var Answer_A = "Not everyone believes in God." var Answer_B = "It is impossible to know, with certainty, what God has commanded." var Answer_C = "Whatever you believe God has told you to do is what you ought to do." var Answer_D = "If God had commanded things like lying and murder, then those would be just as moral as truthfulness and respect for life actually are." var Feedback_A = "Wrong - this is true, and it is a problem for any version of the divine-command theory, but it is not an implication of any interpretation of the divine-command theory." var Feedback_B = "Wrong - this is probably true, and it is a problem for any interpretation of the divine-command theory, but it is not an implication of any interpretation of the divine-command theory." var Feedback_C = "Wrong - the first interpretation of the divine-command theory does not say, or imply, this." var Feedback_D = "Correct - the first interpretation of the divine-command theory leaves it open that God could have commanded anything, and it would then be right." var Question = "What is the first problematic implication of the first interpretation of the divine-command theory that Rachels mentions?" var Question_number = "2"