| Philosophy General philosophy: metaphysics, ethics, the Enlightenment, and the human experience. |
08-10-2004, 05:07 AM
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#136 (permalink)
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Uppity Woman
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
Posts: 3,516
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Re: morality within evolution
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Originally Posted by juantoo3
Is either extreme then, transcendent or basic (animal), out of normal operating range for modern humanity?
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Hmmm, no. But I doubt any person spends all of their time in either extreme state. I think of it as a continuum of states with a bell curve representing where people are on the continuum at any given time. Individuals move between states constantly and the "average" human state also moves. The question I have is whether the top of the bell moves progressively toward the transcendent end of the continuum. Spiritual evolution, if you will.
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For the sake of discussion, is the "Lord of the Flies" society amoral if it is tune with the Tao? As presented in the book, because these were creatures raised into another moral model, the "paradigm shift" into a strange moral model would have been hugely taxing mentally. Culture shock in the nth degree.
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I am not fluent in Tao, not used to thinking in those terms, so that's why I avoid reflecting on Tao and Chi questions. However, as for the LOTF, I don't think a small group of people isolated from their moral base experience a paradigm shift. I (probably incorrectly) think of that phenomenon as something that affects larger society, a change that overtakes the old way of thinking, the previous model is replaced with a new model. It's been a long time since I read it, but I think TLOTF shows what happens when the societal checks and balances on our behavior are suddenly removed for a small group of people, in this case a small group of immature people. They have lost their moral base, they have to invent their own society, and a type of survival of the fittest quickly takes over. It's not like they suddenly inherited the accumulated wisdom and experience and morals of a culture that had adapted to island life over the millenia.
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But if those boys had been raised into that morality...their moral model would have been far less severe. They would have the trappings they were stripped of in the plane wreck; parents, family, a system with their betterment at heart, and more social support. Consider the LOTF process in reverse; bring a "savage" into the modern world, forcibly and decidedly.
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OK, I guess this is what I was talking about too, just didn't get you at first. I guess I'm thinking that if your moral ground is pulled out from under you and you have to start from scratch, it's likely that you will take on a survival of the fittest behavior until you, or your offspring, know where your next meals are coming from. What kind of God do you think people in this situation will find?
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True, but is it not wise to consider fitness? Our western civilizations are constructed to provide excessive abundance, and that abundance is to our detriment. Our people are overweight and lazy, or fitness nuts, both of which extremes can kill. And if nature is any respectable indicator, as scientists frequently tell us, then we are falling apart as a species and rotting on the vine, physically, mentally, and spiritually.
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We are no longer living in the environment our bodies are fittest for so we try to use our brains to adapt, and it works OK but not perfectly. The problem is that environment determines fitness and our environment is changing faster than we can understand it. We can't predict the weather tomorrow, much less the weather hundreds of years from now. How could we ever decide what would make us more fit for the changes ahead? We don't have to, and should not, worry about our genetic fitness. That is not to say that we should not try to understand and find cures for genetic disease. Oh boy, do I sense a whole other debate coming on??
How fragile we are, how fragile we are.
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08-10-2004, 05:24 AM
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#137 (permalink)
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Uppity Woman
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
Posts: 3,516
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Re: morality within evolution
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Originally Posted by Abogado del Diablo
Just to clarify, I don't advocate abandoning morality.
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Actually, I didn't really think you were advocating this, except in the role of devil's advocate, of course. I apologize for making it sound that way.
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Technically, I don't think I advocate anything. My point is simply that natural systems are an unlikely place to find a justification, meaning or order for the human moral impulse.
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Agreed.
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If indeed you start down the path of finding "morality within evolution" you may be putting yourself on the road to eugenics or something like it.
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I don't think you can find morality in evolution. It's interesting to explore the idea of just how much of our morality can be explained by natural selection, and where is the limit of our understanding of this phenomenon. As you pointed out earlier, it is ultimately a matter of faith whether we believe all of our virtues have a basis in evolutionary psychology or not, and whether this is even important.
Eugenics is abhorrent in its assumptions and methods, and without merit scientifically. Eugenics is immoral, and this time I am using the term the way I intend. I think you might agree--we just need to get to this point by our own reasoning.
Thank you for the poem. Makes me think about the term Vaj uses-"co-arising," is it? Again, I am not fluent in Eastern philosophy, so I'm probably way off base.
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08-10-2004, 05:26 AM
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#138 (permalink)
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Uppity Woman
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
Posts: 3,516
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Re: morality within evolution
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Originally Posted by alexa
Lunamoth, please don't stay to long in your trip ! In one day only, you'll find a lot to read !  I could't believe how many posts I had to read this evening.
And yes, you are right. I found the post juicy since the beginning ! 
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My bathrooms and floors are still not clean! So much to do, so little time. And I have been addicted to this thread.
Have a good week!
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08-10-2004, 05:50 AM
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#139 (permalink)
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somewhere in time
Join Date: May 2004
Location: mapple area
Posts: 721
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Re: morality within evolution
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Originally Posted by lunamoth
I don't think you can find morality in evolution. It's interesting to explore the idea of just how much of our morality can be explained by natural selection, and where is the limit of our understanding of this phenomenon. As you pointed out earlier, it is ultimately a matter of faith whether we believe all of our virtues have a basis in evolutionary psychology or not, and whether this is even important.
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I have another question : Are we really evoluated ? On one side we have countries with a huge economical developement and space programmes for future basis on other planets. On the other side, we have countries so poor, that their children have to work to survive. Worst, in 21st century we have cannibals among us.
We need morals to learn how to be a better person. I think this is the point in all children's stories : what can one learn from somebody's life. And we have an entire panoply of religions to support that. Finally, we can find morality only in human societies, societies with a great history and culture and religion.
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08-10-2004, 05:52 AM
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#140 (permalink)
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somewhere in time
Join Date: May 2004
Location: mapple area
Posts: 721
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Re: morality within evolution
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Originally Posted by lunamoth
My bathrooms and floors are still not clean! So much to do, so little time. And I have been addicted to this thread.
Have a good week!
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You, too ! 
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08-10-2004, 04:27 PM
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#141 (permalink)
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,945
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Re: morality within evolution
Namaste Juan,
thank you for the post.
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Originally Posted by juantoo3
True Vaj, but yet while I do not in any way presume to speak for Luna,
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we're all busy folks.. i'm sure she'll respond when possible... in the mean time...
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does she not mean the circuit, the connection back to the source?
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well... i don't quite know... hence the question
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The difference as I see it, is that all of nature, every living thing, is tied back to the source. Different "plugs" maybe, but all life (chi) is tied together, and to the source. Is this not the "web of life?"
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indeed... this would be a difference in how we view the universe, as it were. my view is that the entire universe is an organic whole.. everything exists in relationship to everything else... it seems that, as you outline above, all life is connected to each other, and then a connection from the totality to the source is established. my view would be slightly different as the source doesn't have a seperate link.. it is part and parcel of the "all life"... if that makes sense
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Consider the time Jesus cast the devils into the swine.
Or the talking ass that belonged to a prophet in the OT.
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interesting that you mention these two things... as an aside, do you view these as allegory, metaphor or literal?
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Spirit interacts with the whole of nature, down to and including the earth. Stones are alive.
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spirit IS nature and nature IS spirit, from my view. we can seperate these things into discrete bits to facilitate our ability to communicate, however, this is a lingusitic artifact and does not correspond with suchness, in my view.
the thing with the God shaped hole, however, is particular to a theistic view of the universe... it implies that morality flows from the source of morality, God, and that each human, as evidenced by a great overlap of morality, innately recognizes that God. some just openly rebel.
this is a subtle technique, to be sure, and it is a veiw that is perfectly valid to hold, i just don't happen to share it.
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08-10-2004, 04:41 PM
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#142 (permalink)
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,945
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Re: morality within evolution
Namaste lunamoth,
thank you for the reply.
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Originally Posted by lunamoth
Of course I did not coin this phrase--I think it is attributed to Sartre, whose name I can't even spell much less discuss how he meant this.
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oh, i know that you didn't coin the phrase.. it is one that gives me pause, however, as it displays a worldview which i do not share.
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To me it means that part of our make-up that causes us to search for higher meaning in our lives.
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i think that's a good thing.
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Could you tell us more about Anthropic Principle?
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sure enough... though, as my understanding of this topic is superficial, i'll let someone a bit more versed carry the explanation forward thusly:
The Anthropic Principle was proposed in Poland in 1973, during a special two-week series of synopsia commemorating Copernicus’s 500th birthday. It was proposed by Brandon Carter, who, on Copernicus’s birthday, had the audacity to proclaim that humanity did indeed hold a special place in the Universe, an assertion that is the exact opposite of Copernicus’s now universally accepted theory.
Carter was not, however, claiming that the Universe was our own personal playground, made specifically with humanity in mind. The version of the Anthropic Principle that he proposed that day, which is now referred to as the Weak Anthropic Principle (WAP) stated only that by our very existence as carbon-based intelligent creatures, we impose a sort of selection effect on the Universe. For example, in a Universe where just one of the fundamental constants that govern nature was changed - say, the strength of gravity - we wouldn’t be here to wonder why gravity is the strength it is. The following is the official definition of the WAP:
“Weak Anthropic Principle (WAP): the observed values of all physical and cosmological quantities are not equally probable but they take on the values restricted by the requirement that there exist sites where carbon-based life can evolve and by the requirement that the Universe be old enough for it to have already done so.” (The Anthropic Cosmological Principle by John Barrow and Frank Tipler, p. 16) Later, Carter also proposed the Strong Anthropic Principle (SAP), which states that the Universe had to bring humanity into being. This version is much more teleological, if not theological, and is of a highly speculative nature. Nonetheless, Carter had scientific reasons to propose it. The definition of the SAP) is as follows:
“Strong Anthropic Principle (SAP): the Universe must have those properties which allow life to develop within it at some stage in it’s history.” (The Anthropic Cosmological Principle, p. 21) In addition to the WAP and SAP, there are the Participatory and Final Anthropic Principles. The Participatory Anthropic Principle states not only that the Universe had to develop humanity (or some other intelligent, information-gathering life form) but that we are necessary to it’s existence, as it takes an intelligent observer to collapse the Universe’s waves and probabilities from superposition into relatively concrete reality. The Final Anthropic Principle states that once the Universe has brought intelligence into being, it will never die out. These two are also very speculative.
the interested reader is directed here for more thorough information:
http://www.physics.sfsu.edu/~lwillia...ple_index.html
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08-10-2004, 07:52 PM
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#143 (permalink)
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CODinside
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: istanbul
Posts: 226
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I hope am not spoiling this wonderful going thread,
but ive got one or two add-ons.. after spending ermmm apprx. 2 hours to read the whole thread couldnt help myself to dig into this burning debate ;
Ok, has anyone consider the morality's evolvement from the selfishness perspective? Let me :
"Why ought anyone be unselfish in the future?"
Because when we're selfish, it'll hurt the group. ..
But that answer on its own isn't enough of an answer because that answer itself presumes another moral value that we ought to be concerned about the health of the group. So, I'm going to ask the question, "Why ought we be concerned about the health of the group?" Nice question... Well, thank you.
The answer is going to be '"because if the groups don't survive, then the species doesn't survive."
Then you can imagine the next question. "Why ought I care about the health of the species and whether the species survives or not?"
You see, the problem with all of these responses that purport to be justifications or explanations for the moral rule, is that all of these things that are meant to explain the moral rule really depend themselves upon a moral rule before they can even be uttered. Therefore, it can't be the explanation of morality.
When I ask the question "Why ought I be concerned with the species?", the next answer ends the series.
The answer is, "I ought to be concerned with the species because if the species dies out, then I will not survive. If the species is in jeopardy, then my own personal self interests would be in jeopardy."
what was the point, sorry feeling dizzy
dad usually told me to not to stick my nose into **** that i dont know. he still does, though now im STRONGER.. and can beat him, but shall i? isnt it immoral? damn feeling dizzier 
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08-11-2004, 06:26 AM
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#144 (permalink)
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,737
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Re: morality within evolution
Kindest Regards, Vaj!
Thank you most sincerely!
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
indeed... this would be a difference in how we view the universe, as it were. my view is that the entire universe is an organic whole.. everything exists in relationship to everything else... it seems that, as you outline above, all life is connected to each other, and then a connection from the totality to the source is established. my view would be slightly different as the source doesn't have a seperate link.. it is part and parcel of the "all life"... if that makes sense 
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I'm not quite sure how I am read as "a connection from the totality to the source."? Perhaps something I wrote could be taken that way, but I think we are actually in agreement. Maybe I see an outside influence that potentially directs the flow of the river of life, or at least makes ripples in the water from time to time, but otherwise I think we are far more in agreement than not.
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interesting that you mention these two things... as an aside, do you view these as allegory, metaphor or literal?
(*"Consider the time Jesus cast the devils into the swine. Or the talking ass that belonged to a prophet in the OT."*)
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You have a valid question. I would whole-heartedly accept a knowledgable retort, particularly from bananabrain, but I have always viewed these events as real. Nothing in my later experience has given me specific cause to reconsider that view.
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spirit IS nature and nature IS spirit, from my view.
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Now we're getting somewhere. How then does nature relate to morality? Likewise, how then does spirit relate to morality? If you prefer, ethical actions. Does spirit lead humanity to ethical actions by way of "being more human?", or by way of "supressing the animal nature?" I suppose that demands the opposite question; does nature provide the source, base, ground of whatever that leads humanity to ethical actions?
If nature is spirit, and nature is neither moral nor amoral, is spirit neither moral nor amoral? If so, why morality in humans? What cause for morality? Love?
I rather like Luna's observation, of humanity operating in the tension built between the animal nature and spiritual transcendence.
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we can seperate these things into discrete bits to facilitate our ability to communicate, however, this is a lingusitic artifact and does not correspond with suchness, in my view.
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Agreed.
However, I am still eating my rice gruel.
I like the way I saw this described in a post sometime back. The words keep coming back, the lesson I took away. I've tried to refind it several times, I would love to thank the original writer here. They said something about being in a train station and looking at all of the trains. Being able to run off this and that about each and every one of the trains, but having never experienced it. That the only way to know where the train went, one had to pick one out and get on. The only way to truly "know" is to get on the train and ride. Well, I am still looking at the trains, trying to figure out which one is worth the ride.
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the thing with the God shaped hole, however, is particular to a theistic view of the universe... it implies that morality flows from the source of morality, God, and that each human, as evidenced by a great overlap of morality, innately recognizes that God. some just openly rebel.
this is a subtle technique, to be sure, and it is a veiw that is perfectly valid to hold, i just don't happen to share it.
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May I accept that, as in the past with gluadys, there is a term here you are uncomfortable with? I am not aware of any association with the term, and I can understand your detachment for certain implications, but I am not aware of it being a byword or buzzword with any extra-curricular baggage. You are the last person here I would dare think to deliberately answer to with something I knew caused you anxiety. I may provoke thoughtful answers, but I would hope you see my questions in the sincerity they are meant. I greatly value your input into my wanderings and musings.
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08-11-2004, 06:34 AM
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#145 (permalink)
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,737
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Re: morality within evolution
Oh yes, Thank You very much for the bit about "Anthropic Principle." 
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08-11-2004, 06:50 AM
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#146 (permalink)
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,737
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not at all, welcome
Kindest Regards, PNG!
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Originally Posted by PersonaNonGrata
Ok, has anyone consider the morality's evolvement from the selfishness perspective?
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Actually, yes, Lunamoth did in post 109:
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And where did this need for morality come? It seems that the evolution of self-consciousness would be fairly detrimental to a selfish gene. Why all the extra baggage of morality? It seems to me that here is better "evidence" for God than in any claim from Intelligent Design about the structure of the eye. Not that we are perfectly created, but that we are imperfectly so. And yet, here we are.
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So...
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"Why ought anyone be unselfish in the future?"
Because when we're selfish, it'll hurt the group. ..
But that answer on its own isn't enough of an answer because that answer itself presumes another moral value that we ought to be concerned about the health of the group. So, I'm going to ask the question, "Why ought we be concerned about the health of the group?" Nice question... Well, thank you.
The answer is going to be '"because if the groups don't survive, then the species doesn't survive."
Then you can imagine the next question. "Why ought I care about the health of the species and whether the species survives or not?"
You see, the problem with all of these responses that purport to be justifications or explanations for the moral rule, is that all of these things that are meant to explain the moral rule really depend themselves upon a moral rule before they can even be uttered. Therefore, it can't be the explanation of morality.
When I ask the question "Why ought I be concerned with the species?", the next answer ends the series.
The answer is, "I ought to be concerned with the species because if the species dies out, then I will not survive. If the species is in jeopardy, then my own personal self interests would be in jeopardy."
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Yeah ... so? Are you saying that the individual has a greater chance for survival as part of a group? I think we covered that on page one. At a physical level you are correct. What are the moral implications? Which way is up?  How can you go with the flow, if you don't know which way the flow goes? Think beyond physical, think beyond mental. What truly IS?
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08-11-2004, 07:27 AM
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#147 (permalink)
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,737
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Re: morality within evolution
Kindest Regards, Alexa!
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Originally Posted by alexa
Are we really evoluated ?
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Oh my! We have spent many long posts discussing this in the past. I guess some depends on what it is you mean. Physically, I think it is fair to say we have changed physiologically over the brief span of history. We are generally taller, and have smaller lower jaws, just in the last couple thousand years. We are still human, but the adaptive mechanism does exist. The long running debate is whether or not that mechanism is deliberately manipulated, and on what time frame.
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On one side we have countries with a huge economical developement and space programmes for future basis on other planets. On the other side, we have countries so poor, that their children have to work to survive. Worst, in 21st century we have cannibals among us.
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I would think this is social evolution, not evolution in the strictest, Darwinian sense. Society is an artifact of life, not life itself. It does speak at a spirit level though.
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We need morals to learn how to be a better person. I think this is the point in all children's stories : what can one learn from somebody's life. And we have an entire panoply of religions to support that.
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Religion founded from a collection of children's stories? That is an interesting insight, I had always looked from outside of the family unit on this, meaning religion's association with politics and power. But ultimately mom teaches the kids, you are right.
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Finally, we can find morality only in human societies, societies with a great history and culture and religion.
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Do the Bushmen of the Kalahari have a society with a great history and culture and religion? Or Australian aboriginies practicing their native culture? Just checking. These societies have moral codes, I might add strong moral codes. Morality seems endemic, "natural", among humans. One can always find the exception to the rule, the "lone wolf," but as a rule humans are social animals. The only places and times throughout known history in which humanity thrived, it was as social animals.
I need to spend some time looking at what Brian suggested, I just haven't had the time. Animals do show an elemental morality. Especially the social, herding animals. Cattle. Antelope. Deer. Elephants. Whales.
Thank you very much, yours was a thoughtful response! 
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08-11-2004, 11:43 AM
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#148 (permalink)
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somewhere in time
Join Date: May 2004
Location: mapple area
Posts: 721
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Re: morality within evolution
[quote=juantoo3]I need to spend some time looking at what Brian suggested, I just haven't had the time. Animals do show an elemental morality. Especially the social, herding animals. Cattle. Antelope. Deer. Elephants. Whales./QUOTE]
Juan,
Do you mean we have to go back at the departure quay ? Oh God !
You let me without words !
Alexa
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08-11-2004, 06:34 PM
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#149 (permalink)
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CODinside
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: istanbul
Posts: 226
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Thank you, nice to take part..
Kindest regards back juan,
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Originally Posted by juantoo3
Kindest Regards, PNG!
Actually, yes, Lunamoth did in post 109:
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That was quite a long reading Juan, i guess i have missed that part, and i was a lil bit.. high vs low, to tell you the truth elephants were shagging in my head while was writing that stuff ;
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Originally Posted by juantoo3
So...
Yeah ... so? Are you saying that the individual has a greater chance for survival as part of a group? I think we covered that on page one. At a physical level you are correct. What are the moral implications? Which way is up?  How can you go with the flow, if you don't know which way the flow goes? Think beyond physical, think beyond mental. What truly IS?
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hmmmm... yeah good point.. so, thats what ive been thinking the other day, SO what? why on earth i wrote things like that...
p.s in the middle: (F* man, should have listened to my pa, and wouldnt put my nose into **** ive got a little idea about but wtf here my mind goes, what you are about to hear is myselves own thoughts travelling in my head...)
Ok now, I ought to be unselfish because it is better for the group, which is better for the species, which is better for me. So why ought I be unselfish?
Because it is better for me. But looking at what is better for me, is selfishness. So all of this so-called description of where morality comes from, gets reduced to this ludicrous statement: I morally ought to be unselfish so that I can be more thoroughly selfish.
That is silly. Because i know that morality can't be reduced to selfishness.
Why do i know that?
Because our moral rules are against selfishness and for altruism. They are against selfishness and for the opposite. When you think about what it is that morality entails, you don't believe that morality is really about being selfish. Morality is about being unselfish, or at least it entails that. Which makes my point that this description, based on evolution, does not do the job. It doesn't explain what it is supposedly meant to explain. It doesn't explain morality. It is simply reduced to a promotion of selfishness which isn't morality at all.
Morality is something altogether different. I may debate about all that moral views, but one thing we can all agree on, I think, is that when we are looking for a definition of morality, we know it isn't about selfishness. It is about not being selfish, just the opposite.
That's why these explanations don't work. They either smuggle morality into the balance by describing the behavior that is meant to be explained by evolution so they depend upon morality to do the job.
Else the descriptions and explanations end up being reduced to selfishness, which isn't what im trying to explain. I'm trying to explain why one ought not be selfish, not why one ought to be selfish.
thats it im over )
spend your time in some useful stuff mom cried, go buy some aubergine.
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08-11-2004, 07:09 PM
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#150 (permalink)
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~~~~~~~~~
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Gator Country, FL, USA
Posts: 4,737
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Re: morality within evolution
Kindest Regards, Alexa!
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Do you mean we have to go back at the departure quay ? Oh God !
You let me without words !
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Oh now, I would think a former poultry geneticist would enjoy such a ride! 
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