Religion and Morality
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This is probably a rambling, but it is interesting to me at least, all comments and thoughts are welcomed.
When I think of religion, lots of different thoughts go through my mind, respect being one for it is essential (to me anyway)
that religon is respected. We have all seen the results of groups or individuals disrespecting others religous beliefs,
therfore it is a rather hot topic and deserving of respect.To some religion brings comfort, hope, desire, belief, reassurance and probably many more I cannot think of as it can
be a very indivdual experience and for others perhaps disapointment, anguish, pain and again many more emotions
and feelings that I cannot characterize, not easily in any event.Throughout history and indeed in todays modern world, social acceptance, governing laws and indeed morality are all
parts of both society and religion and I suggest that religion has played and still does a large part in this makeup
of our world.There are things I really do not like about religion, influences that have been bolted into leaders minds and influence
their decisions and how they deal and view with minority groups or groups they simply do not care for because religion
has taught them these groups behaviours are immoral and not to be encouraged but rather the reverse.Yet part of me is glad we have religion as without it would we ever have morality? Morality is after all
a man made concept is it not? Religious leaders have created moral frameworks throught our
lifes and our ancesters with the goal of establishing a way of life that keeps us out of despair and
anarchy. Without morality what type of species would man kind have evolved into? it is is certain
that the moral concept had to be created and thus someone had to do it and religion has certainly
been one of the main influencers in this respect. -
Ok james age quod agis seems to be a strange tautological statement because it can literally translate into do/make what you do/make.
Latins, to be precise, added a sense of achievement: do/make well/adequately what you do/make.
Following, if you want, this attitude, when you think to religion - you write - lots of different thoughts go through your mind. There is of course nothing bad in that because it doesn't seem in principle we have limits to the mental enrichment of a construction but, if you start from the enrichments, the heart of the problem is left untouched. So, the preliminary question should be imo:What do you/I/we all do/make when we undertake a religious attitude?
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Thanks, I can see where you are coming from and yes the underlying question is certainly about religious attitudes.
I guess what I am trying to really drill down to is the morality factor and religion as an influencer, did morality begin with
religion or has it been an evolving concept/characteristic within human nature?We know that many persecutions, scare tactics and more have been driven by religious organizations as history shows us, and yet despite these events, has religion saved us from a greater evil by binding us with morality and in effect helped us to evolve to the modern attitudes we have on morality?
I am not saying that every country, race or individual has the same moral consdierations, only that there is by and large a number of accepeted morals throughout the world, for example theft and murder to name but two. I am not particulalry good at puting my mindset into words, it is difficult to actually qualify what I am atempting to say.
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Thanks, I can see where you are coming from and yes the underlying question is certainly about religious attitudes.
I guess what I am trying to really drill down to is the morality factor and religion as an influencer, did morality begin with
religion or has it been an evolving concept/characteristic within human nature?We know that many persecutions, scare tactics and more have been driven by religious organizations as history shows us, and yet despite these events, has religion saved us from a greater evil by binding us with morality and in effect helped us to evolve to the modern attitudes we have on morality?
I am not saying that every country, race or individual has the same moral consdierations, only that there is by and large a number of accepeted morals throughout the world, for example theft and murder to name but two. I am not particulalry good at puting my mindset into words, it is difficult to actually qualify what I am atempting to say.
Thanks to you too james Whence am I coming from btw? :cool2:
Concerning the following question I'd say approximately the second one you have written.
Approximately because you put the question in terms of derivation, evolution or reciprocal influence. These things stand as always possible of course as ex-posts (that is to say things done/made after) but, while I assume a religious attitude, it doesn't seem to me I'm doing/making the same things I'm doing/making when I assume a moral/ethical attitude otherwise we wouldn't need two different words to denote them: religion/faith and moral/ethics.
Concerning the difficulty to actually qualify your mindset through words, I wouldn't worry about that. The language seems to be the more refined human means to give our mind activity a facies publica (that is to say the possiility of a public recognition) but you/I/we all generally experiment a bottleneck feeling passing from the mind activity to the words/language. For the simple reason mind activity comes before and is always richer than its exhibition :hug2: -
Did morality begin with religion or has it been an evolving concept/characteristic within human nature?"
A study on infants at Yale University may shed some light on this matter.
See for yourself:
hxxp://nyti.ms/qFDXGt
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Did morality begin with religion or has it been an evolving concept/characteristic within human nature?"
Historically and in many areas the answer would be NO… you do not get your morals threw religion, they are result of logic or rational thought about empirical enviromnental experiences mostly, and as Yale studies suggest some are already encoded in our genome... science has been a kind of kinder mentor, you do have no religious people and atheists which are far from immoral, secularism actually gave you most of your modern morals, and morality has vague defenitions, the morality is synched with the culture of the individual, can we say that the moral code or values of a warlord in Liberia are less moral than the one's one norwegian scientist has? Their entire reality is so distant, so let's regeneralize this; good and evil are concepts in evolution, the best way to further this is to analyse the defenition of religion and exemplifying... "thou shalt not lay with your neighbours wife" well, not because God would be really pissed with you, but also because that would lead logically to your neighbour get upset and perhaps do something drastic, and think about the time it was written... the poor women would be stoned, so you would loose your loved even if you got away, and well you could get an std from the neighbour, so yep many possible reasons in logic alone for that... and if religion was the root of morals then why would there be so many completely immoral logic in so many of it's teachings by our actual standpoint morality? In the example an adulterous women would be stoned to death, in Islam the penalty to stop being muslin is death... (and this would seam even a bit illogic in the times so many are yet saven) granted there are less extreme religions, however if you paid attention you'd see that all values and morals come from the action-reaction bynom and the logic of phenomena according to a viewpoint of reality... religion acts more like a medium of sorts it does not create morality it channels already known action/reactions so to warn you.
Actually most of our civilization is based on greek philosophy and this relates directly, plus you should respect people which have a religious belief which is positive and harmless... like Santa Klaus and the easter bunny ahahah, religion is a concept so to respect it you'ld have to respect it's logical evolution to adapt to our actual situation, you cannot respect religion if it's harmfull and unadapted to your situation, you get a riot or opression.
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Morality is after all a man made concept is it not?
I fear that you have that wrong James. Morality is part of human nature. Religion is man made. Human's observed morals long before any religion existed. We did evolve into what we are because of human nature, not because of religion. The basic instincts like fight or flight and self-preservation are parts of human nature that helped us evolve. Can any of us imagine a time when humans did not know, instinctively, that it is wrong to physically hurt another person? Can you imagine a mother of any era watching one of her children beat a sibling to death without any reaction?
Basic morality itself is remarkably consistent across human societies and always has been. We are a highly social species, using social structures like family, clan, and tribe. Our ancestors were using these structures at least 500,000 years ago. If you were suddenly plucked from your life and sent back in time to live with people in Indonesia about 15,000 years ago (or even Ethiopia 150,000 years ago), you would be able to figure out what is going on. The basic social roles, responsibilities, and civil rules would seem somewhat familiar to you, and you'd fit in pretty fast. Cultural anthropologists have long recognized how all human societies have similar basic norms of moral conduct. In 2010 Marc Hauser, professor of evolutionary biology at Harvard University, published a paper about additional studies showing that people’s moral intuitions do not vary much across different religions all around the world (that is meant to be a gross generalization). From an evolutionary perspective, that means that human morality is very old. Old enough to pre-date any religion that exists today. Furthermore, basic morality is highly resistant to religious influence. Most people easily reject religious rules that violate their basic moral intuitions. Religions all tend to confirm and support human morality rather than create it out of whole-cloth. We humans understand that essential morality sustains our schemes of social cooperation. The vast majority of humans understand that from a very early age, even without being taught the details, as is seen in the Yale University studies posted by Spintendo. There’s also the fact that non-human primates and other animals display behaviors that are indistinguishable from what we’d call morality. Clearly, they did not get those behaviors from any kind of religion.
I was once having a discussion about this with my father and he stated that without religion people would be in the streets killing one another. I asked him this rhetorical question: So it is only because of your religion that you don't kill people that tick you off in times when you think law enforcement authorities won't find out? I told him that I didn't see him as a murderer. I told him to please not tell me that had it not been for religion he might have killed me at some point during my youth. No doubt I gave him plenty of reason.
It is a valid question you ask. It is a very good question. It is a great and important philosophical discussion to have.
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Did morality begin with religion or has it been an evolving concept/characteristic within human nature?"
A study on infants at Yale University may shed some light on this matter.
See for yourself:
hxxp://nyti.ms/qFDXGt
Very nice vid Spinny. Of course there can be convictions of ours we individually feel as such from empirical individual experiences which may be interesting to investigate and put through experimental controlled repetitions into a scientifical frame. Well done so. But in my opinion Kiley's claim to deem the babies behaviour as right or wrong is a bit unjustified and so ideological. The babies there imo simply choose the impersonated alternatives which seem to open new possiilities, to enlarge their horizons. Often, in fact, infancy is considered as that very moment when all the horizons start and have to open. Personally I'd consider those reactions as lead by this opening pleasure more than an awareness of a good and right which, in themselves, could even not exist at all. Right?
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Very nice vid Spinny. Of course there can be convictions of ours we individually feel as such from empirical individual experiences which may be interesting to investigate and put through experimental controlled repetitions into a scientifical frame. Well done so. But in my opinion Kiley's claim to deem the babies behaviour as right or wrong is a bit unjustified and so ideological. The babies there imo simply choose the impersonated alternatives which seem to open new possiilities, to enlarge their horizons. Often, in fact, infancy is considered as that very moment when all the horizons start and have to open. Personally I'd consider those reactions as lead by this opening pleasure more than an awareness of a good and right which, in themselves, could even not exist at all. Right?
Yes but you do have to take in account the understated self preservation psichology behind the scenes enacted, the babies are picking as you said the alternative which allows more possibilities, but they are also not picking the one which ends them, it's self preservation also, which is the mainframe of what you will consider as good and bad in future too however vague those as concepts do are. Tho I really sympathise with Pastol's text however at a part he is speacking more of logic than morals, as logic can apply in many different times and cultures so you can figure things out, however that is not morals, that is mainly logic adjusting your moral conduct to see which values should be prioritary in the new reality, because you do not have the same code of conduct in a warzone that you have in a peacefull civilized beach but apart from that I really like his text.
For me Religion as a medium group for knowledge has flaws like ulterior agendas, and well it's a composed group so you'll have more individual personality disorders jamming up on your notion of "truth", it's preferable to be a little more anarchic in your process to get your individual "truth".
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Concerning myr's and past's answers, myr correctly underlines that moral has vague definitions and, even more, it seems to refer to different things in different communities. This could lead us to think that a common denominator could be found elsewhere in something different from the experience of a reality passively received as is.
Past has been very kind with his dad :D. It would have been even too easy to make him notice that human history remembers many episodes which have been named religion wars, not to mention the various witch-hunts and stuff. So religion even less seems up to avoid violence but it could, sometimes, even promote it.
But of course I still owe James an answer because I have left him with a dangling unfinished statement:…while I assume a religious attitude, it doesn't seem to me I'm doing/making the same things I'm doing/making when I assume a moral/ethical attitude otherwise we wouldn't need two different words to denote them: religion/faith and moral/ethics.
This statement remains empty as long as I don't specify what it seems to me I'm personally doing/making when I'm acting those ways and goto see if you all do/make my own operations in the same way or not. Let's see.
In the first place:
when I assume a religious attitude it seems to me I'm moving into a subset of a more generical fideistic attitude which calls for a credence accepted as it's given without verifications or checks. From it we could derive both an axiomatic attitude we are not treating now and a religious/dogmatic attitude we are instead interested in. The language could not be particularly helpful here cause in English and in many other languages I could say for instance:I believe in the GTru portal there's a forum named Religion & Philosophy
and this believing seems dubitative (it seems to me I've seen it/I was in it, I'm not sure but I oppose to the doubt this belief)
or
I believe in god, the spaghetti monster, ladidadi free John Gotti, a soccer team… etc.
and this apparent synonim has not the same meaning at all because it doesn't stem from a doubt but from an unshakeable certainty.
In the religious/dogmatic attitude this unshakeable certainty which has to be accepted without understanding or even trying to understand it is made generally coincide with the revelation of a deity or, more honestly, of an important man or human institution. In both cases though, it requests all the becoming, the differences emerging are adapted to it and sometimes even through complex and ingenious deductive constructions as the ancient middle age theology was.
Secondly:
when I assume a moral/ethical attitude…ahem I will answer to that lata cause I gotta run now
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If I may, it is well established that the morality of humans is completely changed in a war. Soldiers, along with those trapped in a war zone, do not abide by, nor do they witness, a morality that is anything close to the norm for them. That is exactly the cause of Post-traumatic stress disorder that occurs in so many people directly engaged in a war. I submit that a discussion on morality must be broken into two different discussions when war comes into the discussion. My comments above were made with the exclusion of war time morality. The two do not and cannot exist together. Ask any soldier who has been in heavy combat. Ask any civilian who has been in the midst of a firefight or bombing. Ask yourself, if you have ever experienced war up close and personal. The normal rules are suddenly turned upside down. It was my understanding that this particular discussion was about "normal" morality. That is, a peacetime morality. If we are to bring wartime morality into it, that is a different discussion all together. However, having said that; minus specifics of the battleground, the impetus for wars and the will of a people not in the war zone to promote an ongoing war is probably fair game for this discussion.
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Yes but you do have to take in account the understated self preservation psichology behind the scenes enacted, the babies are picking as you said the alternative which allows more possibilities, but they are also not picking the one which ends them, it's self preservation also, which is the mainframe of what you will consider as good and bad in future too however vague those as concepts do are. Tho I really sympathise with Pastol's text however at a part he is speacking more of logic than morals, as logic can apply in many different times and cultures so you can figure things out, however that is not morals, that is mainly logic adjusting your moral conduct to see which values should be prioritary in the new reality, because you do not have the same code of conduct in a warzone that you have in a peacefull civilized beach but apart from that I really like his text.
For me Religion as a medium group for knowledge has flaws like ulterior agendas, and well it's a composed group so you'll have more individual personality disorders jamming up on your notion of "truth", it's preferable to be a little more anarchic in your process to get your individual "truth".
Agreed myr! It's a possible alternative way to see the things. I admit I've not understood the age/(range?) chosen by Kiley for the babies who seemed to me all very young though. Generally very young babies are still in the process of a self and not-self building and have not yet the capability of reintroject the not-self as another possible dfferent self. Important studies on these very problems have been made by Jean Piaget and carried on after him by many other ones ^-^
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Secondly:
when I assume a moral/ethical attitude…in my opinion language could be instead of great help in denoting the underlying mind activity. This because all the human languages of this planet know an unambiguous verbal form named Imperative…
James! Kiss my lips (right now)!! :cool2:
this would be the purest and the harshest of the forms but, since we are tortuous and complex animals, we could also choose a sweeter and enveloping approach:
Jaaamiieeee, hoooneeyyyy would you kiss my lips right nooow? :hug2: :cheesy2: ( :fight: )
Do it like you want, this imperative puts the subject getting it in the classical aut-aut: an unbreakable binary alternative.
It is true she/he might play for time: Nooo, I'm sick, I've forgotten my appointment with the dentist…
But in the end the answer cannot be anything else than a yes or a no. You might now have noticed the imperative makes on its own a thing many of us here deem as very important even from a sexual point of view: the discipline! :police:
At this point James of course will be disciplined answering yes and undisciplined answering no.
When we forget that, in this kind of situations, the imperative was a causating prius (the thing which came before and created all the situation) and we start instead to think to it as a posterius (a thing coming after) to be derived from the situation, in my opinion there we get the good/bad and the moral/ethics with all their differences and difficulties due to the fact that in vain you will search in an "after" what was there instead before. ^-^So said pastol what you say is not wrong because it is obvious in different periods or spaces of our personal story or of the whole mankind history the ethical/moral rules/precepts may change but this shouldn't be a problem cause the moral/values/ethics depend on the prius and can never be derived from the facts (the posterius). A little practical example and de hoc satis for now.
I could slightly complify my imperative:
James! Kiss my lips right now otherwise I will spank you!! NOOOOOOOOOOOO!
James! Kiss my lips right now otherwise I will not spank you!! YEEEEEEEEEEEES! :cheesy2: :cheers: :cheesy2: :cheers: -
Pastol, I used war as contrast but you might have subtler adaptations like prejudice as an example, people very usually bend morals or adapt them, the important is to have a stable core and you would function even with an unstable moral core, and well the "normal" well normal as in average… I shiver to think what statistics might tells us about society average moral; but yes one thing are thought another is action, I understand your train of logic.
Agis Piaget studies based on his kids are a tad to biased since the upbringing has nothing to do with the average upbringing, however theoretically it's interesting. And my guess is that he was thinking pleasure (libido) = good and destrudo = bad... rather crude I know, I wonder what Jung would think? :blink:
Mainly religious thought is arched by a pretense of spiritual path which is allegories and rites which explain the mythology, so it's dogmatic and fixated and more in an alter "superego" proxy (God), meanwhile ethic thought relies on doubt cinycal philosophy and questioning of reality phenomena, so it's more flexible and relatable to the "individual ego" I.
I :love: this topic
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Agis Piaget studies based on his kids are a tad to biased since the upbringing has nothing to do with the average upbringing, however theoretically it's interesting. And my guess is that he was thinking pleasure (libido) = good and destrudo = bad… rather crude I know, I wonder what Jung would think? :blink:
He let alone Lacan et al. myr :hot2: Better to automoderate me otherwise Dax will spank us all and that one is a big bear :crazy2:
Good objection again though myr bias and poverty of the sample. Piaget can be considered as a pioneer though and he doesn't compare with the other ones for a number of reasons imo.
Moreover I could find a couple of arguments more for a disagreement between his thought and mine but we would really end off topic there. If you know him well you could open another topic and I will follow you as far as I can :hug2: -
Better to automoderate me otherwise Dax will spank us all and that one is a big bear :crazy2:
No need for automoderation, agis! But in case anyone needs a good bear spanking, just call! :fight:
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@Dax:
No need for automoderation, agis! But in case anyone needs a good bear spanking, just call! :fight:
:crazy2: :crazy2: noooooo noooooo don't spank poor ol' ign… ahem innocent agis mole !!!
let's fuck instead!! :cheesy2:
butt just a moment ???
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No, really I don't understand how you can be so elusive surface mammals ;D. Anyway after this failed attempt of "against nature" ( :hehe: ) intercourse between the yummy young dax bear and the ol' mangy agis mole, to the original Jamie's question I would answer summarizing:
Religion and moral are 2 different things cause we originally make them differently with our mind activity using then, coherently, 2 different words to denote them.
We make religion/dogmatism choosing a not commonly/generally shared point of reference which, once chosen, has to be left untouched as is adapting all the "becoming" to it.
We make moral with the initial emisson of imperative(s) whose foundative statute gets lost engendering as a consequence the impossible attempt of going to search it/them amongst its/their consequences.
Once made this way these 2 different attitudes, nothing forbids and, as a matter of fact,it has been very often done, to mix and to make them overlap.
Very often, for instance, the religious/dogmatic attitude has used and still uses the moral attitude for the build up of dubious but compulsory precepts I'm sure, for our personal stories, we all know more or less. In this case we willingly denote this constructs as "moralism".
So said though the myr's and pastol's considerations are not devoid of validity cause the consequences of series of imperavites can be checked more or less consciously against other kinds of attitudes (for instance an historical attitude), recognised useful by a majority and, as a consequence, deemed as a Moral with a capital M. -
wrong post sorry should go slower in writing mpf pth
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Personally I'd consider those reactions as lead by this opening pleasure more than an awareness of a good and right which, in themselves, could even not exist at all. Right?"
The fact that 80% of these infants demonstrated some kind of feelings towards the "helpful" puppets as opposed to the "unhelpful" puppets may indicate an inherent attraction towards these helpful behaviors concomitant with an inherent dislike of the unhelpful behaviors. As people are mostly attracted to things which are pleasing to them, your observation would naturally be the correct one.
Since feelings form the foundation of all moral thoughts — and all babies have feelings (they laugh and cry) — this Yale study may say something quite profound about the origins of human morality.