Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Dec 18, 2023 8:45 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Dec 18, 2023 5:53 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Dec 18, 2023 12:32 pm
Objectively speaking, I don't think we have a duty towards other human beings in general,
Right. Well, that's certainly the logical conclusion of Evolutionism: one cannot have a duty to such creatures as we are told we are.
Well it isn't really anything to do with whether we think evolution is how we got here.
Sure it is. What we think we are matters immensely to any justification of duty to each other.
Duty is something we either impose on ourselves, or have it imposed on us by some human authority, in which case we may or may not accept it. Both morality and duty are purely human concepts.
If that's so, then duty is merely an illusion. We don't actually owe it to each other: we just make it up, if we want to, or ignore it, if we don't.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:it's just that Christians do seem to think they have a duty,
Yes, we do.
But that also makes sense, given our worldview. For Christians, man is a creation of God, dignified by having been given by Him life, volitional liberty and stewardship of the world, and accountable to God for his use of all that. So we have duties to God, but also duties toward each other, since each is seen to be not some accidental byproduct of a universe run on nothing but time, chance and accidental happenings, but deliberate creations of a God who is their benefactor, and to whom they are answerable.
In other words, people are not property of their societies or of themselves, or answerable to either; if they have an "owner," so to speak, or anybody to whom they are responsible, it's God.
That is fair enough, and I don't have a problem with their attitude towards God, but neither am I interested in it. If their behaviour in respect of others is admirable, I will credit them for that, but I don't recognise any virtue in their loyalty or obedience to God.
That's fine. I understand that perspective.
If I admire somebody for putting time and effort into doing work for charity, the fact that I don't believe in God, but do believe the theory of evolution, causes me nor anyone else a problem.
Well, unless you think it's a problem for people to believe in things that are unreal -- and unless I mistake your critique of Theism, that's exactly what you do think.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:...admiring them on subjective grounds.
Which you can do, of course: at the risk of having no actual grounds for doing so, since the deep truth Evolution teaches is that that is all nonsense. It's not just "subjective," but also "merely subjective," being a misunderstanding of how things actually, objectively are.
What am I risking by admiring someone for doing good, but not having "actual" grounds for doing so?
Deluding oneself. If you think that's a "bad" thing.
Evolutionism would instruct you to think that you were merely imagining things.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:We all want to be treated well by others, but we can't expect it if we don't treat them well in return, even if we don't care about them.
That's partly true, of course. But only partly.
The other side is that it's very often to our own advantage not to treat others well. So we become only selectively "moral," in that we do what is socially convenient when it's personally convenient. But when we find it inconvenient, we become treacherous. That's very much how human nature, when ungoverned by objective morality, tends to behave. We do right only until we really don't want to.
Yes, we are quite often conflicted between self-interest and doing the "right thing", but, as you say, that is an aspect of human nature, and which direction we go in has more to do with our character than our religious beliefs, I would say.
But think about that claim: that is "has more to do with our character." If we believe the Evolutionists, there's no such thing as "bad character" or "good character." All there is, is the nature of the beast; and beasts do whatever beasts do...it's never good or bad, morally speaking. So there's no such thing as "character," far less "having a
good character."
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:The accidental/random aspect of evolution is an essential part of the process, but it isn't what determines the final outcome, and you probably understand how natural selection works better than I do. I suppose that when we first evolved legs, we could have refused to walk on them, but along with the legs we were also provided with the impulse and instinct to use them, and so it seems to be with our sense of morality.
It's not at all obvious that morality is a survival advantage. Very often, being moral merely gets one silenced, cancelled, excluded, abused or even martyred.
I disagree that morality has not given us an advantage in respect of our success as a species.
Oh, you can argue that it's in the interest of the species to be "moral," in some sense, even though that remains debatable. However, it's often not at all in the interest of the individual: and it's at the level of the individual that our moral determinations all take place.
It's like that "selfish gene" nonsense, that Dawkins is so fond of. "Genes" don't make moral determinations; people do. And survival, as Darwinism tells us, is a primary practical imperative for them. Being "moral," is optional.
What's more to the point is that it's probably an advantage to me, as a selectively-moral Atheist, that you should behave morally, while I do not. It makes you predictable and useable to me. As Nietzsche said, that you are "enslaved" to a particular conception of morality renders you vulnerable to MY machinations as a moral "superman" who does not need to follow the same rules. If that's so, the true "survival advantage" lies not in total immorality, nor in total morality, but in my power to use and discard morality whenever I like.
Yes, this happens...So, anyway, I think you have scored something of an own goal with that argument, because it demonstrates that religiously motivated actions can sometimes lead to morally catastrophic outcomes.
I wouldn't say it's anything like an "own goal." After all, I'm speaking in the voice of an Evolutionist, not a Theist. But you're right that some religious views can advocate very wicked things. So it's not just a question of "religion," but of "which religion," and then as well, of how obedient to that religious morality the individual in question is.
But whatever the case, since the deep truth is supposed to be that morality is just an accidental "burp" from an indifferent universe, I, as the Nietzschean superman, have zero obligation to care it's there at all.
I don't think most people analyse their moral sense to that extend, and neither do most people know anything about Nietzsche.
They really should. Because what Nietzsche did is to analyze their suppositions in a more rigourous and logical way than they, themselves, often find themselves able to do. He showed clearly where secular "moralizing" all ends up, if we follow the logic of Atheism rigorously.
That's useful: because before one starts down a road, it's a good idea to know where it ends.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:Yes, lots of people might think we should just get over it, but evolution has seen to it that that is easier said than done.
You're now speaking of Evolution as if it has a "plan." It's "seen to it," you say: and the implication seems to be that if Evolution has "seen to it" that something is so, then we are supposed to bow what it has "seen to". But I don't see why that would be -- unless we are regarding Evolution as some sort of demi-god that is able to plan, intend, direct, "see" and issue moral necessities to us.
But is not that sort of "magical thinking" exactly what Evolutionism is supposed to free us from?

No, you have misinterpreted me. Evolution has no teleological element to it.
Well, I thought you'd resist that suggestion: but then I can't make sense of your claim that Evolution "has seen to it" that anything in particular happens. It's like saying, "The roulette wheel has seen to it Iost my shirt at the casino." Assuming the roulette wheel is not 'fixed' by somebody, there's no malevolence on the part of the roulette wheel, just as there is no benevolence in evolution: both just do whatever it is that randomness produces.
So we needn't take seriously anybody's claim that Evolution "wants" us to do anything, or that it "has arranged that we must/should" do or be anything. Evolutionism's blind, deaf, dumb and morally indifferent to whatever happens.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:I think the thread title highlights the problem of the muddle and misunderstanding most conversations about morality seem to suffer from, which is one of over simplification. It reduces the question down to one thing or the other. When I say that morality is subjective, I don't mean that morality itself does not have an objective existence, because it clearly does, albeit in an abstract sense, and confined within the bounds of human psychology, rather than having an intrinsic presence in nature or the universe. It is the nature and content of our own, individual, morality that is subjective. Our moral values are the subjective part of morality.
THAT something called "morality" exists is obviously an objective fact. But whether that thing we call "morality" is LEGITIMATE is the problem.
Morality serves an important function, and no less so for being secular, so viewing it as legitimate is not a problem for me.
It should be. One has to ask whose "function" it's serving. It's not everybody's, clearly: some people end up on the condemned, guilty, sacrificed or punished side of morality. That may "function" for those who put them there; but it certainly doesn't "function" for them. And the people who put them there cannot even themselves explain why the morality that put them there is the "right" morality.
That's pretty cold, if that's how things are.
But one thing is obvious: that if Atheism is true, then an Atheist doesn't have any real obligation to be moral. He can be, or he can not be. It's up to him. And another Atheist, looking on at him, is unable to find firm and objective grounds to say whether that makes the first Atheist "good" or "bad," or nothing in particular at all...at least in reference to his moral condition.
That seems a strange way to describe the situation, or at least how you perceive it, but it doesn't go anywhere towards showing that the alternative to it is actually the truth.
I was merely pointing out the holes in Atheist moralizing; I wasn't trying to make the case for an alternative yet. But realizing that Atheist moralizing makes no sense drives us to a choice, rationally speaking. Namely, we realize that if we are rational persons, we either have to give up moralizing altogether, or give up our Atheism. But we can't really have both, because they contradict each other.
...my point was that people more often act on emotion and sentiment than on rationality, so the lack of a rational reason is not an impediment to living up to moral standards.
Which ones? WHOSE moral standards is anybody supposed to be living up to? You say that such standards simply cannot be objective -- very well, then why would you even be concerned as to whether or not somebody was "living up" to them? Heck, how do you know that what they're "living" to, is even in the direction "up"? Maybe living according to something like Sharia law is "down"? Or maybe it's nothing at all. From an Evolutionary perspective, how is one to tell which "morality" is the one that moves in the right direction?
It looks like you're taking your own moral presuppositions as a
given -- as the "living up to" thing. If people "live up to" the sorts of basic moral precepts to which Harbal is accustomed, then they are "living up"; but what if they don't? What does Harbal say then, since he also says morality is not objective?