Codo, on 2013-October-21, 12:21, said:
And we can compare the reality of theists and atheists civilizations and see which look better.
I don't know of many 'atheist' societies. It is arguable that China is close to atheistic these days and clearly much of its recent history contained atrocities and it to this day deals with human rights issues in a way that we in the West see as improper. However, it is probably best to see China's problems as stemming from being an authoritarian state rather than an atheistic state. In the early days, post revolution, it was governed by a group of rulers in love with another 'ism': a political philosophy that claimed that human nature was malleable and that by the imposition of certain rules and modes of behaviour, a proletarian paradise would evolve.
If there ever was evidence to support this philosophy, it has long-since been revealed as erroneous.
Soviet Russia was another secular state in which the rulers professed a form of atheism, but the atrocities it committed were not in the name of atheism but, as in China, in the name of a now-discredited political philosophy.
This is no surprise, because atheism, being simply the lack of acceptance of a particular kind of delusion, carries with it no goal or purpose. Atheists don't need 'leaders'. That there are 'leaders' within the atheist world is simply a happenstance arising from cultural forces, such as access to media, willingness to write books, etc. There are no seminaries for atheists, no 'church' in the hierarchy of which one can rise and so on.
Bill accused me earlier of a false dichotomy: this attempt by believers to portray totalitarian states, be they Germany in the 1933-45 era, or the Soviets and so on, may convince the believers but reveals far more about their ignorance than it says about the effect of atheism on public morality or government practices.
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What you call the golden rule is quite interessting. From a sole selfish point of view, it is sure NOT the best way of living. For you personally, for your tribe, your nation, whatever, it is much better to have your own set of rules and have the others killed, as slaved, as dependents. There are millions of examples in history that can proofe this fact.
So, why do you and I agree that this is the golden rule and that it would be nice to live according to it? Obviously there must be different ways in reaching this knowledge- or this ethics.I cannot see any logic leading to this behaviour. In a strict darwinistic way, we better kill our neighbors and take their food, money and females.... I am quite happy that we left this stadium in evolution behind...
It appears to me that you have done very little, if any, reading on this issue.
You are simply wrong to state that 'in a strict Darwinian way.....'. All you reveal by making that statement is that you have no clue about this subject.
A moment's thought should point out the errors of your ways.
Imagine 3 groups, identical in all aspects other than their approach to cooperation. One is a winner take all group while the other two espouse cooperation.
In the case of military conflict, the two cooperative groups rate to win, by force of numbers.
In the case of technological progress, so long as the groups are open to innovation, the cooperative ones will soon surpass the go it alone one, because they will share ideas.
Your notion that selfishness is the best evolutionary strategy is correct only if one assumes that there are never more than 2 players, or that the selfish player is at least a strong as all the cooperative ones put together.
That is not the way the world works. Yes, strength and selfishness can gain a temporary upper hand, but consider this: when it comes to the success of, say, nation states, while history shows that empires were founded and in some cases lasted for many years, cooperation within those states was essential. There has never been an empire founded by anarchists, or people who refused to cooperate.
I suspect that this mistaken 'understanding' of the implications of evolutionary theory is part of the reason for the nige's of the world, supported by the Codo's of the world, feeling that the natural state of humans is psychopathy or the urge to rape, kill and steal, and that we need some external force to stop it. A belief in a god being a big one, with a reluctant concession that maybe we atheists have some other source of moral sense.
We do. We have exactly the same moral sense as you do.
You dress it up as divinely inspired, but there is compelling evidence that most believers make their god espouse what they, the believers, want to be true, rather than vice versa. We make our gods in our image, and we tend to obey them only when they tell us things we already want to believe.
However, you and all but the damaged people we call sociopaths or psychopaths share an innate sense of morality that is remarkably uniform across cultures and religions or the lack of religion. Dawkins, in The God Delusion, referenced some fascinating studies to that effect.
It seems likely that this innate moral sense is therefore a product of the way our brains are formed and this means that some form of evolutionary effect has given rise to this. I don't personally find the notion of group selection to be very convincing, but I have only a semi-educated layperson's understanding and am hardly qualified to assert that one expert is right and the other wrong. The level at which evolution works is not especially relevant: the notion that it works at some level or levels is enough. Interestingly, it is possible that in moral terms, the evolutionary process is not genetic at all. We may be dealing with memes, rather than genes. A meme is a self-replicating idea. However, the fact that morality appears to be relatively standard across the entire species suggests, to me, a genetic component.