If you’re talking about consciousness being deterministic, then no. The data currently doesn’t point anywhere.
Friendly reminder, the default is “undefined”. Not “no”.
No I am referencing that all justified answers, at this point, are all necessarily restricted to natural explanations until there is justified evidence of another realm that has a causal link to influences in this reality. Thoughts, emotional states, consciousness, etc. are all, necessarily, restricted to natural explanations until there is a justifiable distinction between the imagined idea of the supernatural and that it is actually there. Until that is established, using the supernatural as an explanation for anything is not valid.
First you have to have a justifiable reason for concluding that the supernatural realm even exists at all and then you have to justifiably conclude that experiences in this realm are influenced by the supernatural.
Just as you can justifiable conclude there is an underwater realm with fish. But that does not mean that those fish are the cause for something outside of the underwater realm. Those fish have been demonstrated to not be a causal link to events outside of their realm. How is it possible to demonstrate at all that the supernatural interacts in this reality at all and that it is even there at all? At this point it is indistinguishable from a literary idea and so, the default, null-hypothesis is to continue to hold a disbelief that the supernatural is a possible explanation for anything.
That sounds nice, but then how do you actually flesh out rules for everyone to follow? When do we act for self and when do we act for community? Why did you draw the lines where you drew them?
Same way religious do it as well, we have to have a conversation and find the most common overlap of what most of the people believe is the human experience. Such as life is preferable over death, non-pain is preferable over pain, equal rights is preferable over special privilege, etc. It’s like the idea of nutrition. People that believe that nutrition is not a goal to strive for have died off and we are the results of people that valued nutrition. So we can argue over my tribe preferring apples to your tribe’s oranges for the goal of nutrition, but everyone can objectively conclude that drinking battery acid is bad, in reference to nutrition. So to the people that don’t believe that the goal of human morality is human well-being, they tend to be fringes, the psychotic, etc. The vast majority of the overlapping norms of the human condition is the bar that sets the goal of the idea of “human well-being”.
We can get the lines wrong, but we have the mechanisms for correcting it when the lines are wrong through reason and debate. We are not stuck in the dogma of these lines. We have to be convinced that these lines are the correct ones to follow. Otherwise we are just acting as a-moral people, robots not assessing situations to see if the action was a moral action or not. That’s what divine command theory is; to follow the dear leader’s orders regardless if you assessed it as a moral action or not. I don’t see how religion has a built in correcting mechanism when the ruled disagree with the commandments of their leader or holy texts.
Because rules that appear arbitrary are readily broken. If the basis isn’t in some notion of absolute and inescapable justice then whether you steal your neighbors things comes down to probability and cost estimates of getting caught.
Rules are never arbitrary, they just are not explained properly to the people that believe they are arbitrary. Every rule is reasoned and discussed, even if the discussion is only within the dear leader’s head or council members. No one ever just made a decision/rules for actions without thinking about it. There may be bad reasons and being short sighted, but with that new feedback from running the rule experiment, we can correct those rules. I really can’t think of a single rule that has ever been just “arbitrary”. It’s just arbitrary to the people that disagree with it and don’t understand why it was created. Every action is a cost benefit analysis since we are limited timed creatures with a limited energy supply that we must constantly refuel. Every decision is based on an analysis of reality for what you gain for the amount of resources it took to reach that goal.
Honestly, I’ve read several atheists that agree with this particular point. The sky-fairy myth keeps the lights on and some semblance of social order.
So, it’s like the santa idea for kids then. Great, but wouldn’t it be better to know that santa is actually there though. I have rituals too, like looking both ways before crossing the street and making sure I put time aside to invest in the relationships I am in. I still get the social benefits and good life from those rituals as well. But at least I can point to reality to show why doing those rituals has a positive result over not performing those rituals.
As it’s axiomatic, there isn’t really anything you can do about it. We’re left with appealing to the consequences of our systems in the exercise of the human condition. I think the theistic life has better outcomes as it pertains to broad humanism. Ergo, one reason I’m a theist.
Is it better in the long run though to keep people using a lucky rabbits foot for their psychological well being in this reality? Maybe we are just wired that way, such as punching the ground when we are frustrated. I could get on board with people presenting religion as that, the equivalent of a yoga meditation class. But don’t present the idea that chi, chakras, healing crystals, prayer, deities, spirits, etc is an actual thing of reality though.