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Originally posted by jsobecky
Neither do I, now that you mentioned it. That possibility never crossed my mind. That's what I love about ATS.
Thanks for the (missing) link.
Originally posted by supercheetah
Originally posted by AceWombat04
... My belief is that we are more than the sum of our parts, however, as others have stated, that does make my belief factually correct.
It does or does not make it factually correct? Did you mean the latter?
Anyway, everything you wrote in that post is beautifully ambiguous, and can't really be measured, and so it's more art than science, which is great, but it's just not science.
Originally posted by supercheetah
You seem to be playing pedantics here. I used to try to get people to understand the difference between ethics and morality, but I gave up that battle to fight more important battles.
Originally posted by liquidself
I have to say that I find the concept of morality repugnant. These discussions seem to be revolving around the concepts of rationality and choice, which are simply not used by animals. This does not make them any less aware or rob them of the ability to feel pain and indignity. Animals are masters of feeling and sensing. Morality is a system of beliefs developed over time in a culture usually for the purposes of societal control. What scientists conclude about morality is not of very much interest without an examination of what morality is. The preying mantis rips the head off its male partner and eats it at the conclusion of mating - is this moral? The attempt to find evolutionary reasons for morality is headed towards extinction - morals are nothing more than behavioral habits inculcated by society. Do animals have ethics? seems more germane to the discussion. The obsession with finding genetic reasons for isomorphic behaviors is at full bloom. The logical result is to find ourselves consigned to a genetic fatalism that obviates choice.
Also, notice that the animals in question are social creatures. Praying mantises are not social. Social cohesion through some form of ethics is of far greater import to social creatures than to non-social ones like praying mantises.
Finally, genetics do not dictate the type of person any of us becomes. They give us a foundation for being human that we use to build ourselves within the environment we live. Living in certain environments may mean that certain genes are never expressed, but are in others. There is no genetic fatalism--only genetic predispositions.
Originally posted by liquidself
Given the context of the article I'd you are right that mantisses are not a fair comparison - but my point is that even chimpanzees exhibit a full range of behavior related to human social groups, not just the sympathic ones. The idea that morality has a precursor in primates is not really all that shocking to me; I suspect (very) early humans/hominids had tribes and relatively complex social groups/tribes without really being sentient or rational in the strictest sense. The dividing line here for me is the use and understanding of metaphor - no animal understands the concept of a universal - if chimpanzees understand metaphor then they would be sentient to my way of thinking (and I do not rule this out - but that I would say they were able to learn it from humankind).
Morality often seems to me to be an add-on or adjunct to instinct; instinct is akin to an inherited habit; if a morality is not aquired environmentally then it must be an instinct.
It seems that these scientists involved in this work are re-examining the old philosophical idea of trying to observe the human in a "state of nature" (ala Hobbes), a purpose for which primates have been used for quite some time now. The problem is that I often notice a great deal of social projection into those humanlike animal groups; when scientists thought of evolution being soley about dominance and agression, then that was what they saw in those primate groups. Now that it is slowly being understood that cooperation is possibly a superior survival strategy to competition they are now seeing that in animal groups as well, when in reality it was there to be seen all along.
There is sometimes a tendency to think that science is somehow either the only way of knowing (and I am not referring to mystical knowledge here either) or that science is somehow totally distinct from other questioning disciplines - which is not the case. Every scientific venture has its axiomatic assumptions which influence perception. This issue is not just pedantic, but underlies many battles.
You're missing the point completely, and that is that morality isn't some human invention like most of philosophy, or given to us by some external superior being(s) as religion touts, but rather that it's a part of us like our hearts. It's something that's been around even before any human evolved.
Originally posted by LastOutfiniteVoiceEternal
Every thing is linked to every thing.
Philosophy comes from biology as does biology from philosophy.
All these recent news articles are becoming more and more miss leading and, excuse my language, stupid.
Originally posted by jsobecky
I don't know. If it were part of the local ecosystem, it would seem to me that at least one other species would have evolved in the same way.
Originally posted by supercheetah
You're missing the point completely, and that is that morality isn't some human invention like most of philosophy, or given to us by some external superior being(s) as religion touts, but rather that it's a part of us like our hearts. It's something that's been around even before any human evolved.