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| quote: | Originally posted by kewlness
Just another topic to put in mind for discussion:
Let's say, you see a six year old girl getting raped by some 30 year old bastard. Now, you know that is JUST WRONG. But what causes that feeling inside of you that just tells you that it's wrong? Your concsience? Your psyche?
As a Christian, I believe it is our conscience that tells us what is right and wrong. I don't believe it is our mind telling us what what is right or wrong, because if you compare humans to animals, we actually believe in what is morally right and what is morally wrong, whereas animals just do what it is best for them or what is best in order to pass down their genes for future generations.
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I consider morality and religion to be two seperate entities. Where is it written that an athiest cannot help the poor, treat others how they'd wish to be treated, or recognize that rape is unjust? On the contrary, since when does the fact that someone claims to be a Christian (or Jew, Muslim, etc for that matter) make them a moral person? Need I remind you that some of the worst atrocities in human history have been committed in the name of "god?"
Some examples:
-The crusades in Europe (which forced some of my ancestors out of Spain because they were Jewish)
-The persecution and rape of native peoples in what are now the Continental US, Canada, Hawaii, Australia, New Zealand, Mexico, Central and South America by European colonialists largely on the basis of ethnicity and cultural/religious beliefs.
-Sept 11th and the ensuing "war on terror" (the highjackers felt they were doing the work of "god." Pres. Bush feels he is doing the work of "god." At least that's probably what he tells himself so he can sleep at night knowing how many US soldiers and Iraqi civilians have died in the Iraqi campaign.)
-3 wars between India and Pakistan, countries created along religious lines, within their short ~56 year existence in which countless thousands of people have died.
-Palestinian suicide bombings, and IDF killings of young children throwing rocks. Much of their fight is over supposed religious entitlements to a common piece of land...
Since you brought up the issue of rape, I'll give you another example of one country in which most of the population considers itself to be Christian (Catholic); Mexico.
In Mexico the crime of rape is hardly considered a crime at all. If a woman is raped in Mexico she must struggle against a legal system and a culture that is against her in most every respect to seek justice. Rape cases often get thrown out of court by judges and if there is a conviction (rare), the rapist often only gets a slap on the wrist. In many of the smaller towns and villages, it's considered ok for a woman to be "stolen" by a man as long as the "theif" agrees to marry her after getting her pregnant (usually against her will). Would you consider this to be moral? I don't, but living in the US I was conditioned to view rape as one of the most serious of crimes...
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Physically, I think humans are just a more highly sophisticated, intelligent, and advanced living being. But you must admit that there is something distinctive about humans, not that we are smarter and more capable, but we seem to have a moral sense of what is right and wrong. |
Humans are very weak physically compared to many other animals of comparable size and stature (yes humans are animals too). Ask Roy Horn the magician if you don't believe me. As for intelligence, I believe that to be a double edged sword. I think it must have helped us evolutionarily in our past, and thus those genes containing the seeds of the present human consciousness were passed on to future generations. Those of our ancestors who were more intelligent survived the rigors of natural selection.
Dr. Penny Patterson's studies with Koko the gorilla (in my mind) prove that species other than humans are able to be conditioned to adopt a sense of "right" and "wrong." These are the basic building blocks of morality, if perhaps less sophisticated than what humans practice. Actually the fact that Koko can grasp "right" and "wrong" places her above some humans lol.
Here's a question for you:
If humans are so sophistocated and intelligent, why do they poison themselves and consider themselves not a part of nature? Why do they do their best to upset the natural balance the existence of which is the very reason for their existence? Is it moral for large US corporations (supported largely by the right-wing) to move across the border of the US into Mexico in order to avoid spending extra money on pollution controls and minimum wage (or more) salaries in the USA? Is it moral to pay someone 50 US cents an hour as a worker in your factory while you poison their drinking water supply and air? Is it moral to appoint industry lobbyists to the Environmental Protection Agency (and the Texas state equivalent TNRCC)? Dubya's sense of morality and my sense of morality must differ then. What a wonderful Christian man.
http://www.tranceaddict.com/forums/...threadid=134343
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For you atheists, what would you think accounts for this sense of what is good and bad? Your brain? Or is it something else?? |
I'm not an atheist, and I believe that the existence of a creator cannot be proven or disproved at this time. I believe how ones brain is "wired" so to speak, and also ones conditioning and upbringing in ones respective culture account for ones sense of morality. One can "learn" a sense of morality by means of religion, or by other means. The fact that religion is often the vehicle used to teach morality doesn't mean that the two are one and the same.
I have been studying the teachings of the Buddha lately because as much as I respect Jesus' wisdom and teachings (many are very similar to the Buddha), it's hard for me to study what he said without the taint or pollution of the structured Christianity that I've experienced growing up living in the USA. I'm aware of much of the history about how greedy, immoral men have twisted the words of Jesus to suit their own bigotry. This still occurs to this day:
http://www.tranceaddict.com/forums/...529#post1897529
Thus it's harder for me to view the teachings of Jesus through something other than an opaque window.
-I hope that all made some sense. 
Great thread btw/
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