My words My feelings - you're welcome to add yours

by LouBelle 23 Replies latest jw friends

  • Big Dog
    Big Dog

    Tetra, very interesting quote by Mr. Dawkins and one that sort of bothers me. As I understand it, nature/evolution is pitiless and indifferent as Mr. Dawkins points out, and that all the traits we have are bred into us for survival. I also recall your explination as to how culture evolved along with biological evolution, and that the drawings that started out to coordinate the hunt evolved into the Mona Lisa as we big brained apes found ourselves stimulated by the pictures.

    I also given what I do acutely understand the role that morals play in the functioning of our society and why they might evolve, but here's where I have a problem and I find it to be a leap: If morals evolved so that we can live together as a group and provide order, as our living together in a group is safer for the species than alone that makes sense, but what about the emotions of say, pity, compassion, remorse, etc. In Mr. Dawkins view, nature is pitiless, there is no place for sentiment here, if it favors survival it is kept, if not, discarded. Why would the tribe develop compassion for the sickly weak member that isn't smart and doesn't contribute anything to the tribe towards its survival? Why would we feel moved to feed, care for, and protect such and individual? It would seem what we deem the higher aspects of human behavior really don't benefit our survival all that much if at all, in fact they may actually be counter productive in many situations. This is where I find a problem with the theory and find myself having to make a leap of faith to accept it akin to that made in accepting a god.

  • Sad emo
    Sad emo

    Good points TS

    but there needed to be authority and order for this all to work. ergo, the birth of morals.

    Would you say that the authority they 'looked to' or 'created' would have been a god who 'made the rules up' and subsequently 'ruled' them by fear?

    On the Dawkins quote, yep, the more I read it, the more it kind of makes sense! So what you're saying is that if I went back a few thousand years, the technology would be more primitive but people would be behaving the same?

    I'm not too sure whether I fully agree with it though. If an alien arrived with no idea of what we call good, bad or indifferent, then it would look like its how things were 'created' (using the term loosely!) because they don't know how it was before. But if they visited the earth at two different points in time, they might see that morals had developed.

    Or - are they saying that the concepts of good and evil exist only because humanity has defined it as such? *hears the sound of a penny dropping*

    ok, I think I might be starting to contradict myself here! It's too close to midnight, I'll have to sleep,read again and rethink in the morning!

  • GetBusyLiving
    GetBusyLiving

    Hey LouBelle, nice topic. Personally I find that not believing in anything that can't be proven to me beyond a reasonable doubt has improved my outlook on life HUGE. I don't have to think that some jolly Santa-Claus-looking sky daddy is hanging back watching little kids get raped and murdered, innocent people suffering and dying, ect.. and not doing jack shit about it, because I know I would. I can't even comprehend someone that would create us then f*ck us over like that.

    Being honest with myself has helped me to not resent some God, simply because I honestly don't believe it exists. It's been such an empowering experience for me and I think I'm a better person because of it too.


  • prophecor
    prophecor

    Hi Lou Belle. I find it very difficult to believe that God, in his infinite wisdom, could ever be blamed for all the evil that has been perpetrated by man's hands, in that he would allow it or disallow it as well. Though we as humans are imperfect sinners, we often give more credit to the devil than he deserves.

    Though I do believe evil is a lot more inheirent in some of us, the KKK, Hitler, Sadaam Hussein, Mussolinni and the likes of those, I also believe the devil sponsors such destructive energy like child molestation, murder, rape, as well as a some forms of pornograpy. I won't, in every case, always transfer the energy of the devil for being responsible for the actions of humans, I'll not deny that demonic and Satanic influences exist either.

    We are those who are out of sync with the planet. Earthquakes, forrest fires, tsunami's, volcanoes, we are on a planet that is just as alive as we humans are. The destructive forces we have given over to our world, in the form of pillaging it's resources is coming to haunt us in a very big way. I don't believe man has the capacity to understand the grand charge that he has been given him, for the care and upkeep of our home here, Earth. His ignorance as to how to be a good steward of this planet, has only come back to haunt him. I personnally can not hold God responsible for all the havoc that comes back on us because of the collective greed of mankind.

  • tetrapod.sapien
    tetrapod.sapien

    big dog & sad emo,

    i am going to actually spend some time with my wife this evening, so i will get back to you two tomorrow. but good questions! i will be mulling them over.

    (big dog, just quickly before my wife gives me more silent treatment : don't take any of it on faith. these disciplines you touch on: anthropology and evolutionary psychology, are huge areas of active research. we'll get to the bottom of it.)

    cheers!

    TS

  • LouBelle
    LouBelle

    Google - some people do feel that they need God - and that is what I was trying to get at. The feel the need God as much as the need oxygen & both are invisible.

    Tetra: well what to say....you make me think too much. Oh oh and please I'm not religous at all.

    For some it may not matter too much whether is a God or not. To others it does. I guess it's actually THAT simple.

  • tetrapod.sapien
    tetrapod.sapien

    Big Dog,

    I also given what I do acutely understand the role that morals play in the functioning of our society and why they might evolve, but here's where I have a problem and I find it to be a leap: If morals evolved so that we can live together as a group and provide order, as our living together in a group is safer for the species than alone that makes sense, but what about the emotions of say, pity, compassion, remorse, etc. In Mr. Dawkins view, nature is pitiless, there is no place for sentiment here, if it favors survival it is kept, if not, discarded. Why would the tribe develop compassion for the sickly weak member that isn't smart and doesn't contribute anything to the tribe towards its survival? Why would we feel moved to feed, care for, and protect such and individual? It would seem what we deem the higher aspects of human behavior really don't benefit our survival all that much if at all, in fact they may actually be counter productive in many situations. This is where I find a problem with the theory and find myself having to make a leap of faith to accept it akin to that made in accepting a god.

    before i get into the rest, Dawkins does not suggest that because nature is cold and indifferent to our survival, that all survivors also need to be cold and uncaring. but rather that we have the capacity to survive natures indifference, and make life even slightly more easy and humane in the process.

    so, this is all very similar to your question regarding art and poetry, and it's evolutionary history. and to a certain technical point, it's speculative to a degree of certainty about how morals developed. there is no fossil record of morals. what we mostly have is all the biological and paleontological evidence for evolution (brain size etc). we also have well documented modern human psychology. the speculation comes from marrying the fact that we know that we evolved, with what we see now in modern psychology, and modern behaviour. if we evolved physically, then it is safe to assume that we evolved psychologically too. exactly how is speculation. but not all speculation.

    let's break the discussion into an anthropological explanation of the evolution of morals, and evolutionary psychology's explanation of morals.


    the anthropological explanation is very similar to the explanation that i provided in the other thread where i described art and poetry to you, from an evolutionary perspective. morals evolved as our brains evolved. mind evolved as our brains evolved. consciousness evolved as our brains evolved. compassion ...etc etc.

    but as an interesting aside, "moral" behaviour is not limited to only homo sapiens , as i am sure you are aware. depending on one's definition of morals, we could say that dogs ( canus lupus familiaris ) have morals, as they seem to treat us well, will protect us, even love us on a certain level. apes also tend to band together and take care of each other.

    however, there has been a recent find at a site in Georgia (country) where paleoanthropologists have been uncovering very early hominids (non human) since the 90's. The site is called Dmanisi .

    the find i am going to point you towards is a rather new one, and it is causing some heated debate in anthropological circles about the ability of early hominid apes to care for one another. they have uncovered a skull of an old (40 yr) male H. ergaster or H. erectus that had no teeth, and by the looks of the jaw had survived for some time after losing all of his teeth. to many anthropologists, this is strong indication that he was propped up and supported by the community he lived in. here are some articles culled from the comments and articles of the anthropologists that support this hypothesis:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4418363.stm

    http://www7.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0504/feature2/learn.html

    and some actual sources in support of caring early hominids:

    DeGusta, David. "Aubesier 11 Is Not Evidence of Neanderthal Conspecific Care." Journal of Human Evolution, vol. 45 (2003), 91-4.

    Delson, Eric, and others, eds. Encyclopedia of Human Evolution and Prehistory. Garland Publishing Inc., 2000.

    Gabunia, Leo, and others. "Earliest Pleistocene Hominid Cranial Remains from Dmanisi, Republic of Georgia: Taxonomy, Geological Setting, and Age," Science (12 May 2000), 1019-25.

    Jurmain, Robert, and others. Introduction to Physical Anthropology, 10th edition. Wadsworth, 2005.

    Lebel, Serge, and others. "Comparative Morphology and Paleobiology of Middle Pleistocene Human Remains From the Bau de l'Aubesier, Vaucluse, France." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (September 25, 2001), 11097-102.

    Lordkipanidze, David, and others. "An Edentulous Hominin Skull from Dmanisi, Georgia." Submitted to Nature. Under review.

    and, in all fairness, here is a critical look by a rather well known anthropologist:

    http://johnhawks.net/weblog/fossils/lower/dmanisi/edentulous_care.html

    so it would seem that there is some anthropological evidence for the early development of morals and feelings like empathy and caring, although the specifics are debated. the main point that i would take away is, not that morals developed at all, but more when and why. they are obviously here today, and they did not just appear 3000 years ago in full form, but like everything else, they evolved. this is a special find, because these hominids were supposed to have live 1.8 MYA. anthropologists have long known that in order for humans to work within a tribe system, a certain type of moral code would have been needed. this is obivious from observation. but these old hominids were supposed to have been really primitive. so it's interesting to note that morality did not originate with humans alone, but is most likely something we obtained from our ancestors.


    evolutionary psychology:

    more than art & morals, i am starting to sense that your apprehension really lies at the boundary between the brain and the mind. the computer and the software, so-to-speak. how did the Mind evolve? after all, art & morals are really products of the mind, right? like consciousness, they are like software running atop, and dependant on, the brain, or computer.

    like any complex system, if we simply compare our minds to that of a shark, we sense that it is impossible to make that leap. and it is impossible. but, to study current behaviour and neural patterns that reflect not a "civilized" mind, but a "primitive" mind, is one of the basic tenets of evolutionary psychology. and we see those sorts of ancient survival behaviours everywhere, nested in with the newer, more moral behaviours.

    we know from paleontology that over the past 6 million years, the size of hominid brains have increased, leading us to where we are now. along with the increase in size, we see evidence of increased self awareness and intelligence (tools, culture, cave art, clothes, etc) especially in the last 200 000 years. but what really do these developments boil down to? general intelligence increased with brain size, this is a fact. but why the extra, non necessary things like consciousness, culture and morals? well this really boils down to the development of Mind after Brain. and it's not a clear cut differentiation either. other apes have a sense of cognition too, just not a highly self actualized one, like us.

    and it's not to say that the mind developed first, and then culture, morals and art came after, but that they are symbiotic to each other. they evolved together. only a small bit of cognition would be required to look after a sick relative. and like all memes, our ideas about ourselves, our morals, our consciousness and culture evolved by a process very similar to natural selection.

    the very fact that we are not perfectly moral (a lot of bad disgusting stuff happening along with the good stuff in society), is testament to the fact that we evolved our morals over a period of time that was very different to our own. morals, modern or ancient, come from our mind. and our mind is still wired for survival, not modern living. from http://www.psych.ucsb.edu/research/cep/primer.html :

    Principle 5. Our modern skulls house a stone age mind.

    Natural selection, the process that designed our brain, takes a long time to design a circuit of any complexity. The time it takes to build circuits that are suited to a given environment is so slow it is hard to even imagine -- it's like a stone being sculpted by wind-blown sand. Even relatively simple changes can take tens of thousands of years.

    The environment that humans -- and, therefore, human minds -- evolved in was very different from our modern environment. Our ancestors spent well over 99% of our species' evolutionary history living in hunter-gatherer societies. That means that our forebearers lived in small, nomadic bands of a few dozen individuals who got all of their food each day by gathering plants or by hunting animals. Each of our ancestors was, in effect, on a camping trip that lasted an entire lifetime, and this way of life endured for most of the last 10 million years.

    Generation after generation, for 10 million years, natural selection slowly sculpted the human brain, favoring circuitry that was good at solving the day-to-day problems of our hunter-gatherer ancestors -- problems like finding mates, hunting animals, gathering plant foods, negotiating with friends, defending ourselves against aggression, raising children, choosing a good habitat, and so on. Those whose circuits were better designed for solving these problems left more children, and we are descended from them.

    Our species lived as hunter-gatherers 1000 times longer than as anything else. The world that seems so familiar to you and me, a world with roads, schools, grocery stores, factories, farms, and nation-states, has lasted for only an eyeblink of time when compared to our entire evolutionary history. The computer age is only a little older than the typical college student, and the industrial revolution is a mere 200 years old. Agriculture first appeared on earth only 10,000 years ago, and it wasn't until about 5,000 years ago that as many as half of the human population engaged in farming rather than hunting and gathering. Natural selection is a slow process, and there just haven't been enough generations for it to design circuits that are well-adapted to our post-industrial life.

    In other words, our modern skulls house a stone age mind. The key to understanding how the modern mind works is to realize that its circuits were not designed to solve the day-to-day problems of a modern American -- they were designed to solve the day-to-day problems of our hunter-gatherer ancestors. These stone age priorities produced a brain far better at solving some problems than others. For example, it is easier for us to deal with small, hunter-gatherer-band sized groups of people than with crowds of thousands; it is easier for us to learn to fear snakes than electric sockets, even though electric sockets pose a larger threat than snakes do in most American communities. In many cases, our brains are better at solving the kinds of problems our ancestors faced on the African savannahs than they are at solving the more familiar tasks we face in a college classroom or a modern city. In saying that our modern skulls house a stone age mind, we do not mean to imply that our minds are unsophisticated. Quite the contrary: they are very sophisticated computers, whose circuits are elegantly designed to solve the kinds of problems our ancestors routinely faced.

    so, i hope this helps. again, let me know if there is anything i can explain better, or perhaps expound on. i can round up sources that get into the evolution of our mind (rather than brain size) if you like. but here is some further reading:

    Barkow, J., Cosmides, L. and Tooby, J. 1992. The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture. NY: Oxford University Press.

    Dawkins, R. 1986. The blind watchmaker. NY: Norton.

    Pinker, S. 1994. The language instinct. NY: Morrow.

    Williams, G. 1966. Adaptation and natural selection. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

    cheers,

    TS

  • tetrapod.sapien
    tetrapod.sapien

    sad emo,

    Would you say that the authority they 'looked to' or 'created' would have been a god who 'made the rules up' and subsequently 'ruled' them by fear?

    i think there is more evidence to support the hypothesis that human morals have come from within. from our interaction with the tribe in pre-historic times, that to say they were handed down from on high by god. this is evidence by what i cite in Big Dog's post where there is clear evidence that our brains are wired for hard cold survival, and not modern comfort living. this is shown by all the disgusting crap that goes on in the world compared with the minority of noble minded actions. our minds worked well for us while we struggled to survive. but now that we do not have the great pressure that we once did, our minds are trying to adjust in terms of morals.

    On the Dawkins quote, yep, the more I read it, the more it kind of makes sense! So what you're saying is that if I went back a few thousand years, the technology would be more primitive but people would be behaving the same?

    not quite. dawkins is saying that if you look around at the world, without the notion that the world was given to us by god, it makes perfect sense, morals (bad and good) and all. it's when we look around, and see all the crap, and wonder why god would have left us in such a hell, that it does not make sense.

    I'm not too sure whether I fully agree with it though. If an alien arrived with no idea of what we call good, bad or indifferent, then it would look like its how things were 'created' (using the term loosely!) because they don't know how it was before. But if they visited the earth at two different points in time, they might see that morals had developed.

    i guess it wasn't a very good illustration on my part. it would depend on the alien. if the alien had a critical faculty of thought, it may not think everything was created this way. after a while of observing, it would probably be very credulous that anything could have been developed consciously that had this many holes in it.

    Or - are they saying that the concepts of good and evil exist only because humanity has defined it as such? *hears the sound of a penny dropping*

    yes, this is it. there is much stronger reason to believe that we define morals ourselves, than to think they come from outside of ourselves. nature is not good or evil, but just indifferent. we are the ones that apply labels of good and evil to things that nature does not care about either way.

  • Daunt
    Daunt

    Sorry Loubelle, but the Oxygen and God analogy just doesn't hold up. Sight is not the only thing that judges natural occuring phenomena. We can not see gravity yet we can observe it's habits. We can not see oxygen yet we can test it's existence. However, God is unfalsifiable and can not be tested. This puts God in the lump of other mythology such as Santa Claus and Unicorns or anything else I make up on the fly.

    We came about our morals and our understanding through an interesting concept called memes. Memes are an excellent thing to study because it focuses human ideas and cultural differences much like scientific genes but Memes have it's own ability to replicate itself. Memes are ideas, thoughts, anything that can be thought of in the human mind. Buddhism, atheism, and christianity are Memes that spread when the right conditions are put forth. From the beginning of our simple but big brains, we had to find a way to seperate ourselves from other humans that weren't in our tribe. If we didn't seperate each other we would overrun our food supplies and strain on our ability to produce. Anyways, we didn't have the intricate smelling abilities of Dogs or other senses to tell each other apart so we used our big brains to come up with clothing, ornaments, and ideas to set us a part. All these things are memes and they were used mostly to set us apart.

    Much like Tetra has said, morality and such did not originate with humans. Many scientist believe that Memes started from the first proto-chimpanzes that were around at the time, but our memes were more complicated than the instinct ridden primates. To help our chances of extending our gene line throughout humanity we had to think of more complicated ways to seperate ourselves from our non-genetic human neighbors because their memes were growing in complexity also. So we began instituting religions, simple philosophies, more distinct and exotic clothing to seperate ourselves. We also changed our group systems from a individualistic selection type to a more a group selection type. Our memes spread faster and more distinct than genes since it had the ability to capture the fears, the love, and all of the emotion that we hold close to us. These memes (alongside our genetic instincts and nature’s influences itself) created control over other groups, dependence, more complicated forms of war, more complicated ideas, more complicated technologies, more complicated ways to love and an almost endless host of other things. All of this over time created our moral codes, shaped our way of thinking, and kept ourselves alive.

    Now in today's word our groups are so large and intricate that a billion people can be in a group and to insure their survival of their ideas they still have war, and try to spread their memes throughout other groups.

    Religion played a huge part in the early formation of these memes. It provided a glue, something that brought the groups together as a whole. We have a natural instinct to feel loved and to be a part of something and if we don’t we pretty much die. Thousands of studies have been produced to support this. Anyways, religion was very useful and successful in providing this glue that kept people together and from not dieing off from loneliness (we are social animals eh). However, religion also did it’s job too good. It kept groups together but also formed a Us vs. Them mentality to keep the group together. Yet as we know this has created innumerable bouts and wars between groups and individuals.

    I believe that it is about time for us to get over religion as a glue to society because a countless number of instances has supported the notion that individuals can survive on larger groups to help the super-organism. We can be a group if we devise a meme that doesn’t need an enemy that is essentially ourselves. We can do this but it can only start if we get rid of these viral memes that has expired it’s purpose. We can change the world but we have to work at it.

    Humanity itself is like a single human being. There’s the liver, legs, brain plenty of “societies” That keep the whole brain working. In these societies we have billions of cells. Each sell is almost just like each human. Many help us but many can also do very bad things to us. If we work together as a whole we can greatly benefit the superorganism aka you and me.

  • Big Dog
    Big Dog

    Its sort of amazing, I walked away from the KH over 20 years ago, went to college, built a life and never really gave this stuff much thought. I would go through phases of not believing in a god while at other times thinking there must be a god. But I never really sat down and thought about issues like evolution, intelligent design, etc. they just didn't impact my life. But the last couple of days reading all the threads with the evolutionists and creationists squaring off really got me to thinking about this whole issue, and what I actually believed.

    Tetra, I think you hit the nail on the head, I have a hard time NOT separating the mind from that lump of gray matter that resides atop of our necks. The mind, the human intellect, conscience, self awareness, the things that make us unique among the animal kingdom and amongst ourselves I have a hard time reducing to a set of binary solutions. If A does not promote the species then discard and go to B. But I also hear what you are saying in that the "higher" brain functions evolved along with our physical traits, they became more complex as we became more complex and there is a certain sense and beauty to that I suppose.

    I certainly do not dispute evolution, it appears to be as much a fact as any arguement I could hope to persuade a jury of. Now, where everything came from (including possibly some of the attributes we have been discussing, those that make us human), the universe at large, well the jury is still out on that one. I can certainly see why people want to discount the existence of a (G)god(s) given there is zero tangible proof of one and I could see myself going that way though I will admit to being somewhat saddened by that prospect. I have heard many say that their life is full of meaning without a god, and that they enjoy their existence and I can respect that. But a part of me is saddened by the thought of a scant 70 or 80 years of existence if I'm lucky and then eternal nothingness, that there is nothing more, nothing greater to aspire to or hope for. Or that if some are correct that life was such an amazing coincidence that in the whole universe this might be the only place it happened, it just shrinks the tapestry for me.

    Many say that if there is a god and things have been allowed to go the way they have that it just ruins the notion of god for them, I feel the same way in the opposite, if all this, the universe, humans, animals is all just the result of a mathematical probability playing itself out on this remote spec of rock in a vast universe, that just doesn't sing to me, or fill me with much sense of granduer.

    My point? No point really I guess, just thinking aloud. I don't think of myself as delusional, I live my life and make my living by what I can prove, and I don't ignore science or the things it explains, but I guess I am going to hold a little hope back that maybe there is something more to the whole deal, though I certainly would never try to prove that to anyone else as that is foolhardy. Once again thanks for all the thought, effort, and patience you put into addressing my questions, put it this way, you have pretty much convinced me of how things have happened, I am just going to take the ultimate why under advisement at this point.

    Humble thanks from BD.

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