RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
Regarding the Lewis quote.
I don't think that a sense of justice is something that we are born with. Infants are self centered. They are their world. Their needs and wants come first. When my son was young and we had friends over he refused to share his toys. Later when we went to our friends home my son wanted to play with the other child's toys. Funny thing happened. A light bulb went off in my son's head. It was like when he figured out how to maneuver the chair to the counter to get a cookie. He wanted something and devised a strategy as to how to get it. As to sharing, my son figured out that such a strategy was an equitable way to maximize benefits. Ok, he didn't really see it that deep but he got it at an intuitive level. It works. After that he started thinking in terms of fairness. If you want to borrow your friends things it's only fair to share your things.
How this happens is not complicated at all. Humans have wants. We also are capable of realizing that other humans have wants. From there it is no great leap to develop a sense of fairness. It's a simple process of devising strategies to improve our lives through cooperation. No Deity needed. It's how our brains are wired, not necassarily for fairness but simply to solve problems. Game theory objectively shows us that cooperation is the best strategy to maximize benifits over the long run.
Of course, some people are not born with the ability to understand that other people have wants and desires or they have some degree of limitation in this regard. Autistics are such individuals. They are often, AIU, not very good at devising such strategies.
That said, I really don't get the quote by Lewis. It seems post hoc and a non sequitur. How do you go from justice to god? You first have to assume that god is just. Not all religions believe or have believed that god or gods are just. So it would also seem to beg the question. A lot of fallacies in that quote it seems to me.
In the end, I think justice can be said to be the result of wants and of comparison. "You can't know the sweet unless you have tasted the bitter".
I don't think that a sense of justice is something that we are born with. Infants are self centered. They are their world. Their needs and wants come first. When my son was young and we had friends over he refused to share his toys. Later when we went to our friends home my son wanted to play with the other child's toys. Funny thing happened. A light bulb went off in my son's head. It was like when he figured out how to maneuver the chair to the counter to get a cookie. He wanted something and devised a strategy as to how to get it. As to sharing, my son figured out that such a strategy was an equitable way to maximize benefits. Ok, he didn't really see it that deep but he got it at an intuitive level. It works. After that he started thinking in terms of fairness. If you want to borrow your friends things it's only fair to share your things.
How this happens is not complicated at all. Humans have wants. We also are capable of realizing that other humans have wants. From there it is no great leap to develop a sense of fairness. It's a simple process of devising strategies to improve our lives through cooperation. No Deity needed. It's how our brains are wired, not necassarily for fairness but simply to solve problems. Game theory objectively shows us that cooperation is the best strategy to maximize benifits over the long run.
Of course, some people are not born with the ability to understand that other people have wants and desires or they have some degree of limitation in this regard. Autistics are such individuals. They are often, AIU, not very good at devising such strategies.
That said, I really don't get the quote by Lewis. It seems post hoc and a non sequitur. How do you go from justice to god? You first have to assume that god is just. Not all religions believe or have believed that god or gods are just. So it would also seem to beg the question. A lot of fallacies in that quote it seems to me.
In the end, I think justice can be said to be the result of wants and of comparison. "You can't know the sweet unless you have tasted the bitter".
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