SawTooTH
Can't get enough of FH
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2003
- Messages
- 819
The ruleset that defines their Christianity.
To return my pre-rant point;
People don't do shitty things due to either(after thought) A: reprocussions or B: due to morals.
Moral teachings more or less go hand in hand with reprocussions.
We are taught these as kids.
Those teachings are based on religion.
Religion is based on afterlife reprocussions.
Kind of hand in hand i think.
Now, you could argue that you can have morals without religion, but that can't be proven. We can however prove that religion brought morals into modern day society. Those morals are based on an afterlife.
If you don't believe in afterlife, those morals are...(enter rest of statement here if you get my point).
Now, to return to the original point;
You try to make a good impression on people due to being alive, but if you don't believe in afterlife, you have no reason to think about what happens to people after you're dead.
If you do, you base it on morals, which are based on religion, which is based on an afterlife.
Ask if you want clarification, and this is MY opinion.
This whole thing seems to cling to the idea that an atheist cares what people think of him/her when they die. This implies that the only reason to do decent things is to make others think highly of us, but this simply isn't necessarily the case at all. We care *now* about other peoples futures, whether we're a part of it or not.
You seem to be suggesting that without a belief in an afterlife there's no point in caring for others when you're not around to reap the rewards. If that was the case, atheists would never create a will as what would be the point? The fact is, since people care NOW about others, they do what they can NOW to ensure that things will be good for them in the future.
As for the morals based on religion - no one could argue that it's had an effect, but to suggest that morals stem from there is a little silly. Have you not considered that religion actually stems from our innate desire to be decent to one another, given that we're a social animal. Religion may have just put words to existing emotions.
Hell, good example; "thou shalt not f*ck thine neighbours wife" only came to play after religion, it's natural to f*ck around.
It's not all morals, but something like "not f*cking your neighbour", when all beings on the planet f*ck around like it's last day of f*ckaran, is something that certainly came from religion.
There's plenty of examples in nature of animals that form and maintain monogamous relationships. Unless you're claiming they've also found God then there's a flaw in your claims that monogamy has only come about from religion.
Are you trying to say that religion doesn't teach "do this and get to good place"?
I'm not claiming ALL current morals are ALONE by religion, but claiming that religion and as such afterlife reward isn't part of it is equally wrong.
I'm not being defensive, not sure why you assume I am.
I'm not sure what you're trying to say about the now vs future thing. I think we're in agreement that from an atheist perspective, we don't believe we exist after death and as such won't *then* be worried about well.. anything as we won't exist. As I've said, this doesn't stop us being concerned *now* with things that happen *then*.
Are you honestly suggesting that if religion had never come about, people all over the world would be fucking each others neighbours with no appreciation for the consequences? Sorry but that just seems a little naive. Once again I think religion pulled an Alexander Graham Bell and patented something that it didn't invent
But it isn't. It can be, but it doesn't have to be. It doesn't actually matter that religion was the basis of morality up until say, 2-300 years ago; religion at the time controlled most intellectual activity (harks back to the religious scientist argument earlier), it doesn't have to be that way now because we're smart enough to see that you can take the God/afterlife part out of the equation and it doesn't detract from the moral message. Your view is that is does (e.g. why would people care if there's no afterlife?), but since there are people here who can flat out tell you that (lack of) belief in an afterlife doesn't have an impact on their morality, I don't really understand where your argument goes; other than it being your personal moral framework.
Let's cling to that shall we. It's an example, examples aren't supposed to be taken as discussion topics.
Do i really need to post every chritian teaching(another example) and compare how it was before christianity and how christianity effected ways of life before people can agree to ONE OUNCE of things?
You stated that morals have come from religion, and that a good example for the proof of that was that people form and maintain monogamous relationships. How is that not to be taken as a discussion topic??
The simple fact is there are social and evolutionary pressures which can lead to monogamy being a better option than polygamy for the survival of offspring. This has got nothing to do with religion, which is demonstrated by the fact that it's not only humans that engage in monogamous relationships.
The only impact religion is likely to have had is to have codifyed existing social tradition.
Like i said, it's one example. Do you need all examples to admit religious effect on modern day morals?
As much as you said i'm being defensive. You assumed i meant atheist and based argument on that. That whole thing is defensive. You're disagreeing because you live differently. You take it personally.
I'm not saying you can't be concerned 'now', but explain an atheist saying "i'm worried what people will think of me", or doing things that make people think more of you even if you never have to interact with those people again?
Doesn't make sense.
I'm suggesting you can't prove(look at that) that we WOULDN'T be doing that, but you can prove that we're not now and you can prove religions effect on that.
I'm not saying you can't be concerned 'now', but explain an atheist saying "i'm worried what people will think of me", or doing things that make people think more of you even if you never have to interact with those people again?
Doesn't make sense.
Now i'm throwing the atheist way of looking at things back at you, flat out, even knowing it's not "fair";
Prove that we would have same morals now without religion.
Or even say your own moral teachings, that are not some morals that stem from religious effect.
You're kinda missing the point. You came out with a grand statement that religion is the basis of modern Human morals. You then backed up this statement with examples intended to prove your point, and in 2 separate posts put quite a lot of emphasis on the fact that we engage in monogamous relationships as proof of religion's impact on morality.
This however is clearly not true as mongamy can be evidenced in the animal kingdom and can be easily demonstrated to have nothing to do with God or religious morality.
To now claim "it was only one example" and that the fact you were wrong has zero impact on your the validity of your claims is the argumental equivalent of putting your fingers in your ears and going "lalalalala" very loudly.
This is an incorrect assumption, I'm not taking anything personally and I'm not getting defensive.
I've not heard anyone saying "I'm worried what people will think of me" specifically from an atheist beyond what you're saying here. If someone were to say that and claim to believe in an atheist then there is a point that it doesn't matter. However, doing things that make people think more of you - these things are not necessarily done IN ORDER to make people think more of you but because they're the right thing to do. The fact that others think more of you because of it may simply an unintended consequence.
And you can't prove that religion didn't just hijack normal human compassionate social interactions and claim them as its own.
Morals do not stem from religion alone. If we had no religion we would still have morals, rules and a sense of right and wrong. These things come from our instinct for survivial and the continuation of the human race and from community.
You keep saying it doesn't make sense, but it only doesn't make sense to you. This is absolutely fundamental; you feel the need for an afterlife to give a reason for being nice to people. We don't. I don't see what's so hard to understand.
You can't prove it. Unless we can discover an alternate universe devoid of religion. But so what? No one's trying to say religion has had no bearing on moral thought. Religion was a useful way for people who didn't understand it to organise their view of the world. However, it was also an extremely useful way to get people to do what you wanted them to do, from stuff that was in their own interests (don't eat pork or shellfish in hot countries because it'll kill you. What do you mean "but, bacon is so tasty"? Well God says pack it in. "Oh all right then") all the way up to threats of eternal punishment ("if you're not scared of your King, how about God? Ooh, scared now aintcha? God's a right bastard.").
But even as far back as Plato, people have seen through this religious basis of morality and have argued that religion could just as easily be a symptom of morality as the other way around. I think its always been questioned, but for large parts of history access to information was controlled by religious elites, so morality became associated with religion because it was in their interest.
It's actually YOU who's missing the point, not that you'll ever admit it.
You keep on babbling about that animals can be monogonous when it was simply an example of one thing religion changed in human behaviour. Stop trying to argue the example.
Monkeys f*ck around, we're closest to monkeys, ergo, if we were evolved without moral codes or the strict religious hand to do so, we'd be f*cking around too.
I'm arguing against your statement that religion = morals
But people ARE claiming that religion has no effect on morals, which as said, is horsecrock.
I thought the atheist way was to accept things that are fact? Yet here people are saying things like "we MIGHT have morals like these" simply 'cause it now fits your agument. That i find hypocritical.
Like i said, sincere problem with people accepting anything that might be even remotely linked to atheist being at all religious. Complete paranoia.
No, they're claiming religion has no effect on their morals. Your view is that as religion used to be the moral framework for pretty much everyone, some of their morals come from religion. No-one has claimed religion has never had any bearing on moral thought, just that it has no bearing on their personal morality. The two things aren't incompatible.
If you take it as such, then go ahead. I won't bother with that argument as i didn' mean it as an ultimatum.
Moral teachings more or less go hand in hand with reprocussions.
We are taught these as kids.
Those teachings are based on religion.
Religion is based on afterlife reprocussions.
Kind of hand in hand i think.
Now, you could argue that you can have morals without religion, but that can't be proven. We can however prove that religion brought morals into modern day society. Those morals are based on an afterlife.
You try to make a good impression on people due to being alive, but if you don't believe in afterlife, you have no reason to think about what happens to people after you're dead.
If you do, you base it on morals, which are based on religion, which is based on an afterlife.
You can't prove what the world would be like, or the morals fo the world would be like, without religion. It has influenced people for ages and as such, even the teachings you got as a kid(without religion) are based on religion.
Religion is based on an afterlife, it's the biggest goal there. Talking generic "default what people think about religion"(as shown by many on this thread), not all religion. Also, i'm not saying "without religion there's no morals", i'm saying "without religion, morals wouldn't be necessarily as they are".
Modern morals come from religious effect, that's a fact.
Those morals are based on "getting to heaven"(etc).
Ergo, morals are based on an afterlife.
I'm not claiming ALL current morals are ALONE by religion, but claiming that religion and as such afterlife reward isn't part of it is equally wrong.
And yes, your morals(if at all basic morals the modern society has) are based on religious effect too.
Hell, good example; "thou shalt not f*ck thine neighbours wife" only came to play after religion, it's natural to f*ck around.
About morals and religion;
It's not all morals, but something like "not f*cking your neighbour", when all beings on the planet f*ck around like it's last day of f*ckaran, is something that certainly came from religion.