A
AntiTheist
Guest
I did. I ignored it because it’s irrelevant.You honestly didn’t read the last part of my post, did you?
Humans are indeed the only animals that use reason – to the extent that we do – to determine the best course of action, given the values that our nature and nurture have equipped us with.You can’t call survival behaviour “moral” or “immoral”… animals are not moral agents.
But the mere fact that we use reason to choose a course of action in no way means anything for this argument. Reason operates on values that have a biological basis and values that have a societal (nurture) basis.
Our behaviors are more complicated than those of other social animals – which we would expect, since we have higher brain functions – but they’re well in line with what we expect to see social animals doing.
There’s nothing contradictory about working together and also having a sense of private property.I also find it hard to believe that you call “cooperation” and “not wanting their things stolen” as two basic values when they are obviously contrary.
We’re also the only animals that can build racecars. So what? You can’t select some behaviors that differentiate us from other animals and use that to conclude that these behaviors can’t be natural.we are the only animals that can give the other cheek or love our enemies.
Atheists can and do endure pain and die for people and causes all the time. Whether it “makes sense” or not – and in what contexts it might “make sense” – is utterly irrelevant.For an atheist it would make no rational sense to endure such a pain for the sake of others, after all, your existence is the only one you can experience, unless you don’t value your existence, but then again, why would you value anyone else’s?