Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1

DIRTY HANDS


66

north of Asia Minor, including the land of
the Getae, about which he later wrote and
spoke. After Domitian’s death in 96 CE,
Dion was able to return and continue
his life as an orator. Being well-schooled
in both classical Greek traditions and
philosophical schools, Dion makes multi-
ple references to and offers critiques of
both. He is also one of the few sources
in existence on the Greek mystery cults.
Unfortunately, most of Dion’s discourses
have been lost (including his complete
discourse on the Getae). A total of 80 of
his discourses currently exist; the most
famous of these are his Olympic Discourse
and his four discourses on Kingship. The
details of Dion’s death are unknown, but
he was certainly alive and involved in a
lawsuit with Pliny the Younger in 112 CE.


DIRTY HANDS. A popular term for
the problem of persons who have done
ill in the process of bringing about
some presumed desirable ends. In the
fourth century CE, Basil the Great did
not excommunicate or punish Christians
who were soldiers (and who thus killed
during war), although he held that their
unclean hands made them unable to
take communion until three years after
their military service. Modern philoso-
phers have wrestled with the question of
whether some honorable practices (gov-
ernance) inevitability involve dirty hands
and that to deny this involves an imprac-
tical moral rigorism.


DISSENT. An important religious and
moral category, whereby a person may
claim allegiance to a religious community
or tradition and yet protest or not consent
to some community or traditional rule
or teaching. For example, one may claim
to be a faithful Roman Catholic and yet
dissent on church teaching about the
celibacy of priests or the impermissibility
of female priests.

DIVINE. See GOD.

DIVINE ATTRIBUTES. See ATTRI-
BUTES, DIVINE; and GOD, CON-
CEPTS AND “ATTRIBUTES” OF.

DIVINE COMMAND THEORY. The
belief that moral truths can be analyzed
in terms of God’s approval or disapproval.
Strong versions hold that moral truths
consist of what God commands, whereas
moderate versions claim that moral
truths can be analyzed in terms of God’s
approval or disapproval. On this view, X
is morally wrong entails God disapproves
of X. Some object to the strong version
on the grounds that an atheist can have a
clear comprehension of moral truths
while denying the existence of God. This
alone does not seem decisive, for one
can have a clear comprehension of some
things and properties (from water to
the concept of truth) without knowing or
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