All quotes c&p from the thread on trusting atheists.
I'd go further than that. I'd say that the care & concern you're talking about, aka moral behaivour, is one of the main tools that allow social animals to thrive. Without that care being shown by a large percentage of the population, a successful society is hard to maintain.
Yeah. Although I think one of the reasons for that is lack of a complicated enough language. Language helps to codify moral behaviour, and to maintain the code, I see it as a prerequisite for the development of religion. I'd see the timeline as going roughly: moral behaviour & social animals thriving working in tandem and reinforcing each other, the development of language leading to the ability to codify morals, which in turn leads to proto-religions which developed further.
Not sure if it's been looked at at all, but I'm interested to go and see what I can find: What about other primates that have been taught language? Are they able to communicate what they think is right & wrong? The reasoning they're using, etc?
Why? Before someone has the ability to answer moral questions, can they actually show moral or immoral behaviour? So that would mean that if religion came first, it appeared before humans had the ability to exhibit moral/immoral behaviour, and it means that all the other species of social animals without religion don't have the ability to exhibit moral/immoral behaviour, yeah? In that case, what gives someone or something the ability to be moral/immoral?
sanabas said:On the which came first, religion or morals question, I have a question of my own: What enables someone or something to make moral or immoral decisions? Free will? Ability to analyse choices? Ability to weigh up consequences? You can't make a decision to be moral until you have the ability to be immoral, can you? So was it that religion first gave us our ability to be immoral? Or that the ability to recognise moral (aka helpful for the society as a whole) and immoral choices lead to trying to codify those rules to help the society, which is what turned into religion? Or something completely different?
ironduck said:Perhaps the concept of a moral codex comes about through the recognition of the worth of other beings. I'm thinking that other intelligent, social animals have a concept of morals on some level as they show care and concern towards their loved ones and interact on a fairly complex level with other members of their community. This is not only based on a strict ranking system.
I'd go further than that. I'd say that the care & concern you're talking about, aka moral behaivour, is one of the main tools that allow social animals to thrive. Without that care being shown by a large percentage of the population, a successful society is hard to maintain.
I'm not aware of any animals other than humans that have religious beliefs, I consider it a rather abstract concept that is based strongly in a need to explain deep rooted questions.
Yeah. Although I think one of the reasons for that is lack of a complicated enough language. Language helps to codify moral behaviour, and to maintain the code, I see it as a prerequisite for the development of religion. I'd see the timeline as going roughly: moral behaviour & social animals thriving working in tandem and reinforcing each other, the development of language leading to the ability to codify morals, which in turn leads to proto-religions which developed further.
Not sure if it's been looked at at all, but I'm interested to go and see what I can find: What about other primates that have been taught language? Are they able to communicate what they think is right & wrong? The reasoning they're using, etc?
mobboss said:Religion came first in my opinion.
Why? Before someone has the ability to answer moral questions, can they actually show moral or immoral behaviour? So that would mean that if religion came first, it appeared before humans had the ability to exhibit moral/immoral behaviour, and it means that all the other species of social animals without religion don't have the ability to exhibit moral/immoral behaviour, yeah? In that case, what gives someone or something the ability to be moral/immoral?