It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Astyanax
reply to post by Pjotr
I don't think morality is learned. Moral precepts are, but morality itself is instinctive, the result of millions of years of evolution as social animals. As I said in an earlier post on this thread, altruism, exchanges of favours and adherence to the golden rule are all evolved traits -- traits we share with other social animals, as a matter of fact.
Empathy, too, is instinctive, indeed hardwired -- we have 'mirror neurons' in our brains which mimic the firing of neurons in the brains of those we see performing a particular action.
Being nice to other members of our own species (but differentially, with those most closely related being treated best, and the most distantly related being treated worse) is entirely natural to us.
Moral precepts adjust instinctive morality to the needs of a given culture. That is why such precepts differ from place to place and from time to time. As humanity has become more numerous and more interdependent, human contacts, especially between very distantly-related individuals, have multiplied. This means that, in order to avoid incessant conflict and preserve society, the kind of behaviour we once reserved for close relatives must now be applied to strangers. Morality must become more inclusive in order for the human race to survive.
And there are signs that it is -- though perhaps not on this thread.
Originally posted by tonyJ
Well Sacerd, how do you think this thread has gone?
I've checked back after a couple of days and skimmed through, I rarely post in this community, I rarely will again no doubt.
Have you found your answers?
Would you, if you please give your evaluation of the answers you recieved, ie: what it all means to you.
Has your outlook changed in any way?
Furthermore do you intend to read about evolution by reading works by evolutionary biologists, Dawkins for example?
Try Richard Fortey for a great read, not an evolutionary biologist but a great writer.
I hope you understand that I was not attacking you but just trying to get you to address evolution from an informed position.
I did note that I have been attacked in this thread and told that I have been talking nonsense, to respond would have been to derail your thread and I feel no need to defend myself from anything on this thread.
I hope you find motivation to learn about evolution, biology and paleontology, the ancient history of this very, very old planet we live on is fascinating. I wish you well in all you do, never stop asking questions...of anybody.
Nothing is better than an informed question.
Yes, it is instinctive on a certain level, but as soon as it caught in a theory of ethics as in religion happens we learn it.
1.) Do the Darwinist on this site, tend to also favor the ideas of social Darwinism as well? If not why?
2.) Do the Darwinists or evolutionist on this site tend to favor charity of the physically or mentally disabled? If so why?
3.) Do the Darwinist or evolutionist on this site tend to favor eugenics? if not why?
4.) Do the Darwinist or evolutionist on this site tend to favor forced sterilization or euthanasia, of the less fit specimens of the human race either mentally or physically? If not why?
Originally posted by AshleyD
From what I've read there is a difference between evolution (a scientific view held by both many religious and non-religious people) and Darwinism (materialistic philosophical view that incorporates evolution).
Loading the Language. The group interprets or uses words and phrases in new ways so that often the outside world does not understand. This jargon consists of thought-terminating clichés, which serve to alter members' thought processes to conform to the group's way of thinking.
Why would the OP ask such moral and ethical questions of people who accept a specific scientific model. It is safe to assume from those questions that the OP is questioning the morality and ethics of an individual purely because they accept a scientific theory. The OP obviously assumes that morality and ethics are affected by ToE otherwise he would not pose these questions. This is why it is unfair, as i previously state.
Darwinian thought completely fails to explain morality...Darwinian systems do not explain why people will act against self interest because the feel they "ought" to do something.
Natural selection, in ancestral times when we lived in small and stable bands like baboons, programmed into our brains altruistic urges, alongside sexual urges, hunger urges, xenophobic urges and so on. An intelligent couple can read their Darwin and know that the ultimate reason for their sexual urges is procreation. They know that the woman cannot conceive because she is on the pill. Yet they find that their sexual desire is in no way diminished by the knowledge. Sexual desire is sexual desire, and its force, in an individual's psychology, is independent of the ultimate Darwinian pressure that drove it. It is a strong urge which exists independently of its ultimate rationale.
I am suggesting that the same is true of the urge to kindness - to altruism, to generosity, to empathy, to pity. In ancestral times we had the opportunity to be altruistic only towards close kin and potential reciprocators. Nowadays that restriction is no longer there, but the rule of thumb persists. Why would it not? It is just like sexual desire. We can no more help ourselves feeling pity when we see a weeping unfortunate (who is unrelated and unable to reciprocate) than we can help ourselves feeling lust for a member of the opposite sex (who may be infertile or otherwise unable to reproduce). Both are misfirings, Darwinian mistakes: blessed, precious mistakes.
Dawkins, The God Delusion, p. 221
I have heard Dawkins speak and to be honest he seems a little condescending to me, I don't know I guess its his presentation just kind of puts me off.
Originally posted by Astyanax
reply to post by Pjotr
Yes, it is instinctive on a certain level, but as soon as it caught in a theory of ethics as in religion happens we learn it.
Very well put. And this, sadly, is where things start to go wrong for humanity.
Natural morality gets codified into a set of rules, implanted via indoctrination and enforced through punishment and stigmatization. In its origins, the effort is worthy enough - for thousands of years, it was the only way to protect and police human beings living in social groups larger than the genetically-related tribe. It's called religion.
But protecting communities also means fighting off enemies, both internal and external. So expressions of the various aggressive, defensive and violent instincts get rolled up into doctrine along with what is truly ethical in natural morality. Right and wrong become confused with good and evil and pretty soon murder and genocide are being regarded as moral duties.
Meanwhile, ambitious individuals realize that the doctrine and the moral code it incorporates are useful tools for personal advancement and social control. This further corrupts the doctrine and compromises morality.
The human price - call it the moral price - of using doctrine-based moral precepts to elicit good social behaviour from individuals has, I think, increased over the millennia. There are many reasons for this, too many to recount and explain in a short post. The price is now too high for humanity to afford. If we are not to throw away the unique chance that is now within our grasp - the chance to become the architects of our own destiny and have a hand in that of the universe - we have to replace doctrinaire morality with a theory of ethics based on a clear apprehension of right and wrong, not good and evil (I'm with Kant there, though like you I prefer Hume). This in turn will arise in large measure from natural morality.