David Mo
Philosopher
Male Homo sapiens also cause the death of others. So what’s your point?
See my previous comments, please.
Male Homo sapiens also cause the death of others. So what’s your point?
We have been over this, I'm not understanding you.
The interests of the group comes secondary to the individuals self interest, it is a secondary effect and arises only because the self interest of the individual alines with that of the group. The individual is exploiting the group for it's own benefit. It is not a zero sum game though, both the group and the individual benefit.E]
Since there is no mechanism for evolution and natural selection to operate on the group level, cooperation evolved solely for the benefit of the individual.
Since evolution operates on the individual level, not the group, any individuals putting the interests of group above their own will be selected against and removed from the population. Natural selection guarantees that the individual will cheat the group/members of the group as often as it can get away with it.
How ridiculous, divine revelation, really? How do you come up with this?
Literally everything I have written to you explains how morals originate due to evolution and natural selection.
The mistake you are making seems to be in assuming that the interests of the group supersede those of the individual. That is impossible. It cannot happen, ever, not via evolution and natural selection, not in primates.
You are the one who mistakenly thinks you can devise a single morality based on evolution and natural selection, is this correct? Looks like you decided "cooperation with the group is good" and "putting your self interest above that of the group is bad."
The problem with supporters of natural morality is that they ought to accept violence and brutal relations of power in the same package. Nature is Nature for better or worse. If you choose one or another your choice is out of Nature.
What's the alternative to "natural morality"?
Tassman, here is the God, I believe in!
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=12195347&postcount=326
Relevant to behavior, to kill another human is a natural, physical and biological behavior. It can be described in such terms, but can't be describe as being done by "a social misfit". The problem is the is-ought distinction and that can't be solved using science. In the end that is where you fail. Both "good" and "bad" are natural, physical and biological behavior, but you can't give evidence for good and bad using science.
With regards
No, I am an adeist!Interesting world view. Would you describe yourself a Deist?
I haven't attempted to do that. The question of right and wrong arises due to the fact that we have evolved to live among other human beings. This is all science can tell us. And if we are to do so in a successful way, there are certain basic principles that must apply, if we are to expect them agree on a set of “rules of the game”.
It is a primary effect. No group involvement = no benefits to the individual.
We are by nature a species that lives in groups.
We have evolved to operate on the group level. We are by nature a social species. By definition this means we are creatures that are greatly interactive with other members of our species, with our individual success highly dependent on the overall cohesion and propagation of the group.
"Social species are genetically inclined to group together and follow a particular set of rules defining interactions between individuals. Humans can be considered a social species because we tend to live in communities instead of segregating ourselves as individuals and dispersing to unoccupied territory. In many species, a family unit, meaning parents and their immediate dependent young, groups together and follows particular guidelines of interaction. However, this does not qualify as a society. A society must be composed of more individuals than are contained in a family unit."
Research done under natural conditions show the following:Current evidence suggests that chimpanzees (and other great apes) cooperate in a number of contexts, but do not have robust preferences for outcomes that benefit others. Even when individuals do not need to make trade-offs between outcomes that benefit themselves and outcomes that benefit others, they do not consistently take advantage of opportunities to deliver rewards to others. However, it is important to acknowledge that this characterization may not be completely accurate. One major shortcoming of all the experimental studies of social preferences on non-human primates is that they are conducted on captive animals in laboratory settings. Efforts to devise more naturalistic experiments which could be conducted in both wild and captive settings would be very valuable.
It is a primary effect. No group involvement = no benefits to the individual.
We are by nature a species that lives in groups.
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Research done under natural conditions show the following:
Cooperation with offspring supersedes cooperation with the family group.
Cooperation within the family group supersedes cooperation within the tribe.
Cooperation within the tribe supersedes cooperation within the species.
Cooperation within the species supersedes cooperation with other species.
This is explained by kin selection.
So war pays!!! Good to be the Khan, when it comes to breeding.
16 million men are thought to be directly descended from Genghis Khan.
What's the alternative to "natural morality"?
What are the alternatives to "natural morality"?
With regards
Of course, there are many. If you ask me what I prefer my answer wouldn't be simple. I suggest a mixed of emotional morality, dialogical morality and political action. For the first I sugger a reading of Hume; Habermas or Rawls for the second; and the third is a personal elaboration. I cannot expound this now. But I can come back on the subject if it interest you.
Tassman said:I pay my bills with patriotically-themed personalized checks. Is that what you mean?
Yep! Provided they don't bounce.
And if I wrote one to NAMBLA?
The evolution of altruistic social preferences in human groups
Research done under natural conditions show the following:
Cooperation with offspring supersedes cooperation with the family group.
Cooperation within the family group supersedes cooperation within the tribe.
Cooperation within the tribe supersedes cooperation within the species.
Cooperation within the species supersedes cooperation with other species.
This is explained by kin selection.
Of course, there are many. If you ask me what I prefer my answer wouldn't be simple. I suggest a mixed of emotional morality, dialogical morality and political action. For the first I sugger a reading of Hume; Habermas or Rawls for the second; and the third is a personal elaboration. I cannot expound this now. But I can come back on the subject if it interest you.
All of the above are of interest. But my only point throughout is that ANY moral system is based upon our evolution as a cooperative, altruistic social species. This is the starting point for any moral system and must take into account the interactions that occur between individuals when they form simple aggregations, cooperate in sexual or parental behaviour, engage in disputes over territory or mates, or simply communicate with each other. To facilitate all of this is surely is the only purpose for a moral code.
But my only point throughout is that ANY moral system is based upon our evolution as a cooperative, altruistic social species.
All of the above are of interest. But my only point throughout is that ANY moral system is based upon our evolution as a cooperative, altruistic social species. This is the starting point for any moral system and must take into account the interactions that occur between individuals when they form simple aggregations, cooperate in sexual or parental behaviour, engage in disputes over territory or mates, or simply communicate with each other. To facilitate all of this is surely is the only purpose for a moral code.