sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
As a child I believed that morality could only come from religion. I was an atheist and absolutely confident that god was a lie, and it really worried me that my moral beliefs were therefore totally baseless (as I thought). I used to wonder whether I might some day "wake up" from my irrational beliefs and murder some innocent little old lady for her pocket change, or something.
Believe it or not, I really worried about that - it actually kept me awake at night.
As I grew older I more or less stopped thinking about it, not because I had found an answer, but simply because our thoughts become increasingly trivial with distance from childhood. Recently, though, a conversation with an acquaintance (a philosophy prof working on bioethics) brought me back to the topic. I had asked him The Question, whether he thought morality was possible without religion, and he said "no". That got me worried all over again.
But thinking about it again as an adult, I can see plenty of alternatives to religion. The one I like best is that morality is a very successful meme (in the sense of Dawkins). That is, it's an idea which evolved and was selected for in human society. Societies and individuals who behave in accordance with some version of it prospered; those that didn't, died. (This is rather plausible because cooperation is not a zero-sum game, to borrow the game theory term.)
I believe this idea is probably correct, and following this train of thought led to an interesting idea - if religion is not the basis for morality, perhaps morality is the basis for religion? After all, as I discovered as a child, it can be hard to convince yourself that morality is necessary if there is no punishing and rewarding force standing behind it. And so once the moral code had evolved, societies that coerced their constituents into it through the belief in a vengeful or rewarding god would prosper and do better than those that didn't. Thus religion could evolve as a prop for morality.
Thoughts?
Believe it or not, I really worried about that - it actually kept me awake at night.
As I grew older I more or less stopped thinking about it, not because I had found an answer, but simply because our thoughts become increasingly trivial with distance from childhood. Recently, though, a conversation with an acquaintance (a philosophy prof working on bioethics) brought me back to the topic. I had asked him The Question, whether he thought morality was possible without religion, and he said "no". That got me worried all over again.
But thinking about it again as an adult, I can see plenty of alternatives to religion. The one I like best is that morality is a very successful meme (in the sense of Dawkins). That is, it's an idea which evolved and was selected for in human society. Societies and individuals who behave in accordance with some version of it prospered; those that didn't, died. (This is rather plausible because cooperation is not a zero-sum game, to borrow the game theory term.)
I believe this idea is probably correct, and following this train of thought led to an interesting idea - if religion is not the basis for morality, perhaps morality is the basis for religion? After all, as I discovered as a child, it can be hard to convince yourself that morality is necessary if there is no punishing and rewarding force standing behind it. And so once the moral code had evolved, societies that coerced their constituents into it through the belief in a vengeful or rewarding god would prosper and do better than those that didn't. Thus religion could evolve as a prop for morality.
Thoughts?