Originally posted by FasterPussycat
what is interesting is that african apes live their lives as social animals and cooperate without the benefits of
clergy or the commandments of a god. (their genes are 99% identical to ours). often aged males past their
reproductive stage have been seen to linger at the rear of an escaping troop attacked by leopards in what is
essentially a suicidal fight. the females and younger males escape as the old male delays the attacking
leopard with his very life. interesting altruistic behaviour emerging without the necessity of a god's morality.
furthermore, do young chimpanzees need a god to tell them to refrain from killing their mother, brothers or sisters?
of course not, their morality arises from natural mechanisms, not blind supernatural belief systems.
:-/
purely for posterity's sake i will repost the answer i gave to this on rs7's 'dangerous trading' thread, in case some trader comes a walkin' thru many moons from now and unearths this thread but not the other.
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monkeys fight off leopards at their own cost, yes. animals who warn the herd do so for the benefit of the herd at cost to their own life and limb, yes, because in being first to raise the alarm they invariably have to pause in doing so and catch the eye of the marauding predator. certain animal groups have altruistic tendencies built into their genes because it is understood to be a tradeoff that is valuable for the survival of the group over the long term. this can be interpreted as a moral code. great. so what?
Does such 'altruistic programming' work for man? No it does not. Because man can turn it off, and in his selfishness and pride he does turn it off, and in following his base instincts he does evil things and stupidly selfish things and just plain dumb things and thus fouls his paradise.
The practical difference between man and animal is that animals are basically 100% instinctive. They act in a way that makes sense to them without pondering their actions and without considering the possibility of overriding their natural instincts.
If a monkey feels a desire to protect the herd and fight the leopard, he will do so. There is no questioning his course of action. He does not think, he reacts in the way his programming has told him to.
Now put a man in the monkey's place. Man has the ability to weigh the consequences of his actions. He can "choose" in a way that the monkey cannot. The man does not have to stay and fight the leopards. He can put 2+2 together, decide his own skin is worth more than anyone else's, and let the women and children get mauled instead of himself, thus overriding his 'herd preservation instincts'.
Being made in the image of God is presented as a binary thing- 1 or 0. Man is made in the image of God, animals are not. One, zero. I think this is misleading- it's more like a sliding scale. The more "Godlike" qualities you cultivate- and by that I mean creativity, intelligence, logic, strength, mercy etc., not super powers- the more you reflect that image. The less you evince those qualities, the less your image shines. It is possible for men to intentionally put themselves on a path of gibbering, self interested doom. All they have to do is stop thinking with their heads and start thinking with their stomachs, lose interest in everything but themselves, and sink deeper into a morass of stupid pathetic self interested defilement until the point at which they end up raping or murdering someone or even losing their faculties of coherent thought. Because the image of God is on a sliding scale, there are instances where men act like animals and where animals act like men.
And again, anyone who thinks 'Christians are dumb' or 'the bible is dumb'- if you have not realized by now that you have no idea what you are talking about, you need to wake up and smell the coffee. There are dumb people in every belief system and every walk of life. Pointing to that contingent and extrapolating that all are thusly dumb is a very, very stupid thing to do. Consider the very real possibility that you have set up a straw man, that the 'holes' you see are flaws in your perception, and that what you think you see or what you think I think is wrong.
When I talk with people about my faith, often they will say 'but don't you think this?' or 'but don't you people all think that?' and eighty percent of the time it seems I will say "no, you've got that all wrong, I don't believe that at all." "No, that's a crazy assumption, that is not how I see it at all." "No, you're logic is all wrong there, you have barely scratched the surface of how it really is." See a pattern there?
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