T
Tantum_ergo
Guest
Actually, I’m quite aware of the topic.You might find interesting Sam Harris’ book The Moral Landscape, where he explores the implications of what neuroscientists are discovering about our evolution of behavioral patterns.
Your posts strike me as coming from someone not aware of all of our findings in this area of biology. Social animals – unsurprisingly – have codes and rules that they follow, “hardwired” into them by the evolutionary process (i.e. their ancestors who were inclined to cooperate tended to survive – strength in numbers and all that – and passed on their cooperative genes).
For example, wolf packs have rather strict codes of behavior. There have been cases where we’ve observed wolves being literally exiled from the pack for violating one of their “laws” (one of the most serious being never to attack the young of the pack).
So, given all of this, it’s completely unsurprising that humans – being cooperative animals – similarly have a sense of “morality” hardwired into them naturally.
Sometimes, I use the analogy of a game of chess. Is there a “best” move in the game of chess? For example, is Knight to Q3 always the best move to make? It would be silly to declare one “the best” for no reason at all. But given a specific goal and a specific set of circumstances, it’s quite possible to determine the move or moves that would be the best ones to allow you to reach the goal (and it’s certainly possible to identify the ones that would absolutely hinder reaching that goal).
Similarly, our societies tend to be made up of people with common goals (cooperate, have private property, not get killed). Given those common goals and a specific set of circumstances, it is very possible to determine what we should be doing and what we clearly should not be doing and what we should try to discourage through laws.
Doubtlessly, someone will object, “But…but…that’s not absolute!” And of course it’s not. The universe doesn’t give two quips about what people do. There’s no cosmic record keeper watching you and marking ticks in his book when you do “good” things or “bad” things: “good” and “bad” are terms we’ve invented for discursive convenience – they don’t designate absolutes or imperatives.
And if you’re uncomfortable living in a universe like that, then too bad. You don’t get to choose what reality is like.
So exactly how did humanity and all the other ‘species’ on this planet manage not only to leap into existance but to leap in with hardwired code?
Where again is your ‘evidence’ that the "universe’ doesn’t give two quips about what people do?
You’re managing to take actual scientific data (a collection of both facts and theories) and then try to juxtaposition your own opinion into a ‘truth’ that there is no God. Just some ‘universe’ that came from nowhere and is going to nowhere yet from this random chaos has ‘evolved’ beings who exist with ‘purpose’. . .even though at the end that ‘purpose’ leads to nothing again but chaos. . .
I think you need to be more aware of the advances that theologians have made over the years in studying humanity!