But religions are historically the only carriers of a codified moral messages . Only recently have reciprocal intentions been codified by secular authorities, after the American and the French revolutions and the United Nations (Unilateral Declaration of Human Rights).These grew out of previous religious morality and did not arise de novo.Harbal wrote: ↑Tue Jul 19, 2022 9:21 amA society who's members did not conduct themselves according to any moral guidlines would not function very well, if at all. As I am a member of society it is in my interest to behave within a moral framework with regard to the other members of it, because only then can I expect those other members to behave within a moral framework towards me. Human beings are social animals, and our capacity for moral sensibility is hard wired into us. It makes sense to behave morally, because otherwise the benefits we derive from living socially would not be possible, and this is the rational basis on which I assert morality gets credit.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jul 19, 2022 3:14 am
Who is giving this "credit" of which you speak?
What is the "crediting" agent, or the rational basis for asserting that morality gets "credit"?
I don't actually believe that, say, a Christian and an atheist are motivated by different things when thy both believe that stealing is wrong and so refrain from doing it. The wrongness of stealing is inculcated into them by the society they are born into and grow up in. Were they both to give in to temptation and pocket money that did not belong to them, they would both experience exactly the same pangs of conscience.
If there is a difference between religious and secular morality, It probably shows up more in the case of victimless breaches of supposed morality. I am calling it victimless even though those who practice it are quite often the victims. A Catholic, for example, is told by his church that contraception is wrong, so he does not practice contraception, even though he, himself, might not see any good reason for that particular edict. In instances such as this, religious morality not only lacks the superiority you claim for it, but can also be down right harmful.
Harbal wrote:
Probably true. However our ability to cooperate has been channelled into tribalism and tribal interests , and tribal goals still survive when for instance a nation or a religious sect such as the RC Church make people more devoted to the authority than to the people the authority pretends to serve. Religions as institutions deserve to be blamed for their bad intentions but religions have been the only conservers of the Christian message of universalisation , all men are equal.Human beings are social animals, and our capacity for moral sensibility is hard wired into us.
Baby and bath water. Religions are not instituted by some supernatural presence but by men and it's men who will reform religions so that not the tribal but the universal message rules.