The bible fails egregiously in terms of moral values. Within its books ethnic cleansing, genocide, patriarchy-misogyny-marital rape, homophobia, slavery, authoritarianism, self-abnegation, poverty-masochism, neurotic guilt, superstition, scapegoating (purgitive lynching), vicarious redemption via human sacrifice, denialism, etc are advocated and even in some cases ritually memorialized. Bronze Age barbarism co-opted by – transfigured into – Iron Age statecraft. — 180 Proof
This is what I meant by how Moses, Jesus, and Mohammed were limited by extant social, cultural, political paradigms. They all had a vision of greatness - a being/state of perfection which they called Yahweh, God, Allah - but this idea of greatness was, in a way, severely constrained by the environment in which it was born.
It's quite apparent, if one gives it some thought, that religion was/is a reaction to the familiar misery of human existence - all the myriad ways in which we could be and were/are inconsiderate, selfish, greedy, hateful, etc., in short evil/bad - and what is really depressing about it all is that all these alleged prophets ended up endorsing the very practices (your list above) that they should've been condemning.
At this point what I'd like to do is offer a suggestion; don't take it as an indictment of religion itself but as an unsurprising case of man's imperfect nature. We can't throw out a good idea just because the person who thought of it wasn't, and the people who adopted it weren't, perfect exemplars of whatever that idea is.
My take on religion, at least in the way it's presented in the preceding paragraphs, seems to hint at, if not openly assert that, religion is man-made. What else explains the many flaws, suspiciously human-like, that litter the theological landscape? However, for me, even if I'm severely rebuked for it, the very fact that someone, that too in the bronze age during which people probably had other pressing matters to deal with, took the pains to think of a ethics/morality, its complexities notwithstanding, redeems all the flaws religions suffers from. It's a feat as miraculous as a blind man acquiring the power of sight.
Thus, even if it's true that "The Bible fails egregiously in terms of moral values" it mustn't be forgotten that it counts as one of the first steps made by humanity into the world of morality/ethics and that being so, mistakes should be the norm rather than the exception. The Bible means something - it's a record of the pioneers of morality - and for that it must be given its due recognition/respect/admiration.
Agreed.
And yeah, I subscribe to absurdism (Zapffe/Camus) with respect to moral judgment, though the 'genealogy' of my ethical naturalism (e.g. Spinoza, Peirce-Dewey, Philippa Foot) begins with epicureanism and then extends through spinozism with refining detours through humeanism, nietzscheanism & pragmaticism. Immanence sans transcendence (i.e. cranes, not sky-hooks). Moses & Jesus, Plato & Augustine have nothing to teach that isn't 'otherworldly' (i.e. nihil as per F.N.), or, as Dennett might say a 'sky-hook' for tyrants and other (malignant, bad faith) fantasties. — 180 Proof
Bravo!
... we - humans - are the ethical foundation of the universe.
I'm not gonna leap off that faith-heap with you, Fool. Not only doesn't this statement follow from your naturalist observations, but Nature, of which we're a part, long precedes and far exceeds 'human existence' so much so that saying we're it's "foundation" (of any kind) is like saying birds gliding on the wind are the aerodynamic foundation of the sky or mating fish are the procreative foundation of the sea. :sweat: This 'immanent sky-hook' you're desperately grasping at, Mad Fool, is oxymoronic and anachronistically violates the mediocrity principle. — 180 Proof
I don't see the point of denying an obvious fact - morality was born in the human mind, perhaps heart is a better word. Before humanity entered the world stage good and bad didn't exist. Nature, as we know it, is red in tooth and claw, the law of the jungle is a no-holds-barred fight to the death. In other words, like it or not, we, humans, are the foundation of morality, we're the representatives of good in the world, we're the source of goodness, we're the torchbearers who bring or, more accurately, are supposed to bring light into an otherwise dark universe.
Perhaps your resistance to the idea that humans are the foundation of morality arises from the fact that humans, despite how I've presented them above, are also the worst offenders - no other living organism can be attributed with as much needless violence and cruelty than humans. I have no choice but to accept this of course but at the same time you'll have to concede the fact that no other living organism has a sense of right and wrong, the so-called moral compass is distinctly human. Thus, drawing from the latter half of the preceding sentence, I take the position that humans are the foundation of morality, we are the moral face of the universe.