box at the bottom (or after a message you want to address in the middle of the thread) and you write in it.
The legal system is not an entity but rules. The rules are binding by virtue of someone who established them. Without such someone, the rules have no validity.
My fundamental argument is that in the absence of God, moral laws have no validity. I personally also believe that if God did create the system, it has validity. There are of course those who argue about that. But anyone who argues about the fundamental argument is simply mistaken.
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