Subduction Zone
Veteran Member
I don't know, but my yogurt appears to have it in spades.What is culture?
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I don't know, but my yogurt appears to have it in spades.What is culture?
The defining myths of a social unitWhat is culture?
The answer, from anthropological studies and from experiments with children, even pre-verbal infants, is that we get part of our morality from our evolution as gregarious primates, and part from our upbringing, culture, education and experience.How did we get our moral beliefs?
Here are some different ways to believe where morals could come from.
1. Supernatural derived morals – moral knowledge based on the will or commandments of the Creator/god/goddess. Morals are defined by the creator
2. Non-natural - neither the natural nor the supernatural but coming from comprehension requiring something comparable to mathematical intuition. (Henry Sidgwick in his book The Methods of Ethics, 1907). I am not so familiar with this view.
3. Natural morals – there are moral facts are among the natural facts of the world or moral truths. Here Kant argues that moral knowledge cannot be based on experience of the natural world. If we have moral knowledge at all, we must know a general moral truth from which we can deduce specific conclusions. From what I have read there are those who feel moral properties are identical with certain natural properties specified by combinations of non-moral terms found in the natural and social sciences. And others that believe moral facts are natural facts but denies that they are specifiable using the language of the natural and social sciences.
4. Naturalized morals including rational choice, and pragmatic naturalism. These describe moral facts without absolute moral truth or knowledge and have been described by Nelson Goodman, W Quine, William James, John Dewey and Philip Kitcher
And finally
5. Evolutionary Morals – proposed as early as Darwin who suggested that human morality originated and persisted among our ancestors primarily as an adaptation fashioned by natural selection. This explanation of the origins and persistence of morals among humans undermine the likelihood that moral beliefs are true and hence undermine the possibility of moral knowledge. It is in this last category that advances in neuroscience, evolution, anthropology and psychology are unveiling how human behavior and culture evolved. Here science may not be creating moral beliefs but rather explaining how they came about and the role they serve.
[Interesting in the category of evolutionary moral development there is a division between those that believe the cognitive aspect of the brain in humans has created more complex morals and dominated over a more primitive intuitive/emotional morals (thus humans have an ability not seen in the natural world) and those that believe the cognitive and intuitive/emotions aspects of the brain with respect to morals have evolved together and are co-dependent (those that agree with Darwin that humans are different in degree and not kind).]
So where do you believe human morals come from?
So Divine Command morality, then.How did we get our moral beliefs?
Here are some different ways to believe where morals could come from.
1. Supernatural derived morals – moral knowledge based on the will or commandments of the Creator/god/goddess. Morals are defined by the creator.
???? --- I can't make heads or tails of this.2. Non-natural - neither the natural nor the supernatural but coming from comprehension requiring something comparable to mathematical intuition. (Henry Sidgwick in his book The Methods of Ethics, 1907). I am not so familiar with this view.
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?3. Natural morals – there are moral facts are among the natural facts of the world or moral truths. Here Kant argues that moral knowledge cannot be based on experience of the natural world. If we have moral knowledge at all, we must know a general moral truth from which we can deduce specific conclusions. From what I have read there are those who feel moral properties are identical with certain natural properties specified by combinations of non-moral terms found in the natural and social sciences. And others that believe moral facts are natural facts but denies that they are specifiable using the language of the natural and social sciences.
Not quite following here, either.4. Naturalized morals including rational choice, and pragmatic naturalism. These describe moral facts without absolute moral truth or knowledge and have been described by Nelson Goodman, W Quine, William James, John Dewey and Philip Kitcher
Yes, this makes sense. Co-operation has a positive survival value, so natural selection would weed out dysfunctional individuals.5. Evolutionary Morals – proposed as early as Darwin who suggested that human morality originated and persisted among our ancestors primarily as an adaptation fashioned by natural selection. This explanation of the origins and persistence of morals among humans undermine the likelihood that moral beliefs are true and hence undermine the possibility of moral knowledge. It is in this last category that advances in neuroscience, evolution, anthropology and psychology are unveiling how human behavior and culture evolved. Here science may not be creating moral beliefs but rather explaining how they came about and the role they serve.
I think social species are hard-wired with certain attitudes and behaviors. Humans are wont to extend these into elaborate ethical systems.[Interesting in the category of evolutionary moral development there is a division between those that believe the cognitive aspect of the brain in humans has created more complex morals and dominated over a more primitive intuitive/emotional morals (thus humans have an ability not seen in the natural world) and those that believe the cognitive and intuitive/emotions aspects of the brain with respect to morals have evolved together and are co-dependent (those that agree with Darwin that humans are different in degree and not kind).]
In a nutshell, a culture is an all-encompassing learned survival strategy.What is a "culture"?
This is part of it, but a culture's more extensive than just a defining mythology.The defining myths of a social unit
Moral beliefs or moral behaviours? We all have ideas of what we feel we should do in any hypothetical situation or general context but what we actually choose to do isn’t always the same. Take the various classic hypotheticals involving a train you can switch on to one of two lines, leading to it hitting two differently defined groups of people or only having time to save one person/thing from a burning building. We can sit down and carefully assess all sorts of moral and practical implications of these scenarios but if we’re ever unlucky enough to face such decisions in real life, our instinctive responses in the heat of the moment might be quite different.How did we get our moral beliefs?
I find the "finally" in the title a bit tendentious, implying that science has attempted a "final" account of the origins of morality. I'm not at all sure that it has.How did we get our moral beliefs?
Here are some different ways to believe where morals could come from.
1. Supernatural derived morals – moral knowledge based on the will or commandments of the Creator/god/goddess. Morals are defined by the creator
2. Non-natural - neither the natural nor the supernatural but coming from comprehension requiring something comparable to mathematical intuition. (Henry Sidgwick in his book The Methods of Ethics, 1907). I am not so familiar with this view.
3. Natural morals – there are moral facts are among the natural facts of the world or moral truths. Here Kant argues that moral knowledge cannot be based on experience of the natural world. If we have moral knowledge at all, we must know a general moral truth from which we can deduce specific conclusions. From what I have read there are those who feel moral properties are identical with certain natural properties specified by combinations of non-moral terms found in the natural and social sciences. And others that believe moral facts are natural facts but denies that they are specifiable using the language of the natural and social sciences.
4. Naturalized morals including rational choice, and pragmatic naturalism. These describe moral facts without absolute moral truth or knowledge and have been described by Nelson Goodman, W Quine, William James, John Dewey and Philip Kitcher
And finally
5. Evolutionary Morals – proposed as early as Darwin who suggested that human morality originated and persisted among our ancestors primarily as an adaptation fashioned by natural selection. This explanation of the origins and persistence of morals among humans undermine the likelihood that moral beliefs are true and hence undermine the possibility of moral knowledge. It is in this last category that advances in neuroscience, evolution, anthropology and psychology are unveiling how human behavior and culture evolved. Here science may not be creating moral beliefs but rather explaining how they came about and the role they serve.
[Interesting in the category of evolutionary moral development there is a division between those that believe the cognitive aspect of the brain in humans has created more complex morals and dominated over a more primitive intuitive/emotional morals (thus humans have an ability not seen in the natural world) and those that believe the cognitive and intuitive/emotions aspects of the brain with respect to morals have evolved together and are co-dependent (those that agree with Darwin that humans are different in degree and not kind).]
So where do you believe human morals come from?
I'm going to go on a whim here and say empathy/mirror neurons. If history has shown us anything, we can be cruel and are still cruel to entities we don't consider like us. Humans, animals and all species alike. The less we empathise, the less or don't consider if something is wrong. Hence, morality seems to originate from our ability to empathise.How did we get our moral beliefs?
Here are some different ways to believe where morals could come from.
1. Supernatural derived morals – moral knowledge based on the will or commandments of the Creator/god/goddess. Morals are defined by the creator
2. Non-natural - neither the natural nor the supernatural but coming from comprehension requiring something comparable to mathematical intuition. (Henry Sidgwick in his book The Methods of Ethics, 1907). I am not so familiar with this view.
3. Natural morals – there are moral facts are among the natural facts of the world or moral truths. Here Kant argues that moral knowledge cannot be based on experience of the natural world. If we have moral knowledge at all, we must know a general moral truth from which we can deduce specific conclusions. From what I have read there are those who feel moral properties are identical with certain natural properties specified by combinations of non-moral terms found in the natural and social sciences. And others that believe moral facts are natural facts but denies that they are specifiable using the language of the natural and social sciences.
4. Naturalized morals including rational choice, and pragmatic naturalism. These describe moral facts without absolute moral truth or knowledge and have been described by Nelson Goodman, W Quine, William James, John Dewey and Philip Kitcher
And finally
5. Evolutionary Morals – proposed as early as Darwin who suggested that human morality originated and persisted among our ancestors primarily as an adaptation fashioned by natural selection. This explanation of the origins and persistence of morals among humans undermine the likelihood that moral beliefs are true and hence undermine the possibility of moral knowledge. It is in this last category that advances in neuroscience, evolution, anthropology and psychology are unveiling how human behavior and culture evolved. Here science may not be creating moral beliefs but rather explaining how they came about and the role they serve.
[Interesting in the category of evolutionary moral development there is a division between those that believe the cognitive aspect of the brain in humans has created more complex morals and dominated over a more primitive intuitive/emotional morals (thus humans have an ability not seen in the natural world) and those that believe the cognitive and intuitive/emotions aspects of the brain with respect to morals have evolved together and are co-dependent (those that agree with Darwin that humans are different in degree and not kind).]
So where do you believe human morals come from?
How did we get our moral beliefs?
Here are some different ways to believe where morals could come from.
1. Supernatural derived morals – moral knowledge based on the will or commandments of the Creator/god/goddess. Morals are defined by the creator
2. Non-natural - neither the natural nor the supernatural but coming from comprehension requiring something comparable to mathematical intuition. (Henry Sidgwick in his book The Methods of Ethics, 1907). I am not so familiar with this view.
3. Natural morals – there are moral facts are among the natural facts of the world or moral truths. Here Kant argues that moral knowledge cannot be based on experience of the natural world. If we have moral knowledge at all, we must know a general moral truth from which we can deduce specific conclusions. From what I have read there are those who feel moral properties are identical with certain natural properties specified by combinations of non-moral terms found in the natural and social sciences. And others that believe moral facts are natural facts but denies that they are specifiable using the language of the natural and social sciences.
4. Naturalized morals including rational choice, and pragmatic naturalism. These describe moral facts without absolute moral truth or knowledge and have been described by Nelson Goodman, W Quine, William James, John Dewey and Philip Kitcher
And finally
5. Evolutionary Morals – proposed as early as Darwin who suggested that human morality originated and persisted among our ancestors primarily as an adaptation fashioned by natural selection. This explanation of the origins and persistence of morals among humans undermine the likelihood that moral beliefs are true and hence undermine the possibility of moral knowledge. It is in this last category that advances in neuroscience, evolution, anthropology and psychology are unveiling how human behavior and culture evolved. Here science may not be creating moral beliefs but rather explaining how they came about and the role they serve.
[Interesting in the category of evolutionary moral development there is a division between those that believe the cognitive aspect of the brain in humans has created more complex morals and dominated over a more primitive intuitive/emotional morals (thus humans have an ability not seen in the natural world) and those that believe the cognitive and intuitive/emotions aspects of the brain with respect to morals have evolved together and are co-dependent (those that agree with Darwin that humans are different in degree and not kind).]
So where do you believe human morals come from?
The answer, from anthropological studies and from experiments with children, even pre-verbal infants, is that we get part of our morality from our evolution as gregarious primates, and part from our upbringing, culture, education and experience.
The evolved part is our tendencies towards ─
child nurture and protection
dislike of the one who harms
like of fairness and reciprocity
respect for authority
loyalty to the group
a feeling of self-worth/virtue through self-denial
We've also evolved with mirror neurons, which allow us to see things through other people's eyes, and to have a conscience, which is making judgments with the feeling that we're applying rules of universal application (even though everyone's list of rules is likely to be different).
The acquired part includes table manners, customs about excreting, birth and marriage ceremonies and requirements, funeral practices, how to dress in particular instances and so on.
Your whim explains why conscience varies in strength. It doesn't explain how we know the difference between right and wrong, fair and unfair.I'm going to go on a whim here and say empathy/mirror neurons. If history has shown us anything, we can be cruel and are still cruel to entities we don't consider like us. Humans, animals and all species alike. The less we empathise, the less or don't consider if something is wrong. Hence, morality seems to originate from our ability to empathise.
It does. We have evolved with pleasure and pain/suffering. Empathy generally reflects this when someone is empathetic. Therefore, if I empathise with someone feeling pain, I will dislike this feeling. Therefore, I know it's wrong. To further this, Buddhists will avoid hurting bugs, because they can empathise with themselves being bugs or others being bugs. They wouldn't want to squish another person or loved one, would they? In comparison, most of the western world does not empathise.Your whim explains why conscience varies in strength. It doesn't explain how we know the difference between right and wrong, fair and unfair.
I go very much with the "natural morals". In order to survive for a group of humans, we all have to support each other in all different ways which demands certain moral codex. The very same goes really for our environmentally use and concerns for the nature itself.3. Natural morals – there are moral facts are among the natural facts of the world or moral truths. Here Kant argues that moral knowledge cannot be based on experience of the natural world. If we have moral knowledge at all, we must know a general moral truth from which we can deduce specific conclusions. From what I have read there are those who feel moral properties are identical with certain natural properties specified by combinations of non-moral terms found in the natural and social sciences. And others that believe moral facts are natural facts but denies that they are specifiable using the language of the natural and social sciences.
Well, now you've added a little to your whim-explanation. I'm not saying you're wrong. I'm saying that your explanation doesn't cover much ground.It does. We have evolved with pleasure and pain/suffering. Empathy generally reflects this when someone is empathetic. Therefore, if I empathise with someone feeling pain, I will dislike this feeling. Therefore, I know it's wrong. To further this, Buddhists will avoid hurting bugs, because they can empathise with themselves being bugs or others being bugs. They wouldn't want to squish another person or loved one, would they?
It's quite simple: if it doesn't feel pleasurable or is unpleasant. When you see someone intentionally hurt, one might empathise and know it's a bad thing that happened. It's an unpleasant feeling to see someone that is in pain, therefore, if the entity doing it had a choice then it's the wrong one. Vice versa for pleasure. This why the majority of convicts are psychopaths. Psychopathy is primarily diagnosed with a lack of empathy. They have difficulty telling what's right or wrong or don't care altogether unless it helps them.How do we know the difference between right and wrong, fair and unfair?
if it doesn't feel pleasurable or is unpleasant.
Yes, this is, in my opinion, the origin of morality and something we can't escape from.Is that seriously what you put it all down to?