Bear Wild
Well-Known Member
So Divine Command morality, then.
???? --- I can't make heads or tails of this.
This isn't clear, either. Are you talking about an ontological category, like moral realism, with actual moral facts embedded in the universe like magnetism or gravity?
Not quite following here, either.
Yes, this makes sense. Co-operation has a positive survival value, so natural selection would weed out dysfunctional individuals.
I think social species are hard-wired with certain attitudes and behaviors. Humans are wont to extend these into elaborate ethical systems.
1. Yes there are people who believe that a creator(god or goddess) commands set what should be a moral and that's where they come from. I do not agree but presented this possibility for those that may still believe this to be our source of morals.
2. non - natural morals - I have no clue - included them for completeness and gave a proponent of this view. Basically morals are not found in nature but in some world of intellectual realm that only with intuitive reasoning of the mind can they be reasoned. Sorry to be unable to give more details but I do not believe in this and have very strong reasons to object to anything out of the natural world. Maybe someone else has heard of this.
3. Natural morals - yes moral realism that morals are a fact of the universe to be discovered. Only through the critical cognitive reasoning can these be truly understood. I do not believe in this either but there is a long line of philosophers that have argued this including Kant.
4. Naturalized morals - this is using natural facts and experiences to determine moral behavior - more of a pragmatic view point. A rational response to experiences and social interaction. Here no moral truth but rather morals needed for social order.
5. Evolutionary morals - I is here where amazing advances are being made and this is where I believe morals for humans as well as animals developed - through natural selection. The collective field studies mixed with experimental studies are beginning to shed light on our own moral behavior.
The research in rats, mice and voles have become the possible models for moral behavior in understanding moral behavior. The role of oxytocin in empathetic behavior, the neural networks through the same regions of the brain that mice and men share. The role of empathy in the development of moral behavior and pro social behavior. These are just the beginning of what we are learning and have learned. Empathy in animals is now clearly demonstrated with neuroscience to support.
What I find most interesting is that some point to the mother child behavior as the initial source for moral behavior that developed in complexity as animals formed more and more complex social behavior. Thus natural selection selected for behaviors that support the social cohesiveness that gave those animals the advantage.