Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-27 Thread Doug Pensinger
Russell Chapman wrote:
Doug Pensinger wrote:

But doesn't the randomness of evolution begin to recede once you are 
actually aware of the evolutionary process and actively abet it?

An animal with a successful adaptation is unaware of what that 
adaptation is, but a human with a successful innovation can 
immediately recognize what and why it is successful and continue to 
build upon it.


Not really, because we also hinder it at the same time - handicapped 
people who would never have had the chance to pass on the damaged genes 
in past millenia are now at no disadvantage in terms of conceiving and 
raising a child. If anything, we are increasing the randomness by 
allowing disadvantages to continue and promoting genetic advantages, so 
there's a broader range of genetic variance. Hell, in this century, even 
_I_ can have children and raise them to child bearing age...  :-)

But increasingly, our greatest assets are our minds.  (tried and true 
example follows) How long would Stephen Hawking have lived even a 
hundred years ago?

Essentially, I agree with you, but I think that the advantages of 
allowing more minds to survive has (at least) neutralized the 
disadvantages of allowing genetic disadvantages to survive.

Doug

Pure speculation though.

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-27 Thread Doug Pensinger
Dan Minette wrote:

But doesn't the randomness of evolution begin to recede once you are
actually aware of the evolutionary process and actively abet it?


Then, its not really evolution.
So once we become aware we are evolving, we stop evolving?

As I pointed out, the aberrant behavior of the Iriquois allowed them the
greatest power for the greatest time with respect to the Europeans of any
native group.  The 6 nations were afforded some respect by the Europeans
because of their power.
But, as someone else pointed out, their behavior put them in a poor 
position to compete with the Europeans.



In turn, behaviors that eventually prove to
be more successful may have appeared and failed one or more times before
they succeeded.  Evolution.


That only works if you are taking a snapshot of about 50 years of history
and calling it the culmination of history. The US is somewhat unique in
that morality is actually the third priority of foreign policy (after
national security and economic self interest). The US winning the Cold War
was not a certainty.
I was thinking of stuff like the emergence of a form of democracy in 
ancient Greece...

What you appear to be saying is that the system that ends up the dominant
system is, by definition, moral.  If totalitarian systems had won, or
eventually win, will that make individual freedom immoral? 
But that's a non sequitur because that type of system, though it 
continues to emerge, continues to fail.  It's like saying in biological 
evolution, if, under normal circumstances, a clearly inferior design had 
"won" over an inferior one.

This isn't to say that there are  extraordinary cases where a less moral 
system has advantages over a more moral one - suspending rights during 
(a real) war might be an example, but those are the exceptions, not the 
rule.

 If your worst
nightmares come true, and a US theocracy is formed, will that make you
immoral if you are not Christian.  Does might make right?
You see, you are trying to foist moral relativism on me and that isn't 
what this argument is about.  Looking at one particular system that may 
or may not be dominant at any given time doesn't determine what is moral 
and what is not.  It is the trend over time _what_works_ that determines 
our morals.

The argument given above indicates that this is true.  My argument is, that
some things are immoral, even if they prove successful.  It was wrong to
treat the Native Americans as we did, even though the power of our country
is at least partially founded on that immoral behavior.  Would you argue,
by definition, it was right?
You aren't looking at the big picture.  I don't think that you would 
argue that any successful system in our past was free of immoral 
elements would you?  What I see and you apparently don't is that the 
morals of a thousand years ago and the systems that used them are 
clearly inferior to those of today.

Doug

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-26 Thread pencimen
--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], "Robert J. Chassell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Isn't there at least one, however vaguely defined purpose to
> > evolution:  success?
> 
> No.  Purpose presupposes intent.  There is no intent in the
> happenstance that some of a set of erroneously self-replicated
> machines survive and self-replicate better than others.
> 
> We attribute intent to other systems through a mechanism that is a
> metaphorical extension of a quality we perceive in ourselves.

Hmmm, I was going to give in and say you are correct, but after
thinking about it a bit I wondered why the urges to survive and
reproduce colud not be considered intent even if they are subconcious.  

Doug

Still no [EMAIL PROTECTED] mail server.

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-25 Thread Robert J. Chassell
> Isn't there at least one, however vaguely defined purpose to
> evolution:  success?

No.  Purpose presupposes intent.  There is no intent in the
happenstance that some of a set of erroneously self-replicated
machines survive and self-replicate better than others.

We attribute intent to other systems through a mechanism that is a
metaphorical extension of a quality we perceive in ourselves.

-- 
Robert J. Chassell Rattlesnake Enterprises
http://www.rattlesnake.com  GnuPG Key ID: 004B4AC8
http://www.teak.cc [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-24 Thread Dan Minette

- Original Message -
From: "Doug Pensinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Killer Bs Discussion" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2003 2:32 AM
Subject: Re: Religion based ethics


> Dan Minette wrote:
> > - Original Message -
> > From: "Doug Pensinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> >>I see our morals evolving before our very eyes, don't you?
> >
> >
> > Not really.  Remember there is no purpose to evolution, it just is.
>
> Isn't there at least one, however vaguely defined purpose to evolution:
> success?

In the same sense that the purpose of gravity is falling, but that's
streatches the meaning of purpose.

> The
> > survival of the fittest is not the survival of the best.  In
particular,
> > fittest may be a function of the sequence of environments; so the
nature of
> > the fittest can be somewhat random.
>
> But doesn't the randomness of evolution begin to recede once you are
> actually aware of the evolutionary process and actively abet it?

Then, its not really evolution.


> An animal with a successful adaptation is unaware of what that
> adaptation is, but a human with a successful innovation can immediately
> recognize what and why it is successful and continue to build upon it.
>
> An animal is not aware of the social "laws" that guide its behavior, but
> a human is not only able to see short term benefits of social behaviors,
> but he is able to 1) compare those behaviors with those of other groups
> and 2) compare those behaviors with past behaviors.  Aberrant behaviors
> may have short term success, but as in your Native American example,
> eventually end in failure.

Every behavior by the Native Americans ended in failure.  The Euroepeans
simply took the land as they willed.  The result was a vast and powerful
European country in the Americas.  It became the super power of the world.

As I pointed out, the aberrant behavior of the Iriquois allowed them the
greatest power for the greatest time with respect to the Europeans of any
native group.  The 6 nations were afforded some respect by the Europeans
because of their power.

>In turn, behaviors that eventually prove to
> be more successful may have appeared and failed one or more times before
> they succeeded.  Evolution.

That only works if you are taking a snapshot of about 50 years of history
and calling it the culmination of history. The US is somewhat unique in
that morality is actually the third priority of foreign policy (after
national security and economic self interest). The US winning the Cold War
was not a certainty.

What you appear to be saying is that the system that ends up the dominant
system is, by definition, moral.  If totalitarian systems had won, or
eventually win, will that make individual freedom immoral?  If your worst
nightmares come true, and a US theocracy is formed, will that make you
immoral if you are not Christian.  Does might make right?

The argument given above indicates that this is true.  My argument is, that
some things are immoral, even if they prove successful.  It was wrong to
treat the Native Americans as we did, even though the power of our country
is at least partially founded on that immoral behavior.  Would you argue,
by definition, it was right?

Dan M.

Dan M.


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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-24 Thread Russell Chapman
Doug Pensinger wrote:

But doesn't the randomness of evolution begin to recede once you are 
actually aware of the evolutionary process and actively abet it?

An animal with a successful adaptation is unaware of what that 
adaptation is, but a human with a successful innovation can 
immediately recognize what and why it is successful and continue to 
build upon it.
Not really, because we also hinder it at the same time - handicapped 
people who would never have had the chance to pass on the damaged genes 
in past millenia are now at no disadvantage in terms of conceiving and 
raising a child. If anything, we are increasing the randomness by 
allowing disadvantages to continue and promoting genetic advantages, so 
there's a broader range of genetic variance. Hell, in this century, even 
_I_ can have children and raise them to child bearing age...  :-)

Cheers
Russell C.
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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-24 Thread Doug Pensinger
Dan Minette wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Doug Pensinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

I see our morals evolving before our very eyes, don't you?


Not really.  Remember there is no purpose to evolution, it just is.  
Isn't there at least one, however vaguely defined purpose to evolution: 
success?

The
survival of the fittest is not the survival of the best.  In particular,
fittest may be a function of the sequence of environments; so the nature of
the fittest can be somewhat random.
But doesn't the randomness of evolution begin to recede once you are 
actually aware of the evolutionary process and actively abet it?

An animal with a successful adaptation is unaware of what that 
adaptation is, but a human with a successful innovation can immediately 
recognize what and why it is successful and continue to build upon it.

An animal is not aware of the social "laws" that guide its behavior, but 
a human is not only able to see short term benefits of social behaviors, 
but he is able to 1) compare those behaviors with those of other groups 
and 2) compare those behaviors with past behaviors.  Aberrant behaviors 
may have short term success, but as in your Native American example, 
eventually end in failure.  In turn, behaviors that eventually prove to 
be more successful may have appeared and failed one or more times before 
they succeeded.  Evolution.  No mumbo jumbo required.

Doug

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-20 Thread Dan Minette

- Original Message -
From: "Doug Pensinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Killer Bs Discussion" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, July 07, 2003 11:41 PM
Subject: Re: Religion based ethics


> Dan Minette wrote:
>
> >
> > One of the conclusions he accepted was the difficult position someone
with
> > his philosophy has with the foundation of ethics.  It was one of his
> > greatest regrets in life that there was no logical/calculus foundation
for
> > ethics.  It was clear, by the nature of his statements, that he
accepted
> > that ethics have no firm foundation in his worldview.
> >
> > Indeed, he volunteered this when he was asked about regrets.  There's
an
> > atheist with his eyes open.  I respectfully differ with his position,
but
> > he certainly has strong integrity.
> >
>
> Let me ask you this, Dan.  If morals/ethics are purely a matter of
> faith, and the "rules" as set forth by a god, why aren't they constant?

The fundamental rules that I follow have been constant for at least 2000
years.  The application has changed.  Peter Gomes writes an excellent
analysis of this in "The Good Book"  He argues for applying Biblical
principals, not practices. Practice and interpretation of basic principals
are also included in scripture, but one does not have to conform to
practice.  One of the great things about his argument is that he starts
out by showing how the temperance movement (a relatively conservative
movement by the 20th century) is consistent with an interpretation of
scriptural principals, even though Jesus drank wine.

>   Why are slavery, human sacrifice, infanticide, child labor, the
> subjugation of women etc. etc. ethical in the past, but unethical now?

The scriptural answer was "because your fathers were hard of heart."
Another way to look at it is seeing us as growing in understanding.
Further, there are changes in the world that changes the morality of a
given action.  For example, child labor was inherently moral when the
inherent results of pulling children from the labor pool was to reduce

> We are discussing gay marriage in another thread.  Is it unethical in
> your opinion?

No, it is not.  I think that the Christians who are opposed to this are not
basing their arguments on biblical principals.  I think that they are
guided by an earlier understanding of natural law. I think that this
understanding is flawed and should be perceived as opposed to fundamental
biblical principals.


> I see our morals evolving before our very eyes, don't you?

Not really.  Remember there is no purpose to evolution, it just is.  The
survival of the fittest is not the survival of the best.  In particular,
fittest may be a function of the sequence of environments; so the nature of
the fittest can be somewhat random.

Yes, of course, there are some things, such as eyes, which are almost
inevitable along many branches of evolution.  But, there are many things
that survived for reasons that can best be described as luck. I don't the
nature of morality is a function of chance.

In addition, by this definition, might is right.  For example, if the
Soviet Union had won the Cold War, then an uncontrolled press would have
been immoral.

If you think that morality is just the rules of the prevailing culture,
then this is probably a self consistent viewpoint.  But, then you would
have to say that all that prevents the viewpoint that it is immoral for
women to live as men's equals from being true is the military and economic
power of the US.  I don't think this is your viewpoint, but I'm not quite
sure what it is.


Dan M.




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RE: Religion based ethics

2003-07-09 Thread Nick Arnett
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Behalf Of Doug Pensinger

...

> That gives me the impression that you think we're some kind of science
> experiment.

I don't think that's a logical conclusion.  The point is that solving one
mystery, such as the origin of species, doesn't eliminate all mystery.

> Do you think maybe he coded Stalin and Hitler in to see
> what would happen?  How about the AIDS virus - some kind of debugging
> tool?  I apologize for being a bit harsh, but if the creator is so
> intelligent that he can "code" an evolutionary species, why are there so
> many truly horrific bugs?

That is certainly a difficult question, but it's not one that science can
deal with at all, since it is a "why" question rather than a "how."  If we
were created as described in the Bible, it is our free will that allows us
to do evil things.  As for the "freedom" of viruses and such, that's a much
tougher question, as far as I'm concerned, but it has to do with the "fallen
world" metaphor.

Nick

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-08 Thread Doug Pensinger
Reggie Bautista wrote:

Depends on what exactly you mean by our morals evolving.

Some would say that right and wrong haven't changed, but our 
understanding of right and wrong has, just as gravity has been the same 
for the past 12 billion years but our understanding of gravity has changed.

So by "our morals evolving," do you mean that our understanding of right 
and wrong have gotten closer to the truth, or do you mean that right and 
wrong have changed?
Right and wrong might well change as a result of a change in 
environment, just as physical attributes that are well adapted for one 
environment become obsolete when that environment changes radically.  In 
the short term, we see modified versions of right and wrong when we are 
threatened either individually or as a unit.  Deadly force is sanctioned 
if your home is invaded.  We inter suspected terrorists in gross 
violation of our own standards because they have threatened our security 
(not saying that's right, but it is being tolerated).

So yes, I do not believe that morals/ethics are static.

Doug

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-08 Thread Doug Pensinger
Nick Arnett wrote:
Doug wrote:

I see our morals evolving before our very eyes, don't you?
The existence of evolution, whether in biology, morality or whatever,
doesn't rule out the existence of God, does it?
No, not necessarily, but it trumps the need for any kind of faith to 
understand morality.

Who is the more intelligent creator, the one who creates things that cannot
evolve, or the one who creates those that can?  As a programmer, I'm quite
sure that writing evolutionary code is a lot harder than writing the static
kind.
That gives me the impression that you think we're some kind of science 
experiment.  Do you think maybe he coded Stalin and Hitler in to see 
what would happen?  How about the AIDS virus - some kind of debugging 
tool?  I apologize for being a bit harsh, but if the creator is so 
intelligent that he can "code" an evolutionary species, why are there so 
many truly horrific bugs?

Doug

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-08 Thread Reggie Bautista
Doug wrote:
I see our morals evolving before our very eyes, don't you?
Depends on what exactly you mean by our morals evolving.

Some would say that right and wrong haven't changed, but our understanding 
of right and wrong has, just as gravity has been the same for the past 12 
billion years but our understanding of gravity has changed.

So by "our morals evolving," do you mean that our understanding of right and 
wrong have gotten closer to the truth, or do you mean that right and wrong 
have changed?

Reggie Bautista

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RE: Religion based ethics

2003-07-08 Thread Nick Arnett
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Behalf Of Doug Pensinger

...

> Let me ask you this, Dan.  If morals/ethics are purely a matter of
> faith, and the "rules" as set forth by a god, why aren't they constant?
>   Why are slavery, human sacrifice, infanticide, child labor, the
> subjugation of women etc. etc. ethical in the past, but unethical now?
> We are discussing gay marriage in another thread.  Is it unethical in
> your opinion?

They change for the same reason that the rules change for children as they
grow up -- the same reason that the U.S. Constitution is different from the
Magna Carta and the Code of Hammurabi.

> I see our morals evolving before our very eyes, don't you?

The existence of evolution, whether in biology, morality or whatever,
doesn't rule out the existence of God, does it?

Who is the more intelligent creator, the one who creates things that cannot
evolve, or the one who creates those that can?  As a programmer, I'm quite
sure that writing evolutionary code is a lot harder than writing the static
kind.

Nick

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-07 Thread Doug Pensinger
Dan Minette wrote:

One of the conclusions he accepted was the difficult position someone with
his philosophy has with the foundation of ethics.  It was one of his
greatest regrets in life that there was no logical/calculus foundation for
ethics.  It was clear, by the nature of his statements, that he accepted
that ethics have no firm foundation in his worldview.
Indeed, he volunteered this when he was asked about regrets.  There's an
atheist with his eyes open.  I respectfully differ with his position, but
he certainly has strong integrity.
Let me ask you this, Dan.  If morals/ethics are purely a matter of 
faith, and the "rules" as set forth by a god, why aren't they constant? 
 Why are slavery, human sacrifice, infanticide, child labor, the 
subjugation of women etc. etc. ethical in the past, but unethical now? 
We are discussing gay marriage in another thread.  Is it unethical in 
your opinion?

I see our morals evolving before our very eyes, don't you?

Doug

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Re: Religion based ethics

2003-07-07 Thread William T Goodall
On Monday, July 7, 2003, at 07:24  pm, Dan Minette wrote:

I decided to finish my reply on religion based ethics, since there've 
been
comments on me ducking the issue.  I am more than happy to discuss it; 
its
just that it takes a bit of time to clearly express my thoughts on it.
Even if man is 'created in the image and likeness of God' that says
nothing about how men should treat each others without an additional
assumption that 'those created in the image and likeness of God must
be treated in such and such ways'.
Right, just as if one points out how valuable $100 bills are, there is
nothing said about burning them being a bad idea. Rather, they are 
simply
called valuable.


The analogy is closer to
1) Man is made in God's image = This is a $100 bill
2) 'those created in the image and likeness'... = $100 bills are 
valuable.


 I cannot imagine picturing someone as the image and
likeness of Love and Truth and Goodness, and still thinking there is
nothing at all wrong with harming them.
Sorry, but I don't see how the limitations of your imagination 
constitute an argument.


So you might as well ditch the
'image and likeness of God' part and go directly to the 'must be
treated in such and such ways' part.  God is a redundant assumption
that adds nothing to the line of argument.
No, not really.
Yes, really.

To me, the real question/the real dividing point is
whether one accepts the transcendental.  Once one does this, one is 
arguing
theology when one sees Love and Goodness as self-aware and the 
foundation
of all existence or as non-self aware principals.  I certainly will not
claim any proof of God's existence by simplicity; I was just pointing 
out
having one starting point for self worth, the foundation of Love, the
foundation of right and wrong is not really a matter of complication.
So you don't have an argument then?

--
William T Goodall
Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web  : http://www.wtgab.demon.co.uk
Blog : http://radio.weblogs.com/0111221/
"A bad thing done for a good cause is still a bad thing. It's why so 
few people slap their political opponents. That, and because slapping 
looks so silly." - Randy Cohen.

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