It seems to me that morality's greatest enemy is the contradiction of thought. Our moral code becoming inferior when faced with a circumstantial paradox. To sustain our defined set of morals, we must perceive our reality around us by having a flexible state of mind. Be capable to think in multiple dimensions and acknowledge a paradox by its very nature, is to challenge "status quo". The status quo is what we believe to be morally righteousness as a "static state", never changing.
That is the illusion, the false belief that the rules of morality will never change. — SteveMinjares
The same goes with morality and reality. It is only define or real if you can observe it. — SteveMinjares
And those who try to justify God’s existence based on the pain and suffering of our current reality is a form of a loaded question. Through my perspective, answering such a question if an answer exists is just catering to the individual's ego desiring to be superior in a reality that cannot be control by human beings. — SteveMinjares
He made us in his image so by that logic we are inherently good by his grace. — SteveMinjares
It is only define or real if you can observe it. — SteveMinjares
you can not grow and evolve into God’s image — SteveMinjares
"Defining Morality in a Reality with no Foundation" — SteveMinjares
Is like asking what came first ”the Chicken or the Egg”? — SteveMinjares
Physics is a matter of perspective in how energy is manipulated. This Universe we see is only one form of physics we know of and we can only conform or accept by what we can observe.
So to say Physics never change is conforming to it's Status quo to what we can witness.
The same goes with morality and reality. It is only define or real if you can observe it. — SteveMinjares
sense; like humour or aesthetics. It was drilled into the human organism by evolution in the context of the hunter gatherer tribe. — counterpunch
I do agree that morality is a form of aesthetics. — SteveMinjares
Morality is fundamentally a sense; like humour or aesthetics. It was drilled into the human organism by evolution in the context of the hunter gatherer tribe. Chimpanzees have morality of sorts - they share food and groom each other, and remember who reciprocates, and withhold such favours accordingly in future.
Insofar as we can assume human evolution was similar, the evidence suggests morality is a pre-intellectual sensitivity to moral implication, advantageous to the individual within the tribe, and advantageous to the tribe composed of moral individuals, in competition with other organisms.
The attempt to explicitly define morality, only begins after the occurrence of intellectual intelligence in human beings; and only became objectively codified, and attributed to God, when hunter gatherer tribes joined together to form multi-tribal social groups - and needed an external authority for moral laws in society. — counterpunch
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