RE: Where Morals Come From

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Where Morals Come From

in news •  6 years ago 

I agree with most of what you say here, that beliefs control what you feel and do, that humans have an inherent instinct for empathy. However, evolution doesn't strive for improvement, it simply eliminates anyone who has traits that slightly decrease its chance of surviving. Empathy to a degree is advantageous for surviving, but if you actually sell everything you have and give it to the poor, that's going to decrease your chances of surviving.

So humans are not just one thing, whether greedy or empathic, they simply do what feels good. Emotions are a way how evolution controls the delicate balance that is just right on average for surviving. But other humans can exploit this: if you appeal to empathy, you can make them more empathatic, if you appeal to greed you make them less empathetic. Beliefs can make people focus on empathy more, or on greed and scapegoating. Belief is just the best model of the world we have right now, that if we admit it to ourselves we are subconsciously certain about that they are true. Consciously, we can make us aware of the fact that it's not actually certain, or that we just don't know, but we always have some "best model" of everything. Belief isn't inherently bad, people also belief that the earth is round, because it's based on scientific knowledge. We can consciously choose our beliefs, and those then heavily influence the way we feel, think and ultimately behave

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From my understanding of evolution, there are several types of “selection pressures” that drive the gene pool in certain directions. For example, a peacock’s tail is the result of sexual selection from a peahen. A peacock’s tail is actually a huge disadvantage because it takes a lot of resources to grow and maintain as well as attracting predators. But it does one thing really well, it gets him laid, and that’s all that matters from the perspective of the gene.

Evolution isn’t just a “weeding out” process. Genes tend to be “pushed” by the environment in a direction that produces the best fecundity of the species. It may seem like just a process of elimination but there is quite a lot more going on under the hood. Sexual selection: Darwin & Fisher. Punctuated equilibrium: Stephen Jay Gould. Genetic drift: Sewall Wright etc.

Read “The Selfish Gene” and “The Blind Watchmaker” by Richard Dawkins to get you started.

Thanks for the comment.