MobBoss said:
Close, simplified it would be instinct, religion, morals, law.
Close enough. So how does religion arise simply from instinctive behaviour? And might that same mechanism repeat, so that other animals operating only on instinct could discover religion?
Where does language fit in the timeline? Did language arise as something purely instinctive? Or did religion arise in the absence of language?
Nope, not a creationist loonie, but being a Pascals wager kind of guy, I like to keep my options open. I like to think my belief sufficient regardless of whether ID or evo is right or some odd combination of the two.
No problem. My statement was just to check that you wouldn't use the cop out of saying social behaviour didn't develop, that humans were plonked down 6000 years ago as we are now.
Its just survival instinct. A school of fish survives by staying together as opposed to being picked off singly. Ditto with other animals that work in groups for a common survival goal. Its what works for those animals, not driven by some need to care for one another.
There's a difference between a school of fish or a herd animal and social animals. Easy to show that travelling in a group makes you less likely to be picked off by a predator, but how does that explain more complex social behaviour? What about social behaviour in animals that have very few predators? Where's the benefit in it?
And as is stated to me so often in other arguments: Causation does not indicate correlation.

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My apologies, I didn't realise we'd switched back to actual logical arguments. And causation usually does result in correlation, BTW. It's correlation that doesn't imply causation.
Just because they exhibit the behavior does not mean that it is a result of the animals actually caring for one another as humans can.
Very true, and I didn't say it did. But you have made two contradictory statements. First, that animals that appear to be following the golden rule are doing it out of instinct, not altruism. Second, that the golden rule is in direct conflict with instinctual behaviour. Which one is it?
Still waiting to hear how humans managed to prosper as a social animal when everyone was acting purely in self-interest, with no thought for anybody else in the social group.
And still waiting for an example of an amoral religion too.