Sappho wrote on Apr 27
th, 2013 at 11:40am:
Soren wrote on Apr 17
th, 2013 at 10:52pm:
There is a real, actually lived and actually shared tragic dimension to life. None of us lives up to our ideals. None of us is free from the haunting recognition that we have buggered up, many times, really badly. None of us is free from knowing that we have buggered up because of who we actually are, each of us individually, personally, morally.
Our daily failings to live up to our own moral and ideal expectations of who we would want to be or who we imagine ourselves to be is palpably true and known by every one of us. Christianity gets this.
Atheism does not. Atheism is blind to human experience, including the experience of atheists, when it comes to the palpable tragedy of human life. It is much more dogmatic and cruel in this regard - in ignoring significant human experience - than religion.
A person does not loose their sense of empathy or morality just because they opt out of God belief... nor should people expect them to... or worse... give them reason to as you would do here Soren.
We are human together and humanity is a social and therefore moral experience. I am not freed from my bugger ups because I am Atheist, rather, I am chained to them because I am a moral entity who perceives consequences.
But Sappho,
If we are merely evolved creatures, aren't we then, just evolved,
animals [and, be 'bound' to demonstrate only the same existential needs as all other animals] ?
And if we are evolved animals, surely the imperative we would naturally express is in seeking the interest of the animal [food, shelter, sex, comfort, etc].
And if we are, just, merely, evolved
animals,
where is the existential need [i.e. through evolution] for us to embrace a
moral imperative ?
I am not saying that animals do not show compassion for other creatures, in fact i think that there are many examples of wild creatures doing just that.
But where is the passion 'to know' [themselves] in wild creatures - that is clearly present in human beings ?i
Quote:Morality does not belong to gods, it belongs to humanity irrespective of your theistic or atheistic inclinations... It is expected that we act with morality. Perhaps, there are those Atheists who think that they can reduce their moral obligations by removing a belief in god... but they are wrong.
It should be expected that Atheists have a deeper appreciation of morality and the principles which underscore them, because they must think upon it rather than merely doing what God says because God says.
This deeper appreciation of morality and its principles is what gives deep meaning to the Atheist experience and validates our experiences.
Why should atheistic, evolved, 'wild' creatures [i.e. human beings] have learnt to respect and embrace a 'morality' ?
Was it embraced because there was/would be some existential advantage in doing so ?
And if the answer is, Yes.....
Then where is the morality ?
i.e.
Why do we so plainly demonstrate, in our interactions among ourselves [personal, communal, national, international levels] that we are grasping, selfish, hedonistic, greedy, ruthless, violent, AND IMMORAL creatures ?+++
And Sappho, if there is this 'great moral sense' being felt
and being expressed, in the
atheistic human creature, then why have many of our cultural 'shamans' of old described our base nature thus;
"Right is only in question between equals, and while the strong do what they can, the weak suffer what they must."
Thucydides (460-400 B.C.) Greek Historian
???
Thucydides got it right imo.