Piggy
Unlicensed street skeptic
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2006
- Messages
- 15,905
Really? I thought they were designed to keep powerful people in power.Moral systems are designed to produce societies in which the largest majority of the individuals within those societies can peacefully coexist.
The key word here is "designed".
Biologically, as a social species, we do find moral principles which pervade human culture that tend to help preserve the social group: Don't steal what is recognized as other folks' stuff, don't kill people just because you want to, don't intentionally harm others for merely selfish reasons, don't produce offspring with near kin, etc. (All within the tribe, of course -- outlanders, well, they got it coming.)
But beyond these basics, there's a plethora of highly variable "moral" principles instituted largely to maintain the political/social status quo: Don't worship the wrong god, don't reproduce with someone from another social group, don't express doubts about the opinions of religious or political leaders, don't eat the way foreigners do, and so forth.
A very enlightening exercise is to tease apart the various layers of God's commandments in Exodus, for example. They change radically from the most ancient passages from the nomadic times, to the most recent passages from settled society dominated by a separate and priveleged priestly caste.
The very oldest passages are primitive and brutal -- sacrifice your first born animals, harvests, and sons; make altars only from dirt and unhewn stone (and no steps!); that kind of thing -- while the latest passages describe a God who demands a temple that sounds like it was decorated by Liberace, who is fussier than a 4 year old when it comes to what people should eat and how it should be prepared, and on and on and on.