but that's bad for social purposes, as the mentally and physically disabled have many friends, family members,etc who love them and thus would rebel against any force that would try to harm them just for the sake of who they are. It also contradicts the whole killing-people-makes-me-uncomfortable shtick. You can't do something immoral without violating one of those three premises.89Hen wrote:While I don't dispute your point that you don't have to believe in a higher power to have morality, your statement above can absolutely be refuted quite easily.youngterrier wrote:Anyway, we disapprove of acts of "immorality" because we understand
1) Harming others does not benefit our species in the long run (biologically)
2) Harming others does not benefit ourselves as individuals in the short term (socially)
Killing off people that have mental and physical disabilities can absolutely have a positive impact on our species biologically. That's not to say I think we should do that, but to say there is no benefit biologically is simply incorrect.
BTW, my comment on where we go from here was really meant to ask what will become immoral in the future.
Eventually, we'll see the golden rule as our means of morality, it pretty much already is.











