You found evidence of the existence of societies at the stage being discussed (pre 10,000 years ago( having things like slavery? THAT is what we are talking about, yes? Where evolutionary forces involved. Keep in mind "chance" includes taking advantage of tools we may come with << like the ability to immediately perceive relative quantity >>. LACKING that built in might make evolving "fairness" more difficult.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Nov 10, 2025 6:01 pm Hmmm...not nearly "good enough." If, for example, the precept that we should not enslave other human beings is merely a matter of "chance," then it's not binding in any way at all...even to the individual conscience. For if something is a mere matter of "chance," it means there was no necessity of it being the case at all. Evolution could just as easily have chance-generated that slavery would be moral as that it happens to be considered (by our local group) immoral.
If you insist on jumping ahead to our larger societies, yes, HOW we managed to expand "morality" to cover situations/interactions now possible is another question. But please note, "where does morality come from?" and "where does each and every rule of a moral system come from?" are NOT the same question.
IC -- when you say "morality comes from God" don't you mean just "the rules of morality come from God". Not "the knowledge of whether we are following or breaking one of these rules comes from God" . Unless by "comes from God" you are including that God placed that tree in the Garden in the first place (keeping with your mythos). In other words, if you were saying "morality comes from our ultimate progenitors having eaten of the fruit of the tree of knowledge (of good and evil) but the rules themselves come from God I could discuss this with you (I think YOUR text reads otherwise).