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VC: Now, I am not an expert in DNA or Cells, but I think such claims are probably equally false. Why don't you link a bit more info.
BIO: I already linked to an entire website Biosemiosis.org, that is dedicated to explaining these issues at the laymen's level, and that website has a bibliography of more than two dozen peer-reviewed sources in the literature.
VC: Basically I see a lot of special pleading and logical fallacies
BIO: Name one.
VC: Why don't you just come clean and tell us what your religious beliefs are
probably a few different reasons, some times such things are misfires of our inbuilt evolutionary "care for the group/others rule", eg evolution has built in a rule that in general we should care for others, as our society has developed we have started giving a form of "person hood" to some other species, we realise we wouldn't want to be treated badly so we don't want to treat others including animals badly, it all stems from the same basic line of thought.
secondly,
Some of it is logical, us humans are coming to the conclusion that we rely on the natural environment, and destroying it and the creatures that live in it is probably not good for us either.
This is getting pretty far away from the original point, which was that I believe everything is physical in nature, are you still trying to link back to that some how? or have we switched to discussing the development and application of morality in humans?
if you are still trying to get at the materialist question, a better line to be inquiring would be can any of these thought processes either moral or immoral which you seemed to think were based in something non physical, exist outside of a physical brain / structure.
Gee wizz, so we pick up a koala out of a bushfire because we hope they will do the same for us one day ?
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OK , if there is a "built in evolutionary rule", how and why did it get built in ? This seems like you are saying that the dice has been loaded by <shock> someone ... ?
No, that's not really the point. The first step is to find out IF such things are happening outside the brain, and then find an explanation as to HOW this is happening.
As I believe I've shown , I don't think you can reduce everything to the physical. Altruism exists, and people do good deeds without the possibility of their genes being passed on or because it may benefit them in some way
Nowhere do I say “therefore God” ...
sir rumpole said-
Your arguments seem all over the shop. First you say we have a 'selfish gene' by which we favour our close relatives in order to pass our own genes down the line, then you widened that to all humanity when I pointed out that we do good deeds for strangers, now you invoke a "built in evolutionary rule" to explain our caring for other species.
I am not sure why you have trouble coming to grips with the fact that kindness and charity might be one of these instincts.
Because kindness and charity doesn't necessarily contribute to the survival of the species.
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If we help the weak survive they pass their genes on to the rest of the gene pool and so weaken the human race in general
So would you care to relate kindness and charity that weaken the gene pool to your 'selfish gene' hypothesis ? (Richard Dawkins' hypothesis actually
Because kindness and charity doesn't necessarily contribute to the survival of the species.
If we help the weak survive they pass their genes on to the rest of the gene pool and so weaken the human race in general. This seems contrary to natural selection, and therefore anti evolutionary, so what I'm saying is that some force outside evolution is acting in these cases.
So would you care to relate kindness and charity that weaken the gene pool to your 'selfish gene' hypothesis ? (Richard Dawkins' hypothesis actually).
Wouldn't you help the weak among you so that they become strong and in turn protect you when you are old and weak? That's why we take care of our babies - so they will one day grow up and disappoint us on all counts
When the leopard comes you want a team around, it makes sense to look after that team.
who do you think survives more, a group that fights for each other or a group that abandons each other?
Back to animals again, and you ignored the point I made about people caring for individuals who will never make a contribution to society, so you are in fact cherry picking your arguments.
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Humans on the other hand perform anti evolutionary acts as I described above. We have to explain why we do, and the selfish gene theory does not stack up in these cases.
No, the correlation between helping someone today and being helped one day is too remote, especially if those people reside in another country.
I would help someone because I felt sorry for them, and if someone can explain how feeling sorry for someone is a product of evolution, please do so.
Back to animals again, and you ignored the point I made about people caring for individuals who will never make a contribution to society, so you are in fact cherry picking your arguments.
Animals want a team who are strong to fight the leopard which is why they most likely sacrifice the weak so that the others can survive. If a lion attacks an antelope the other antelopes run away, they don't try to save the one being attacked.
Humans on the other hand perform anti evolutionary acts as I described above. We have to explain why we do, and the selfish gene theory does not stack up in these cases.
Quite clearly in the example I gave of the lion and the antelope, the team that runs away lives to fight another day.
Mental capability is more important for most jobs in the first world.
Indeed, but my point was that we also look after those with serious intellectual disabilities whose contribution to society is likely to be minimal.
Evolution alone cannot imo explain why we do this.
I could envisage a high advanced intellectual society who would not bother to look after such abnormalities regarding them as not worth the effort.
I cannot see a rational reason to contribute resources to such people, so the reasons must be emotional.
There is a rational reason generally for love, of ones offspring to pass our genes down the line, but love for someone who would never do this and could probably never understand or return that love seems a mystery to me if framed under the laws of evolution.
This is a reason why I suspect that materialism is not the only factor that makes us what we are.
Back to animals again, and you ignored the point I made about people caring for individuals who will never make a contribution to society, so you are in fact cherry picking your arguments.
Animals want a team who are strong to fight the leopard which is why they most likely sacrifice the weak so that the others can survive. If a lion attacks an antelope the other antelopes run away, they don't try to save the one being attacked.
Humans on the other hand perform anti evolutionary acts as I described above. We have to explain why we do, and the selfish gene theory does not stack up in these cases.
Quite clearly in the example I gave of the lion and the antelope, the team that runs away lives to fight another day.
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This is a reason why I suspect that materialism is not the only factor that makes us what we are.
Luutza's point about empathy is also extremely valid, our brains have evolved to the point that we can have very complex thoughts, and we have developed the ability to put ourselves in other people's shoes, seeing some one else experiance something terrible, and being able to imagine what that something must feel like can make us uncomfortable and want to stop it, and it can give us satifaction, like the satisfaction of solving a complex puzzle.
Also who said helping people on the other side of the world doesn't help us, I mean if we can help a starving country kick start their economy, and get their health care up, they may become productive, in 20years they maybe be drinking Coca Cola, using Heinz ketchup or even watching Disney movies. When you lift people out of poverty and they become consumers, the global economy should do better.
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