Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Jan 18, 2023 8:14 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jan 18, 2023 6:23 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Jan 18, 2023 5:21 pm
Evolutionism doesn't eliminate God, though.
Well, you can still posit a kind of Deistic "god," of course; but then you've got to wonder what the point is of having any reference to God at all.
I already wonder what the point of having any reference to God is.
Yep, I know.
But being able to know what morality is, would be a big "point" -- not the only "point" or the most important "point," but certainly a "point."
But the chief problem is that it, rather incoherently, makes man merely an animal, and one that has no particular moral orientation or duty, and no Fall from which to be saved.
Even if you think that is a valid argument, which I don't, it isn't an argument for the existence of God, it is just an argument for believing in God whether he exists or not.
It's not intended to be an argument for God. It's not even intended to be an argument against Evolutionism,
per se. But it's an automatic consequence of rationally-consistent belief in a universe without God.
But man is merely an animal,
I don't think anybody actually believes that. If they did, they'd believe also that mankind had no moral duties at all. So they couldn't even argue that man had any special duty to, say, "conserve the planet." After all, we don't ask foxes and rabbits to do such things.
We just consign them to Beatrix Potter.
I don't really understand what the fall from which to be saved is about.
It means that man is alienated from God, by his/her own doing. (That won't come as any surprise to you, if you don't even think about Him, or regard Him as an issue.) And it means that man's happiness and blessedness will only come about when he is restored to God. "Saved" means, then, being delivered from the self-absorption and destructive business of life without God, and being delivered to a joyful relationship with God.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote: I really don't see what implications evolutionism has for morality.
Oh, that's easy.
In a universe created by accident, there is no such thing, objectively speaking. Whatever "moralities" people may proposed, whether Kantian, Millian, Habermasian, Rortian, Nietzschean, Randean, Humean...and so on, are all merely "feelings" people have, but are unrelated to reality. There is no moral truth "out there" to be discovered anymore. Morality becomes merely a human invention, or an odd intution purposelessly thrown up by accidental processes of nature. And as such, it's no longer at all binding...and can only be made binding by the use of power.
In other words, the alternative to morality grounded in God is morality purely based on power. And power...well, what's moral about bullying people into doing things they maybe don't want to do?
You are right, there is no such thing as morality, objectively speaking.
Oh, I didn't say that. All I said is that it WOULD be true, IF Evolutionism were true. Of course, I think both are untrue.
Morality is entirely a matter of subjectivity, if it were objective, it wouldn't be morality, it would just be accepting predetermined rules.
No more than accepting the "rules" of good diet and exercise are unhealthy. But if it were subjective, then it's nothing: "moral" would just be a placeholder for "what IC likes," not a synonym for "actually good or right."
I disagree that we have a sense of morality through accidental processes.
I disagree with that, as well. I think it's no accident.
Man is a social animal, so it makes sense that natural selection would favour any feature that enabled him to live among his kind without too much conflict.
Except that is only sometimes. Sometimes, for example, reproduction favours the promiscuous, and survival favours the thief, and devil-take-the-hindmost is the way to get ahead...so long as you don't get caught.
But how do we prove that man has a duty even to survive? Species go extinct all the time, and we don't call them "immoral" for dying out. Evolutionism posits a very wasteful process, in which most of its attempts at "evolving" are abortive, and for every successful mutation there are billions of dead failures and false-starts. Yet that's not what we see.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote: I'm sure that even that arch villain Dawkins doesn't suggest that a benefit of dumping creationism and God would be our freedom to lower moral standards.
He's not that courageous. But he does come very close to it.
"In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won't find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but pitiless indifference.” (quoted from River Out of Eden)
I completely agree with the green quote as being an accurate description of nature's attitude towards morality. I have, therefore, no choice but to concede that Dawkin, no doubt, must conduct himself in the manner of an unprincipled savage.
Why would you think that? Do you have any reason to imagine he's consistent? I don't.
And worse, it seems that I, too, must must change my ways and do likewise.

Well, you don't HAVE to. Remember? You have no duties. So you can behave in ways that others regard as "moral" when you want to, and then be as "immoral" as you find it useful to be when they're not watching. Or you can carry on behaving in conventionally "moral" ways, and enjoy fooling yourself that you're meeting a moral standard that has nothing behind it, and fulfilling duties you don't actually have...
That's the thing about the impersonal universe: it lets you do whichever you please. That's one of its great attractions.
I think the most courageous thing Nietzsche did was to go out in public with that ludicrous moustache of his.
Do you remember the cereal called, "Muffets"? His moustache always looked like half a muffet, to me.
Did not Freud say he thought relgion was about wanting a father-figure? Then what is Atheism about, except wanting to klll that same father?
Why can't atheism be about not needing a father figure?
For the same reason a child cannot be without a father. Because God exists, and man, despite his delusions of self-sufficiency, actually does need God, or he's dead.
Anyway, the point is, that by overcoming my fear in order to perform my moral duty, I was rewarded with the removal of most of the fear I have of needles.
Moral duty? But what moral duty can you possibly actually have? If there's no God, how can you "owe" anybody, whether your neighbours or the authorities, to get a shot, or do anything else?
I suppose they can force you, or guilt you into it, if you're inclined to that. But would you actually be a "bad" person if you simply refused? For that matter, would it be "bad" to cough into grandma's face, while COVID positive?
On an Evolutionary account, no. That would be perfectly optional. In fact, you might decrease the population of the weak, and thus progress the race by way of survival-of-the-fittest. Granny's old, you know.
