JanisChambers
Thinker
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2007
- Messages
- 174
My experience with theists and their buss stop sermons have kept me thinking for some time. It turned just recently to "needing God to be moral" and also a story that was told during a recent episode of Skeptics Guide to the Universe. I can't remember it completely, but it told about Starbucks cups that said something along the lines of "Scientists have ignored the moral impact of Evolution" and of course, it was written by some joker from the Discovery institute.
So do we really need a God to be moral? So is Evolution really the acid of morality that Creationists attempt to make it out to be? I couldn't disagree more, I may not be a anthropologist or an evolutionary biologist but just a few moments of thinking about it shows me that our morality and our evolution are closely linked. Just think about it for a moment... Humans are weak, thin skinned beings with no claws, dull teeth, and a thin fur layer. The only power we have is in our numbers and working togeather. Social order, language, and the communication of ideas in general allowed us to overpower other creatures that evolved to be stronger and faster than we ever were.
As weak primates we were a group of underdogs against beings that evolved towards the use of power. We worked together to take down mammoths and dangerous hunters. To some extent we began to understand that unity was far more useful than a claw or a strong arm, but it wouldn't stop there. Our minds grew more powerful and so we began to augment ourselves with use of weapons and clothing, we no longer needed the harsh selective powers of the wilderness to strengthen our collective might. Individual ideas and insights were also respected in time by at least some of our ancestors. Slowly and with several bumps along the way we learned that we could become stronger by harvesting ideas and thoughts amongst one another. Our diversity lead to more and more invention, our unity lead to combining those threads of knowledge into yet more 'fitness'.
So, ultimately it comes down to my personal conclusion. There is two ways you can live your life, by power or by harmony. Try to live by power and you live a very unstable life. You can't always be the strongest or the most cunning. Living by power is buying into a world that cares nothing for you, and remember this.. Even a fool can stab the king in the back.
To lean on God as the moral authority is to buy into power. What *he* says is moral not because it works but because *he says so*. The "because I said so" morality seems to rub off. When I was young I don't know how many times I heard those four words, my parents couldn't give me any solid *reason* for pretty much anything they found moral. I can't find the harmony in that way of thinking, it's all about who has the biggest God.
I have no God, I have no authority telling me what I should and should not believe. I understand that it's a long and hard process to learning what works best, and some may find other paths. The only thing that is really solid I believe should be shared between us is that unity that allowed us to take down giants.
So do we really need a God to be moral? So is Evolution really the acid of morality that Creationists attempt to make it out to be? I couldn't disagree more, I may not be a anthropologist or an evolutionary biologist but just a few moments of thinking about it shows me that our morality and our evolution are closely linked. Just think about it for a moment... Humans are weak, thin skinned beings with no claws, dull teeth, and a thin fur layer. The only power we have is in our numbers and working togeather. Social order, language, and the communication of ideas in general allowed us to overpower other creatures that evolved to be stronger and faster than we ever were.
As weak primates we were a group of underdogs against beings that evolved towards the use of power. We worked together to take down mammoths and dangerous hunters. To some extent we began to understand that unity was far more useful than a claw or a strong arm, but it wouldn't stop there. Our minds grew more powerful and so we began to augment ourselves with use of weapons and clothing, we no longer needed the harsh selective powers of the wilderness to strengthen our collective might. Individual ideas and insights were also respected in time by at least some of our ancestors. Slowly and with several bumps along the way we learned that we could become stronger by harvesting ideas and thoughts amongst one another. Our diversity lead to more and more invention, our unity lead to combining those threads of knowledge into yet more 'fitness'.
So, ultimately it comes down to my personal conclusion. There is two ways you can live your life, by power or by harmony. Try to live by power and you live a very unstable life. You can't always be the strongest or the most cunning. Living by power is buying into a world that cares nothing for you, and remember this.. Even a fool can stab the king in the back.
To lean on God as the moral authority is to buy into power. What *he* says is moral not because it works but because *he says so*. The "because I said so" morality seems to rub off. When I was young I don't know how many times I heard those four words, my parents couldn't give me any solid *reason* for pretty much anything they found moral. I can't find the harmony in that way of thinking, it's all about who has the biggest God.
I have no God, I have no authority telling me what I should and should not believe. I understand that it's a long and hard process to learning what works best, and some may find other paths. The only thing that is really solid I believe should be shared between us is that unity that allowed us to take down giants.