Kurieuo wrote:It seems you are hardly surprised that you have moral values.
Re: [moral] values without meaning? Consider it a prelude to my previous post to you.
There were a couple of previous posts that caused me to be disinclined to talk to you. You may want to specify which one you refer to here.
I'm all open to you explaining what you tie moral values down to.
Tell me this larger context from which you are looking, for I'm feeling quite ignorant.
I can't help it, for as you know, I find it hard to see beyond the smaller subset of my religion.
But, I'm open to you explaining to me this larger context...?
The snarkiness of another poster was very off putting, I requested that he refrain from addressing me, tho I see he did, for the lurkers I suppose, I didnt read it. I will not have anything to do with him, I wont engage on that level.
Same goes for you or anyone. Please refrain, its tacky.
If one sees (his) religion, his god as the be all and end all, everything subsumed under that heading then of course, everything goes under that heading. I see Christianity as but one of countless invocations of the supernatural in a universe of profound mysteries. I dont see any religion as having much to do with reality, other than that they express an aspect of the human psyche. Thats a pretty small subset.
Personally, I don't know why more Atheists don't bite the bullet on morality.
It has not been proven that morality exists, only that we have strong emotions about certain actions.
To "bite the bullet" is to endure a painful or otherwise unpleasant situation that is seen as unavoidable.
What painful situation is that?
Heck, and we may not even be responsible for such actions any more than we are our physical make-up and environment.
Some people are not responsible for their actions. I am, but then I am not a sociopath.
Here would be my take as an Atheist. It is really the most logical I can see...
and actually I'd say it's how many live their lives when no one is looking.
I kind of dont think many religious people know what it is to be an atheist.
nobody looking...
Jim and Tammy, say.
My sense of honour says I dont do differently just because I wont get caught. Too bad for those whose honour is too weak and need a threat to keep them in line.
Humans as social creatures evolved feelings of moral rightness and wrongness.
From the alpha dominance witnessed in primates, feelings evolved to the point that most modern humans value families and others
Sort of.
However, having found out we evolved, why shouldn't we break free from these feelings?
Seriously? Do you need me to say something about that?
There is no ought to them.
Of course there is.
Shaking off all sense of guilt and morality would mean we are free to live our lives how we want.
I was raised to believe that there is no freedom without responsibility.
And, for that matter, that 'freedom' is hardly the highest value.
This is even an evolutionary advantage over others who have not yet realised morality is an evolutionary vestige
No, there is not; this is, sorry, but very typical of the misrepresentations of science that are used by those who want to make some religious point.
Indeed, perhaps the next stage of the fittest surviving are those who first shake off their moral sense.
As above.
Morality and "values" are just an illusion brought about by evolution. Feelings. Nothing more.
An alpha wolf feels no remorse over killing rivals. Doing so allows it to extend its genes the best.
So, as far as it benefits you, be under no illusion -- right and wrong do not exist.
Only what is best for you.
If anything, what is right is therefore what is best us personally.
And what is wrong is anything that frustrates us from fulfilling what we personally desire in life.
I got it the first time you expressed this error. You and CS need not belabour an obvious point.
And there you have it. Atheism is grounded.
I dont follow you, at all, but then the premise is flawed anyway.
But, can any of us really live with these conclusions?