The Big Bang generally refers to the idea that the universe erupted from a single hot and dense point, and is continually expanding, …show more content…
What is right and/or wrong? Are morals objective or subjective? If morals are objective, then something had to have placed it in our minds, and that something being a deity. You can argue and say that morals are objective and are put there by a deity, and if we all were to suddenly die the morals we had lived by would still exist. In that case, the only thing that makes any act wrong is by god prohibiting you from committing it. Now you can also argue that morals are subjective and that whatever you do is right according to you. But if that is true, then would that mean god does not exist. That would explain why we create morals from our own personal experiences and also from what we are taught by other authority figures. You can argue that anything god says to do is good because god is already good in his/her own way. So is love good because it is a part of god's nature, or is love a part of god's nature because it is already good? That is where subjective and objective morality collide. Each person needs to personally decide what would be right or wrong and how to act accordingly. Would it be wrong if you acted against god’s rules knowing it is morally wrong to yourself or would it be acceptable to god because you know it is wrong? Morality is a subjective way of thinking. Three hundred years ago they thought it was acceptable to hang people for expressing themselves. Morals change over time, which proves it is subjective and not something that stays the same. Proving that morals are not made by god, but by we as a collective see as right and