Belz...
Fiend God
So what is/are the other variable/s then if not laws against and a fear of punishment by the state or a god?
I mean, those aren't the only two options I may hold. Namely, yours and your strawman.
So what is/are the other variable/s then if not laws against and a fear of punishment by the state or a god?
Killing 'others' requires people to first believe the 'others' are not human.
But you cannot name, describe or otherwise say what option you are referring too?I mean, those aren't the only two options I may hold. Namely, yours and your strawman.
Not when you take my answer out of context. Try applying what I said to the example I was answering. Excuse me for not writing a paragraph of unrelated-to-the-post-exceptions.No, it doesn't.
No, it doesn't.
Not that a movie is exactly a scientific citation, but you are doing the same thing as Westprog, that is misunderstanding the concepts.Ever seen the Kurt Russel movie "Soldier" ? They pick babies at birth and raise them to be cold killers.
Far be it from me to make an argument from a movie, but assuming you could take a child from birth and raise them this way, would Ginger say we're deprogramming their natural tendencies ? I could reply that children raised in 'normal' homes in the west are also deprogrammed of said tendencies. We teach them that hitting each other is not nice, while otherwise they do it willy-nilly. We tell them that stealing is not nice. We tell them to wipe their butts when they go to the stool. Oddly, we keep having to tell them all these civilised things, over and over, over several years, only to have them memorise part of it and ignore the rest all too often, forcing us to have laws in place to prevent them from running red lights all the time and endangering their kin. Doesn't sound to me like we're genetically predisposed to be nice to each other.
Ever seen the Kurt Russel movie "Soldier" ? They pick babies at birth and raise them to be cold killers.
Far be it from me to make an argument from a movie, but assuming you could take a child from birth and raise them this way, would Ginger say we're deprogramming their natural tendencies ? I could reply that children raised in 'normal' homes in the west are also deprogrammed of said tendencies. We teach them that hitting each other is not nice, while otherwise they do it willy-nilly. We tell them that stealing is not nice. We tell them to wipe their butts when they go to the stool. Oddly, we keep having to tell them all these civilised things, over and over, over several years, only to have them memorise part of it and ignore the rest all too often, forcing us to have laws in place to prevent them from running red lights all the time and endangering their kin. Doesn't sound to me like we're genetically predisposed to be nice to each other.
Natural aggression is a different concept. There's much to be learned comparing Bonobos to Chimpanzees in that respect. I found Goodall's discovery of a serial killer and warring among the chimpanzees to be fascinating. But it took her decades of observation before she saw those traits. Aggression, yes, but killing other chimps wasn't common.Yeah, unfortunately. I'm afraid killing and aggression come pretty naturally to us, and obviously they must have some evolutionary value too. Of course, also co-operation and general niceness come pretty naturally, and have also lots of evolutionary value. But evolutionary value is logically a pragmatic criterion: anything that works will go, and we cannot know for sure till after the fact whether something works or not. That's why evolution is not really a very practical guide to morality. (Well, we probably have the concept of morality and ethics because in these matters biology doesn't seem to be a very satisfactory guide...)
Again, if your concept is morality (aka oughts) come from sky daddies, pixie dust, purely cultural or you believe there is no such thing as an ought, or science cannot determine oughts, yadda, yadda, then we are cross talking.....
This doesn't have any implications as to whether we ought to be violent to our neighbours.
Emphasis mine.
Our what ?
Natural aggression is a different concept. There's much to be learned comparing Bonobos to Chimpanzees in that respect. I found Goodall's discovery of a serial killer and warring among the chimpanzees to be fascinating. But it took her decades of observation before she saw those traits. Aggression, yes, but killing other chimps wasn't common.
Again, I don't think the fact aggression can lead to killing negates the evidence that we are born with a built in reluctance to kill other humans. Killing during an act of aggression is a bit different than purposeful murder, ie killing with the sole purpose of killing.
Again, if your concept is morality (aka oughts) come from sky daddies, pixie dust, purely cultural or you believe there is no such thing as an ought, or science cannot determine oughts, yadda, yadda, then we are cross talking.
I don't use that paradigm because I don't find it fits the evidence. When the full understanding of the neurobiology of oughts is determined, say many years of research from now, including exactly how the variables of nature and nurture interact, will the fact 'ought' differs from individual to individual make it not exist?
Not that a movie is exactly a scientific citation, but you are doing the same thing as Westprog, that is misunderstanding the concepts.
Being born with a moral framework does not mean it is absolute. Yes, nurture can affect it, so can brain damage and other forms of mental illness. According to early research there are genetic variations affecting how an individual's morals are expressed.
But the old paradigm, the one people on this forum continue to cling to, is that morality is learned, as if it is taught on a blank slate and if it weren't for said teaching and cultural emersion, children would be all over the map when it came to moral behavior.
The evidence, much of which is fairly new, is that we do not have blank moral slates at birth. None of the counter arguments presented in this discussion, those that say not-blank-moral-slates can be trashed after birth, are relevant to the fact that said not-blank-moral-slates are indeed the human condition at birth. In other words all these exceptions don't address the point, that is people do not normally kill and that is because killing people in general goes against the moral brain a healthy person is born with.
Again, we are cross talking concepts. The problem is your concept is that an objective morality must be universal and fixed or it does not exist. Or maybe you think said morality only comes from god or culture or learning.
Brain, genetic and animal behavior research has revealed that we are not born with a moral blank slate.
You persist in labelling certain aspects of what human beings do as "morality" as if the term had any kind of biological meaning.
There's certainly evidence of "altruistic" behaviour in various species, where individuals sacrifice themselves in favour of those with similar genetic makeup - just as they destroy those of a different genetic makeup. That can't reasonably be called "moral" behaviour.
I'm certain some people don't understand why and how I see the 'ought' question from within a different paradigm. The way I see it many science oriented persons have been hung up so long on "science cannot determine 'ought'" that it is hard to step back and start looking at morality in a different context, a process that starts with evolution and the brain, not with gods and/or external learning.I'm wondering if some people are using the word moral to mean "proper or good behavior" and others are using it to mean "codes of conduct, both 'good' and 'bad'" and yet others to mean "social mores". That might be muddying the waters.
But the old paradigm, the one people on this forum continue to cling to, is that morality is learned,
I'm certain some people don't understand why and how I see the 'ought' question from within a different paradigm. The way I see it many science oriented persons have been hung up so long on "science cannot determine 'ought'" that it is hard to step back and start looking at morality in a different context, a process that starts with evolution and the brain, not with gods and/or external learning.
What's your point then?I've repeatedly said that this is irrelevant. Whether or not "morality" is inherent in genetics, or part of human development - or whether the same applies to immorality - means absolutely nothing.
If we didn't have a capacity to be moral, or immoral, then we wouldn't do it. End of.
What's your point then?