A lot to unpack here.
I would like to mention up front that your response in no way answered my question. I will ask again, because I'm looking for a more streamlined answer than a response that is all over the place, so it's possible you misunderstood what I was really looking for: How can morality be explained, and where does human morality come from? If "religion" doesn't answer the question of where morality comes from, then what does?
But, there are a lot of interesting things you stated, so I'll just take this bit by bit.
betiko wrote:take things from a different angle. What made our specie thrive compared to other species? We managed at some point to stand on our back legs and use tools... our brains and intelligence became one of our major perks, then we also lost our fur which made it possible for us to regulate better our body temperature while running in hunt mode.... while working as a team. We are designed to be social animals working in team for our own good and the own good of the group.
The human race always evolves to its surroundings. And I agree, humans were made for companionship, fellowship, and teamwork. The question I have for this section of your response is, what does "for our own good" mean? What is "good"? What is the purpose for our desire as humans to have companionship?
betiko wrote:We also have an extremely elaborated communiation within our specie. Before, that communication could not be written. Everything learnt by your ancestors had to be transmitted verbally from a generation to the next. Death has always affected our ancestors... to the point where elaborated ceremonies and different cultures emerged between different tribes... Then yes.... tribe A meets tribe B... sometimes they make trades friends... sometimesthey make enemies and kill, rape and steal everything from tribe B. but I'm highly convinced that doing that within tribe A would always get you into trouble, otherwise tribe A would no thrive. Or would work under a despotic regime that would be overthrown at some point.
Well, to be quite honest, the human race have always had written and spoken language differences. It really wasn't until after the Printing Press where we started to see written and spoken language merge and be more uniform. What I really think you're trying to say is that until modern times, most knowledge was
tribal knowledge, and not widely known knowledge. I would agree somewhat, but to accept the notion that only tribal knowledge in society was present and uniform knowledge was absent detracts from the point of a shared common moral framework we have as humans. Would the same moral framework for humans still exist today if we only had tribal knowledge?
betiko wrote:My guess is that tribe A has always sold itself to its own people as protected by made up entities they had to pay tribute to in order to get good harvests/hunts/fertility/curation/thoughts for dead ancestors.... you name it. basically anything. The human mind has always needed a comfy blanket for everything it has no possibility to deal against. The only thing.. is that technology and science happened... and that more and more of these fields are being covered. Answers given.
What you are referencing is the shift to an agrarian society in most of the world. Even then, the same basic concept remains: that I have something to offer for your something, and we exchange. It's become more streamlined today in terms of banking, currency and the workplace. Would the moral framework of humans still exist today, even if we had not transformed into an agrarian society?
betiko wrote:Others that we can't get answers to and probably will never get. So is the safest bet to think that if we don't have answers to everything... it's a proof that magic man on his cloud exists? That everything has a purpose including yourself? And that if there isn't any greater plan about yourself, then it doesn't matter if you go full columbine or something?
There are questions we will never be able to find the answer as a human race. However, the rationale behind asking questions behind purpose or intentionality are not questions to which an immediate answer is required. Most times, it takes people years, or decades, to answer the questions regarding life fulfillment. The plan regarding your life, or my life, is an ongoing process, just as is someone's life who decides to commit acts of violence. People who reach this conclusion don't immediately decide they feel as if have no purpose, but instead made the decision over a period of time. Why do we as a society see tragedies like Columbine and think they are tragedies? Why does our internal moral compass tell us that senseless death is a bad thing?
betiko wrote:Yes... scientifically... the human and our lifes are so meaningless weshouldn't even bother to talk about all this. But we are minds trapped in human bodies, that's our condition. What other minds trapped in other human bodies do and think is important to us. It doesn't mean it would be important for a greater entity... Our lives and history clearly prove that if there is a greater entity he couldn't give less of a shit about us. We're on our own and we don't need made up stuff to keep going forward or from doing stuff that would work against our society.
The body and the mind are separate but connected. One cannot exist without the other. One cannot be without affecting the other. A great analogy I like to think is similar to the body/mind complexion is electromagnetism. Electricity has certain properties, and Magnetism has certain properties. Both of which are separate from each other in initial concept but are connected in such a way that you cannot consider one without the other. It's why electronic devices that are more valuable in nature have more magnetic shielding. They are different and reside in their own
field (nerd pun), but are affected by each other.
Your body and mind are the same. Push and Pull. When your body gets hungry, your mental stability changes, and you become more irritable. When your mind is undergoing stress, your body will react accordingly.
Don't conflate the scientific process and apply that to things that are not held to the same scientific standard. Philosophy and Science have different contextualized zones in which they are allowed to operate. Science is purely things of the physical world, or things related to your body. Philosophy is purely related to things of the mental world, or your mind. For example, we can both agree that if systemic racism existed in an arbitrary government, then that would be condemnable. However, what mathematical equation can you write that proves systemic racism is immoral? These two realms processes (science and philosophy) cannot be intermingled with each other.
A lot of people want a physical or bodily answer to a question that requires a philosophical answer in nature, or vice-versa. The key to answering many of life's questions is knowing what type of answer your question warrants. What kind of question are you asking, and what kind of answer are you wanting to receive?