I receive some comfort, as little as it may be, from the realization that all that's good in the world comes from mankind. — TheMadFool
Fresh air and clean water are good. — Pantagruel
Are you speaking metaphorically? I don't get it. — TheMadFool
But saying the good is man seems to me the height of anthropomorphism. — Pantagruel
t is alas the Christian tradition to rush to judgement, notwithstanding the man saying quite clearly 'Judge not, that ye be not judged.' (Matthew 7.1)
It comes of worshipping the Great IAM, and though we are nominally a secular society, the finger wagging Christian remains in the unconscious of the supposedly rational atheist. But let us comfort ourselves with the understanding that the individual is almost entirely helpless for good or ill, and everything one might achieve is with the assistance of the mass of society and the generations of the ancestors. Those traditions that venerate the ancestors have the more realistic view, for the ancestors have de-stoned by hand every arable field that grows our crops, and laboured endlessly to glean the little knowledge we have accumulated.
Literally nothing can be done without cooperation, we cannot even feed ourselves. — unenlightened
I don't see human beings as being toto caelo different from other creatures in this respect (or many other respects, for that matter). What we call "morality" simply aligns with a naturally beneficent (or maleficent) disposition which results in behaviours that are either communally beneficial, or communally destructive. This seems to me as intuitive as saying that moral sense suddenly emerges when the human brain achieves a certain level of sophistication (e.g. Homo Erectus, Homo Habilis, what have you). — Pantagruel
the original post is confusing morality of all with morality on Earth — opt-ae
Hum, I would say the op is a little heavy-hearted. The animal kingdom is full of tricksters who deceive each other and steal from each other and may even do worse things such as kill and eat a neighbor's babies. We don't have to be too morbid about our human failure to be saints, but with a light heart just accept that is the way it is and then take steps to protect ourselves and enjoy the game of life. Like in the game of Monopoly the object is to win, so consider life as a game we play to win and how much fun would it be if there were NO challenges?
PS I do not believe anyone is purely evil or purely good. Good people do bad things and bad people can do good things. It is way too simplistic to label people good or bad. I like Pantagruel answer. — Athena
I'm not saying humans are good or that they're bad but I am saying we're the only ones who knows the difference between the two. If all life can be thought of as a group of people lost in the wild, the one person who knows the way is the human who possesses knowledge of morality and hence has everybody's welfare on his agenda. We are this planet's only hope of building an Edenic paradise if that's possible. Issues with overall competence and the possibility of lapsing into behavior misaligned with Edenic goals aside don't you find the peculiar position humans are in to be something we must take seriously? — TheMadFool
I agree and disagree with you. Let us check to be sure we are using the same sources of information.
My information comes from books and documentaries about animal behavior. Are you working with what is learned by studying animal behavior?
I don't think it is possible for animals to discuss concepts of good and bad as humans do, but some of them teach the young how to behave and in groups of social animals such as chimpanzees, bad behavior that is not corrected leads to being driven off. Even horses are said to teach the young proper behavior. Squirrels steal each other's nuts and know they better not get caught, so we might wonder exactly what is our sense of conscience? However, an animal is not going to reason through polluting water and people getting sick and dying, therefore, it is wrong to pollute the water. — Athena
Dare I say we're afflicted with an illness of a moral nature? We are, like it or not, bad, despite our protestations that we're not. — TheMadFool
I receive some comfort, as little as it may be, from the realization that all that's good in the world comes from mankind. — TheMadFool
Corrupt are some religions have become, the loss of Christianity and the moral collapse of society are not merely coincidental. Unless mankind has something higher than mankind to aspire to, things will go badly. — EnPassant
Morality has always been considered as according to social conventions. — thewonder
At best, morality relies upon an appeal to a kind of quasi-ascetic superiority complex arbitrated by those who decide who is and isn't virtuous. — thewonder
That is more like an abuse of moral concepts. No doubt, these concepts can be abused in the way that concepts of justice can be abused. But corruptions of moral concepts are not a measure of ideal moral concepts — EnPassant
I don't think that it is the case that you can say that something like stealing is wrong in every given context. — thewonder
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