RIP Christopher Hitchens

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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

Post by JoltinJoe »

D1B wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote:
There isn't any credible source which would deny Marx's atheism (defined as a lack of a belief in a deity). Marx did not believe in a deity. In fact, Marx went beyond being an atheist, as it was his conception that, in the coming socialist state, the need for atheism as a negation of God would be an anachronism, since the coming socialist state would provide the central values necessary for the ordered society, i.e, there would be no need in this socialist state to describe the negation of God.

Here is a defining quotation from Marx's Critique of Hagel's Philosophy of Right:

“Since the real existence of man and nature has become evident in practice, through sense experience, because man has thus become evident for man as the being of nature, and nature for man as the being of man, the question about an alien being, about a being above nature and man – a question which implies admission of the unreality of nature and of man – has become impossible in practice. Atheism, as a negation of God, has no longer any meaning, and postulates the existence of man through this negation; but socialism as socialism no longer stands in any need of such a mediation.”

There is no doubt Marx is denying the existence of God in this quotation. That he saw "atheism" as a term wedded to a society in which order was centered around the concept of God does nothing to negate his denial of a deity. What is transparent is that, in the coming Socialist state, the people will have no belief in God.
I don't think so. He's actually saying here that atheism is unnecessary.

Ultimately for Marx, atheism does no good simply attacking religion and not addressing the conditions that give rise to it. By attacking religion, atheism was also attacking the way ("opiate") the oppressed masses dealt with suffering.
Again, atheism is counter-productive.

Yes Marx held that at some point in the future man's religious emancipation would come about through political emancipation, but in no way did he say "people will have no belief in God". :nod: If you ever cracked a book of his, you'll discover that that he says religion will become purely a "private matter."

Strike one, Joe. :coffee:
You are twisting things around here. The point is that Marx was an atheist, in that he had no personal belief in God.

He also said that in the coming atheist state, belief in a God would become anachronistic and thus the term atheist, as a negation of God, would be an anachronism too. However, in that Marx was wrong aboug belief in God becoming an anachronism, we can safely call him an atheist, because the term similarly survives in the 21st century.

Not only have I cracked Marx, I studied Marx under J. Quentin Lauer, one of the most significant authorities of German idealism of modern times. Please do more than read summaries on the internet.

In any event, it is not material whether Marx believed that some remnant of religion might survive in the socialist state as a "private matter."

You asked me to provide you with a quote which proved that Marx was an atheist and, in short order, I delivered quotes which demonstrated his personal lack of belief in God. Thanks for playing. We have some lovely parting gifts.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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JoltinJoe wrote:
Seahawks08 wrote:
First, nice word there with canards. Kudos for that. :thumb:

Second, your dead wrong lol.

a) The Spanish Inquisition is self explanatory if you know what it was. If you don't, then here:
http://www.thenagain.info/webchron/west ... inqui.html

b) I actually researched the history of science in college, so I know a little about what happened there. To put it mildly, science lost 1500 years between Aristotle and Copernicus because scientists were afraid to think differently. Yes, minor advancements were made, but nothing like what happened AFTER religion was thrown out.
The Spanish Inquisition was under the jurisdiction of the Spanish crown and was imposed over the objection of the pope. However, it has become quite common to confuse other and all inquisitions with the Spanish Inquisition. In most cases, in fact, church inquisitions resulted from the fear that civil authorities were imposing cruel and excessive penalties, tortures, and even death for "heresy." So the church acted to take control in order to provide the accused with meaningful judicial process and to safeguard the accused from cruel and excessive penalties. The case of Galileo is actually a great example of this. Galileo's house arrest was actually a protection afforded by influential church leaders. Galileo was permitted him to continue his studies and his writings -- while church leaders advised civil authorities that Galileo had been punished by house arrest. Galileo remained a Catholic in good standing until the date of his death and he never renounced his faith.

It is also a myth that the study of science was slowed by the Catholic Church. While the civil authorities of the Middle Ages had no use for science, the study of science was promoted and protected by the great Catholic and Jesuit universities throughout Europe. Virtually every scientist of these times era was the product of a Catholic university, and the Jesuit universities in particular were instrumental in preserving and advancing the scientific method.

Going further, almost all the Enlightenment philosophers were products of the European Catholic/Jesuit universities and, in time, the Jesuits became seen by monarchs to be menaces to the point that the European monarchs sought to have the Jesuit order suppressed.

So much of what is typically believed about the Catholic Church throughout history is the product of Protestant revisionism and anti-Catholic prejudice (a prejudice which remains prevalent and indeed fashionable in America today).
Seahawk,

Joe is partially right about the role of the great :nod: catholic and jesuit universities in fostering great thinkers, almost all em, for centuries. This is what happens when you control the world, like the catholics did. It's like giving credit to the thief who stole your food because he gave some of it back to you. :lol: It wasn't worth it.

Joe also conveniently ignored the fact the catholic church fucked over just about everyone for 1900 years. They fleeced everyone and kept everyone in poverty for a long time. The Dark Ages was a horrendous 800 year period of catholic corruption that stultified progress for mankind. These two facts alone absolutely validate that the catholic church has been nothing but a disease on mankind. Think of all the progress we could have made without those asshole and their monarchs (Spain :nod: ) taking every last dime of our ancestors and killing those who spoke up? We'd have a cure for cancer right now and Stucky's on Mars.

Yep, Galelio was treated great by the catholic church. :lol: Why in the fuck did the pope recently apologize for their treatment of him? They could have beheaded him and, to a passionate man of science and an old, frail man, it would have been preferable to what the catholic church actually did to him by publicly discrediting him and banning his publications.

He's full of shit on the Spanish Inquisition lie. Completely full of shit. :nod:
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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JoltinJoe wrote:
D1B wrote:
I don't think so. He's actually saying here that atheism is unnecessary.

Ultimately for Marx, atheism does no good simply attacking religion and not addressing the conditions that give rise to it. By attacking religion, atheism was also attacking the way ("opiate") the oppressed masses dealt with suffering.
Again, atheism is counter-productive.

Yes Marx held that at some point in the future man's religious emancipation would come about through political emancipation, but in no way did he say "people will have no belief in God". :nod: If you ever cracked a book of his, you'll discover that that he says religion will become purely a "private matter."

Strike one, Joe. :coffee:
You are twisting things around here. The point is that Marx was an atheist, in that he had no personal belief in God.

He also said that in the coming atheist state, belief in a God would become anachronistic and thus the term atheist, as a negation of God, would be an anachronism too. However, in that Marx was wrong aboug belief in God becoming an anachronism, we can safely call him an atheist, because the term similarly survives in the 21st century.

Not only have I cracked Marx, I studied Marx under J. Quentin Lauer, one of the most significant authorities of German idealism of modern times. Please do more than read summaries on the internet.

In any event, it is not material whether Marx believed that some remnant of religion might survive in the socialist state as a "private matter."

You asked me to provide you with a quote which proved that Marx was an atheist and, in short order, I delivered quotes which demonstrated his personal lack of belief in God. Thanks for playing. We have some lovely parting gifts.
:lol: Strike two
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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So just what religion was suppressing science between @400BC(Aristotle) and @400AD when Christianity was deemed legal? That's roughly half of your 1500 years of scientific loss. A 400 year chuck of which the Christians were being fed to the lions.
Religion in general was suppressing science, whether it be Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, or Greek Mythology. Combine that with no one wanting to say Aristotle was wrong, and you have little progress. :nod:
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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D1B wrote:
JoltinJoe wrote:
You are twisting things around here. The point is that Marx was an atheist, in that he had no personal belief in God.

He also said that in the coming atheist state, belief in a God would become anachronistic and thus the term atheist, as a negation of God, would be an anachronism too. However, in that Marx was wrong aboug belief in God becoming an anachronism, we can safely call him an atheist, because the term similarly survives in the 21st century.

Not only have I cracked Marx, I studied Marx under J. Quentin Lauer, one of the most significant authorities of German idealism of modern times. Please do more than read summaries on the internet.

In any event, it is not material whether Marx believed that some remnant of religion might survive in the socialist state as a "private matter."

You asked me to provide you with a quote which proved that Marx was an atheist and, in short order, I delivered quotes which demonstrated his personal lack of belief in God. Thanks for playing. We have some lovely parting gifts.
:lol: Strike two
You're a dunce. Seriously. Not joking at all. :nod:
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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Seahawks08 wrote:
So just what religion was suppressing science between @400BC(Aristotle) and @400AD when Christianity was deemed legal? That's roughly half of your 1500 years of scientific loss. A 400 year chuck of which the Christians were being fed to the lions.
Religion in general was suppressing science, whether it be Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, or Greek Mythology. Combine that with no one wanting to say Aristotle was wrong, and you have little progress. :nod:
That was Hawking's point in his last book. Of course, he was trying to show that all of philosophy was irrelevant and a hindrance to science. Moreover, many contend that the classical and Christian metaphysicists presaged the discovery of quantum physics.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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JoltinJoe wrote:
Seahawks08 wrote:
Religion in general was suppressing science, whether it be Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, or Greek Mythology. Combine that with no one wanting to say Aristotle was wrong, and you have little progress. :nod:
That was Hawking's point in his last book. Of course, he was trying to show that all of philosophy was irrelevant and a hindrance to science. Moreover, many contend that the classical and Christian metaphysicists presaged the discovery of quantum physics.
:lol: Sure you're not thinking of Eastern Mysticism, Dummy?

Christianity :lol:
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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It is also a myth that the study of science was slowed by the Catholic Church.
You're right, it wasn't just slowed by the Catholic Church, but all religions. The main problem was people couldn't freely think about the universe and its laws since they assumed Aristotle was right and that everything was done through intelligent design. And that subject is one effing powerful subject. So powerful that it still exists today to oppose evolution like a poster said earlier. If you think everything is perfect and can't be changed, then why look for something new? So was it just a coincidence that all of a sudden when religion, particularly Christianity, started showing cracks with the Protestant Reformation, science started to burgeon?
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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JoltinJoe wrote:
D1B wrote:
:lol: Strike two
You're a dunce. Seriously. Not joking at all. :nod:
Reminder of your challenge. You forgot it already.
Here's your challenge: Find an essay or article (by Marx, *******, not Father Lauer) where Marx admits to being an atheist, writes specifically about atheism being a philosophy, political or belief system.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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Seahawks08 wrote:
It is also a myth that the study of science was slowed by the Catholic Church.
You're right, it wasn't just slowed by the Catholic Church, but all religions. The main problem was people couldn't freely think about the universe and its laws since they assumed Aristotle was right and that everything was done through intelligent design. And that subject is one effing powerful subject. So powerful that it still exists today to oppose evolution like a poster said earlier. If you think everything is perfect and can't be changed, then why look for something new? So was it just a coincidence that all of a sudden when religion, particularly Christianity, started showing cracks with the Protestant Reformation, science started to burgeon?
The worst though, by far, was the catholic church. :nod:
"Sarah Palin absolutely blew AWAY the audience tonight. If there was any doubt as to whether she was savvy enough, tough enough or smart enough to carry the mantle of Vice President, she put those fears to rest tonight. She took on Barack Obama DIRECTLY on every issue and exposed... She did it with warmth and humor, and came across as the every-person....it's becoming mroe and more clear that she was a genius pick for McCain."

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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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Seahawks08 wrote:
It is also a myth that the study of science was slowed by the Catholic Church.
You're right, it wasn't just slowed by the Catholic Church, but all religions. The main problem was people couldn't freely think about the universe and its laws since they assumed Aristotle was right and that everything was done through intelligent design. And that subject is one effing powerful subject. So powerful that it still exists today to oppose evolution like a poster said earlier. If you think everything is perfect and can't be changed, then why look for something new? So was it just a coincidence that all of a sudden when religion, particularly Christianity, started showing cracks with the Protestant Reformation, science started to burgeon?
I'm bowing out of the discussion based soley on your avatar kicking mine's ass. I couldn't see it at wrok.

...didn't answer what religion squashed the science front from 400BC to 400BC though. Christianity did have a bad couple of decades between the East-West scism and the Reformation/ Counter-Reformation periods. 1000AD-1500AD or so. If it weren't for the Muslins and the Cursades, we'd all be forced into Islam and living in caves.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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JohnStOnge wrote:
You don't do things like murder, steal, rape etc because it helps the individual to help the tribe. A lone person has less survival chance than a group of people so it pays to have stability within the group to keep that lone person safe. It is all about protecting #1.
Yes that is the self interest argument but that's not really about right or wrong. Besides, what's best for the collective is not always best for the individual. Take an example I've used before: Stalin. He killed tens of millions of people. Or he ordered the killing of tens of millions of people. From his standpoint, he did fine. His self interest was well served. He died, as far as we know, of natural causes.

So,what was "wrong" with anything he did if there is nothing "beyond?" If someone else has the opportunity to do what he did, why should they not do it if they think they can succeed?
All living creatures are genetically programmed to attempt survive and reproduce. To reproduce, we must have other members from our species around as well. Reproduction is a means of survival in that part of us, as individuals is "put into," if you will, our children and so on. We strive to reproduce because we wish to survive. To continue our path of reproduction, we must have members of our species alive. To open all opportunities for our descendants to reproduce, one must preserve life as best one can. To murder is wrong because it primarily alters what is natural, in that life and living is natural. When you take the life of another for the sake of killing, you violate the laws of nature in that it serves no purpose. Secondarily it makes reproduction for ones descendants a little harder as the breeding pool is less broad.
^^^^this is a pretty dumbed down argument, but essentially I think one can determine what is moral based off of the "golden rule" because it ultimately serves the interests of the individual and the species. If anything, no one wants to be pushed around or taken advantage of, so we have government to protect the rights that we feel need protecting. Logically, we'd obey those laws because if we didn't we'd be sent to jail. That's not to say that every law is just, but rather it's a broad example.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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I have elsewhere expanded on each of these points, but they are largely self-explanatory. These suggestions are not mandated from above by a higher power, but instead are derived from our biology. One prominent characteristic of humans is sociality. Functioning as a group in many circumstances conveys significant advantages on members of the group. Associated with sociality is altruism, which is sacrificial behavior that in some way promotes the propagation of the genes of the altruistic individual, usually by aiding the survival of a close relative sharing some common genetic stock. The ultimate altruistic behavior would be dying for the sake of another's survival. An uncle getting in harms way to protect a nephew is an example. Social cooperation and altruism are likely significant factors in the success of our species, a fact that underlines the biological basis for a natural ethic as a defining and adaptive human characteristic.
Nice try. Seen the basic line of argument many times before. But it doesn't work. It provides a plausible explanation for why altruism exists, but it does not provide a basis for why a particular individual should care if he or she perceives an action as being in his or her own interests in spite of being contrary to the interests of the group at large. It does not provide a basis for "right and wrong."

The Stalin example surfaces again. Do you think Stalin cared about what was best for the species? Sure, living in a group benefitted him. But he was also head of the group. He had complete power over anybody else in it. Life or death. So on and so forth. He did fine killing tens of millions and doing who knows what else. Then he died of natural causes. Was what he did the best thing for the group?

Again: Postulating that altruism is a behavior pattern that evolved because it promotes the persistence of a species is a reasonable explanation for altruism. But it does not define intrinsic right or wrong.

Suppose we go back in time to a point where two tribes want the same land. There are only so many resources. One tribe sees an opportunity to eliminate the other. Kill them all. It does so. It has acted in its own interest. Now the genetic material carried by that tribe will previal.

And what is "wrong" with that?
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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All living creatures are genetically programmed to attempt survive and reproduce. To reproduce, we must have other members from our species around as well. Reproduction is a means of survival in that part of us, as individuals is "put into," if you will, our children and so on. We strive to reproduce because we wish to survive. To continue our path of reproduction, we must have members of our species alive. To open all opportunities for our descendants to reproduce, one must preserve life as best one can. To murder is wrong because it primarily alters what is natural, in that life and living is natural. When you take the life of another for the sake of killing, you violate the laws of nature in that it serves no purpose. Secondarily it makes reproduction for ones descendants a little harder as the breeding pool is less broad.
^^^^this is a pretty dumbed down argument, but essentially I think one can determine what is moral based off of the "golden rule" because it ultimately serves the interests of the individual and the species. If anything, no one wants to be pushed around or taken advantage of, so we have government to protect the rights that we feel need protecting. Logically, we'd obey those laws because if we didn't we'd be sent to jail. That's not to say that every law is just, but rather it's a broad example.
I do not think that, in general, we strive to reproduce because we wish personally to survive. And I think that the idea becomes especially questionable when we look at most of the history of our species. Rather, I think we have drives that result in reproduction, eating, etc. Also, it is obviously possible to do things that most consider "imoral" while advancing one's own biological interests. Let's say someone actually thinks about promoting the interest of their genetic material in future generations.

Say the estimate about the descendants of Gengis Khan reported at http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... nghis.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; are accurate. They estimate is that he has 16 million descendants. And it's not because he was a nice guy. He was an extremely ruthless dictator. He wiped out entire peoples. By some accounts he killed more people than Hitler or Stalin did.

But he was very successful both in personal terms and in biological terms.

Trying to make a popluation biology argument for personal ethics is futile. It really is.

One tenet of sociobiology is that it is in the interest of the individual to express his or her OWN genetic material to the maximum extent possible. It is competetive. It is the idea of "selfish genes." Thus a male lion kills all the lion cubs when it takes over a pride. Is that "ethical?"

Like, when I marry a woman who already has kids, should I kill her kids? If I am planning to use her to mother some of my own offspring that might be the optimum thing to do biologically. That way I would not have to divert energy and resources into sustaining somebody else's genetic material.

All of that stuff is part of biology too. It's not all sweetness and light.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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You know what's nice? Looking up at the stars and not thinking at all. Some of you should try it.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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Is killing someone for their land "ethical?" It happens in nature:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37830165/ns ... imps-land/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

But in nature it is neither ethical nor non ethical. There just is what is.

Anyway, I think that if people are going to try to use "nature" as a model for what we think of as "ethical" behavior they are headed for problems.

Wish I could find the video I once saw where one band of chimps attacked another, grabbed a baby chimp, and ate it. It provides a very stark visual reminder of what one is dealing with when one is dealing with "nature." Nature is not sweetness and light. It is brutal and hard. Unforgiving. Population biology does not provide a basis for what we are accumstomed to thinking of as rules for right and wrong.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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I found the video with one group of chimps attacking another and eating one of the young (below). One thing to note here: There are many social animals. But they are social within a group. They are often very hostile towards members of their own species from another group. And the groups are small. There is no "Universal Kum ba yah" in nature. On one hand, living in a group helps and is necessary. But that does not mean any particular individual is nice to all other individuals of its species. There is also murder, etc., within groups.

[youtube][/youtube]
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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∞∞∞ wrote:You know what's nice? Looking up at the stars and not thinking at all. Some of you should try it.
And meanwhile, they should stop bumping this thread. :ohno: :ohno: :ohno: :ohno:
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

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JohnStOnge wrote:
All living creatures are genetically programmed to attempt survive and reproduce. To reproduce, we must have other members from our species around as well. Reproduction is a means of survival in that part of us, as individuals is "put into," if you will, our children and so on. We strive to reproduce because we wish to survive. To continue our path of reproduction, we must have members of our species alive. To open all opportunities for our descendants to reproduce, one must preserve life as best one can. To murder is wrong because it primarily alters what is natural, in that life and living is natural. When you take the life of another for the sake of killing, you violate the laws of nature in that it serves no purpose. Secondarily it makes reproduction for ones descendants a little harder as the breeding pool is less broad.
^^^^this is a pretty dumbed down argument, but essentially I think one can determine what is moral based off of the "golden rule" because it ultimately serves the interests of the individual and the species. If anything, no one wants to be pushed around or taken advantage of, so we have government to protect the rights that we feel need protecting. Logically, we'd obey those laws because if we didn't we'd be sent to jail. That's not to say that every law is just, but rather it's a broad example.
I do not think that, in general, we strive to reproduce because we wish personally to survive. And I think that the idea becomes especially questionable when we look at most of the history of our species. Rather, I think we have drives that result in reproduction, eating, etc. Also, it is obviously possible to do things that most consider "imoral" while advancing one's own biological interests. Let's say someone actually thinks about promoting the interest of their genetic material in future generations.

Let's think here, why do we take joy in eating, being comfortable, and fucking? because it helps us survive. There's a reason we're genetically programmed to inherently take pleasure in certain things, because if we didn't we'd die out. It is of the nature of our species to survive both individually and as a population. It's just the way we're designed. Now, that doesn't mean it's impossible for one to break from those habits, as many have done it before. But when one breaks those habits one is not doing any good for himself or his species and thus he is doing immoral behavior.

Say the estimate about the descendants of Gengis Khan reported at http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... nghis.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; are accurate. They estimate is that he has 16 million descendants. And it's not because he was a nice guy. He was an extremely ruthless dictator. He wiped out entire peoples. By some accounts he killed more people than Hitler or Stalin did.

But he was very successful both in personal terms and in biological terms.

Trying to make a popluation biology argument for personal ethics is futile. It really is.

One tenet of sociobiology is that it is in the interest of the individual to express his or her OWN genetic material to the maximum extent possible. It is competetive. It is the idea of "selfish genes." Thus a male lion kills all the lion cubs when it takes over a pride. Is that "ethical?"
You're comparing lions and humans. We're talking about the natural behavior of humans, a sentient species that is capable of reason and rationality. It may be in the nature of lions to kill their young, but man has evolved past that. He has developed a social structure. Dare I say, it was the result of evolution, that it happened. Lions possess sentience, they are creatures of instinct. Man is different because he is smarter. Because man has created social structure, he has created morality. Lions can't do that because they haven't developed that beyond basic Darwinism in that the physically strong survive. Humans understand that different characteristics of different people make them superior to other humans in one way or another as a product of their intelligence whether it be one being physically superior intellectually superior, musically superior, sexually superior, therefore one can only resort to blanketly treat others on the same level. Everyone's talent is of purpose or service to other people, whether it be of yourself or another person. You may not value the thing that makes them superior to you (or even think it makes you superior) but others do and therefore they would oppose taking advantage of that person on your part. You can either choose to engage in actions that violate their rights as human beings and suffer the consequences that could range from being physical to social or not and flourish in those senses. It is much more productive (and rational) to engage in perceived moral behavior than it is to be selfish and immoral behavior.

What Genghis Khan did wrong because he took life because those actions sough an unnatural end to a natural course of nature. Violating nature is immoral in settings outside of saving one's self and species. Raping, for instance is wrong because it violates free will, a trait that every creature possesses naturally. Violating nature, especially that of your own species, serves no positive purpose to one's self or one's species because constant alteration will eventually lead to the downfall of our species.

Like, when I marry a woman who already has kids, should I kill her kids? If I am planning to use her to mother some of my own offspring that might be the optimum thing to do biologically. That way I would not have to divert energy and resources into sustaining somebody else's genetic material.

Wow, you are so full of shit :lol: you can't divide the argument! the points coincide with each other. Let me explain.
It cannot benefit an individual both socially and biologically if you murder others or engage in immoral behavior. It may work one way, but not the other. Ghenghis Khan may have pillaged and raped and biologically maximized his worth, but I'm willing to bet socially not many people took to kindly of him for it. History certainly doesn't.

In the case you stated, it doesn't benefit you socially to kill those children. Those children are probably loved by the woman you married and her family and friends and thus would cause much anger and mistrust and lack of social interaction among them. Your business ventures would much harder to engage in.


All of that stuff is part of biology too. It's not all sweetness and light.
I'm not arguing that morality is objective, I'm arguing that moral values can exist outside of the ethos of a deity. If one is rational he would understand that adhering to traditional moral standards and obeying the "golden rule" can do nothing but benefit him in the long run and failing to do so can hinder him financially, physically, and socially. All these examples you list are wrong for various reasons.

The "selfish" argument in that one can just do whatever one wants if one has the power is flawed because it ignores the social repercussions. If Stalin wasn't the murdering psychopath that he was and his guards didn't fear him so much, perhaps he would have lived longer.

And for Christ sake, can we stop blaming communist crimes against Atheists? They didn't murder because they felt like no God or anything would bring them to justice, they killed because the ones being killed no longer existing served their interests (or it was the result of a failed economic plan) and they felt they had the power to so (or they knew that they wouldn't be opposed rather). If one would notice, EVERY government partakes in actions that would be considered immoral and don't consider the Godly repercussions. In democracies in which we have rights and freedoms of voting, speech, to bear arms, etc, the government doesn't look to its founding document to decide to make law, the government instead looks at opinion polls to decide what they can get away with politically. Look at the Patriot Act, Look at the Trail of Tears, Look at the Japanese Internment Camps. If we (or rather those in charge) in the United States truly believe that those rights were endowed upon us from a creator, or at least if it influenced political decision, would we pass laws or commit actions that clearly violate said rights of Life and Liberty? I would think not. What happened in Russia and the rest of Asia was not the result of Atheist morality but rather what happens whenever the concentration of power is in the hands of a few bad men and when those without power having no means to defend themselves from such oppression. In a governmental sense, Atheists don't kill people, Theists don't kill people, Oppressiveness and injustice kills people. Our freedom and prosperity derives not from where those rights come from, but rather that we have those rights at all. The Constitution is perfect because it is many things, and a social contract is one of them :thumb: We The People established the government and believed certain rights were unalienable but also learned from experience that the only way we could maintain those rights was by securing other rights that we all felt all citizens should have, such as speech, etc. We believed these rights were just, not because we believed they were endowed by our creator, but because we agreed that we would thrive with them and all citizens deserved them.

The rights of Life, Liberty, and pursuit of Happiness can all be inherently justified with the Bill of Rights. Though it's maintained in the DOI that those 3 rights come from God, the rights of speech, arms, etc are rights that man believed were necessary in government and thus come from man. Because those 3 rights can be justified by the BOR, I personally believe that a government that upholds rights that are consistent with the BOR can be peaceful and prosperous. Ultimately, that's why the U.S is superior in many senses, we've done our better to uphold those rights toward our citizens than any other country. it wasn't a commitment to natural law.

Oh yeah....and America Fuck Yeah bitches :coffee:
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

Post by youngterrier »

JohnStOnge wrote:I found the video with one group of chimps attacking another and eating one of the young (below). One thing to note here: There are many social animals. But they are social within a group. They are often very hostile towards members of their own species from another group. And the groups are small. There is no "Universal Kum ba yah" in nature. On one hand, living in a group helps and is necessary. But that does not mean any particular individual is nice to all other individuals of its species. There is also murder, etc., within groups.

[youtube][/youtube]
You can't compare humans to animals. It's like comparing watermelons to grapes. Especially with social tendencies.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

Post by JoltinJoe »

Seahawks08 wrote:
It is also a myth that the study of science was slowed by the Catholic Church.
You're right, it wasn't just slowed by the Catholic Church, but all religions. The main problem was people couldn't freely think about the universe and its laws since they assumed Aristotle was right and that everything was done through intelligent design. And that subject is one effing powerful subject. So powerful that it still exists today to oppose evolution like a poster said earlier. If you think everything is perfect and can't be changed, then why look for something new? So was it just a coincidence that all of a sudden when religion, particularly Christianity, started showing cracks with the Protestant Reformation, science started to burgeon?
In Chapter 2 of "The Grand Design," Hawking/Mlodinow argue that the Ionian school of philosophy made a number of observations about the universe which turned out to be more accurate than Aristotle and other metaphysicians did. He suggests that the Christian embrace of classical Greek metaphysics, therefore, caused a rejection of the Ionian school throughout the Middle Ages and slowed the advance of scientific knowledge.

I think there are problems with that position. First, the Ionians were largely rejected in their own times (long prior to the advent of Christianity), and this rejection was caused by the fact that many of their ideas conflicted with sensory perception and other means, then available, of ascertaining nature. For example, it is difficult to accept that the earth revolves around the sun based on our sensory perception. For that matter, it is difficult to accept that the earth is round based on our sensory observations. So try as he might, Hawking really didn't make the case that the rejection of the Ionian school was religiously motivated. I thought he tried to bootstrap that claim to his statement that philosophers from the Greek times throughout the Middle Ages were more concerned with "why" -- what he described as a "religious" inquiry -- rather than "how" things act.

Second, as a whole, mankind is not ready to accept that his sensory perceptions are wrong until someone can scientifically prove it. For that reason, I don't think it was Protestant Reformation which caused the cracks which allowed science to advance. As a whole, for example, we were never going to accept that the earth revolved around the sun until the advent of the telescope permitted scientists to make observations which began to corroborate that theory.
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

Post by JoltinJoe »

youngterrier wrote: And for Christ sake, can we stop blaming communist crimes against Atheists?
YT, it's great you obviously are interested in ideas and learning, but keep an open mind throughout college. As my father said to me when he dropped me off at college, "You're going to spend four years here and, when you're done, I'm going to be much smarter." ;)

You said a lot of things I think you will eventually disavow, but this one is low-hanging fruit, so I'm going to take a swipe.

You have an officially atheist government which orchestrates a massive and brutally repressive purge focused largely against religious dissidents, and atheism was not the cause??

Communism is an economic system. Atheism is a belief which infuses a moral outlook. (Watch and you will see that, when you study ethics in your philosophy class, every ethical system which seeks to challenge the concept of objective truth will start from the proposition that there is no objective source of truth). So which is to blame? I think you will eventually discover the answer.
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RIP Christopher Hitchens

Post by Ibanez »

I killed a bird once.


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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

Post by 89Hen »

Holy shit, this thread is still going? :lol:

BTW...
D1B wrote:Here's your challenge: Find an essay or article (by Marx, *******, not Father Lauer) where Marx admits to being an atheist, writes specifically about atheism being a philosophy, political or belief system.


I can't find a post where you admit to being an asshole, yet here we are. :kisswink:
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Re: RIP Christopher Hitchens

Post by Ibanez »

89Hen wrote:Holy shit, this thread is still going? :lol:

BTW...
D1B wrote:Here's your challenge: Find an essay or article (by Marx, *******, not Father Lauer) where Marx admits to being an atheist, writes specifically about atheism being a philosophy, political or belief system.


I can't find a post where you admit to being an asshole, yet here we are. :kisswink:

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