It is often argued by atheist and theist alike that evolutionary explanations for morality refute the idea that there are any "spooky" moral facts, and that therefore atheists ought to think there are no moral facts. But nobody on this board (so far as I have observed) has actually made a good argument toward this end. Here is the best I can come up with:
The moral beliefs of humans have been created and conditioned by, apart from cultural factors, the impersonal demands of evolution. Thus we find that our moral beliefs tend to facilitate reproduction and the passing of healthy genetic material onto the next generation. The universal tendency to especially value one's own immediate family, offspring and friends, the protection of children and women (chivalry, perhaps), the (general) disgust for murder, rape and incestuous sex, etc. are all explained by evolution's blind selection for adaptive behaviours. Assuming this is true, we can conclude that our moral beliefs are not sensitive to "spooky" moral facts, but rather to the impersonal pressures demanded by survival. And since knowledge requires a causal connection between facts and beliefs, it follows that none of our moral beliefs are knowledge; they have never tracked facts, only evolutionary pressures.
There are two points I'd like to make here. The first is that this challenge to moral beliefs must be met by theists as well; the evolutionary explanations are impersonal, which means that their success in explaining moral beliefs entails that the idea God has endowed us with reliable moral faculties is less probable (probably false). The second is that both the theist and the atheist can conceivably get around the challenge by positing that evolution happened to select for moral beliefs that actually correlate with moral facts; theists might come out in better shape here.
Any thoughts?
Atheism, Evolution and Moral Nihilism
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Post #21
From Post 14:
Do you both look the same?
Look real careful now, your answer here may reveal more about your situation than you might like folks to be a-knowin'.
If not, then surely it would be a simple matter of presenting some means of confirming the veracity of your claim.
But now I get your point. Theft is wrong.
What if someone stole a biscuit to feed their starving child?
I say it's wrong.
What you reckon that kid's gon' say when he gets that biscuit swallered?
If you question whether shoes are biological or not, I fear the observer may dismiss anything you may ever say.

Notice here though, we have a great example of morality at play. I see nothing wrong with sexing up an ugly chick who brings me alcohol, but others may think my doing so is "immoral".
That and getting thrown out of parties or bars for copping a feel leads me to some understanding that such actions are frowned upon in polite comp'ny.
First, your own God's morality "evolved", if Christian claims are to be believed.
Second, evolution doesn't hafta be towards "better".
We as individuals, and as expressed through society, determine what rights we have. Notice the continuing effort by some Christians to deprive certain segments of society the right to marry the one they love.
I'll use what punctuation and capitalizationin' I deem fit.
I find this one of the most despicable ploys of religious proselytizin'.
I challenge you to show that's where your god hangs his hat.
I challenge you to show folks'd get there when they die.
I challenge you to show you speak truth.
I will not be drawn into supporting claims I've not made.
Now, are you willing to support the claims I've challenged, or are you most comfortable leaving the observer considering if an opinion or position based on bald assertion is worthy of adopting?
You and the missus there, both of ya strip down.Moses Yoder wrote: Most of the people I see look the same. They have 2 hand, 2 feet, a mouth, nose, 2 eyes, 2 ears, etc.
Do you both look the same?
Look real careful now, your answer here may reveal more about your situation than you might like folks to be a-knowin'.
Many of which are genetic mutations.Moses Yoder wrote: There are some birth defects.
Not near as much as I'd say what constitutes criminal behavior is essentially a moral question.Moses Yoder wrote: Are you saying the criminal gene is a birth defect?
Dufflepods seem not to have gained a foothold.Moses Yoder wrote: If it is not a defect, how come we don't have dufflepods running around?
Again with "believe". The science is in.Moses Yoder wrote: I believe there is very little evidence to support evolution.
While I agree the ToE is built on assumptions, I contend they are reasonably and logically derived, based on virtual mountains of data. Let's compare your statement here to your very next'n...Moses Yoder wrote: There are a lot of assumptions made then assumed to be right because "scientists" don't accept any alternatives, thus they pat each other on the back and say "Yea, that must be it."
Are you not doing some pretty fancy assumin' yourself?Moses Yoder wrote: God cannot sin or do something wrong.
If not, then surely it would be a simple matter of presenting some means of confirming the veracity of your claim.
Unless one owned all the shoes involved.Moses Yoder wrote: To take a new pair of shoes and replace them with an old pair of shoes, or to put them in a new box to make it appear as though that was what happened, would be stealing.
But now I get your point. Theft is wrong.
What if someone stole a biscuit to feed their starving child?
I say it's wrong.
What you reckon that kid's gon' say when he gets that biscuit swallered?
It'd be pretty hard for something that wasn't there to steal, wouldn't it?Moses Yoder wrote: God can't steal, because it's wrong.
I was being facetious.Moses Yoder wrote: Ergo, God did not put the old shoes in the new shoe box.
Ever been wanderin' through the wilds and run up on a pair of 'em having sex? Ever had to wash your car because of all the shoe pollen all over it?Moses Yoder wrote: Please provide proof that shoes are not biological entities.
If you question whether shoes are biological or not, I fear the observer may dismiss anything you may ever say.
That smell can be the result of bacteria, fungus or even possibly a disease. Dr. Scholl may well be your new best friend.Moses Yoder wrote: My shoes smell like they died some time ago, and in order for that to have happened they must have been alive at some point.
I said I'd trade it for alcohol. I'm a slut, not a whoreMoses Yoder wrote: What you appear to have stated here is that you would trade your body for monetary gain, which is the same thing a gigolo does. Please clarify.

Notice here though, we have a great example of morality at play. I see nothing wrong with sexing up an ugly chick who brings me alcohol, but others may think my doing so is "immoral".
Across the economic spectrum, im/moral behavior spans, we see.Moses Yoder wrote:Point being?JoeyKnothead wrote: So we see that im/moral behavior spans the economic spectrum.
It's only as complex as we make it. The fact is that I don't go around rapin' women because I have some sense that they might not 'preciate my doin' it.Moses Yoder wrote: In fact, with the athiests I have seen, they figure if they can get away with it then it wasn't wrong.This is in fact not a simplistic argument. It is very complex.JoeyKnothead wrote: A simplistic argument devoid of any understanding of just why atheists don't feel the need to run around rapin' and plunderin'.
That and getting thrown out of parties or bars for copping a feel leads me to some understanding that such actions are frowned upon in polite comp'ny.
Two things...Moses Yoder wrote: If morals "evolve" then the assumption is that people are becoming better.
First, your own God's morality "evolved", if Christian claims are to be believed.
Second, evolution doesn't hafta be towards "better".
How might'n folks keep up with a God that changes his morals?Moses Yoder wrote: If they come from an absolutely moral being which I call GOD, then morals will devolve as people turn away from God.
I concede the point as it relates to the issue of morality.Moses Yoder wrote: It is not a simple argument.
Party at Yoder's !!!Moses Yoder wrote: The theists who told you the consumption of alcohol is wrong were wrong. The Bible says Jesus turned water into wine, and God cannot sin. I consumed an excellent jack & coke myself last night; it takes a good Christian to really appreciate the fruit of the field.
"Accidentally" implies something got fouled up along the way. As a species, we "just are".Moses Yoder wrote: If we are here accidentally, why would we have "rights"?
We as individuals, and as expressed through society, determine what rights we have. Notice the continuing effort by some Christians to deprive certain segments of society the right to marry the one they love.
What we make it. Or ask Navin Johnson and see what he has to allow.Moses Yoder wrote: What would our purpose be?
Perhaps only in the mind of the theist could two folks trying to help each other ever be considered an "impasse".Moses Yoder wrote:Yes. And I would be more than willing to help you with your misconceptions. Looks like an impasse to me.JoeyKnothead wrote: ...
I'd be willing to help ya along there best I can if you're interested.
Your god is not worthy of my respect.Moses Yoder wrote: Please capitalise all words which refer to God in any form, such as He, out of respect for my religion.
I'll use what punctuation and capitalizationin' I deem fit.
So you claim.Moses Yoder wrote: As I have told you repeatedly, it will all be confirmed when you die.
I find this one of the most despicable ploys of religious proselytizin'.
I challenge you to show there's an alternate universe.Moses Yoder wrote: There is no other way to reach the alternate universe where God resides than to die.
I challenge you to show that's where your god hangs his hat.
I challenge you to show folks'd get there when they die.
I challenge you to show you speak truth.
I challenge you to show you speak truth in this regard.Moses Yoder wrote: It's the only way to get there, excpet for one man whom according to the Bible God transported (not Jesus.)
No.Moses Yoder wrote:Please provide an explanation and proof of how the universe came into existence.JoeyKnothead wrote: Something - "God defined it" - that can't be shown to be a true statement hardly qualifies as knowledge. Notice also the use of "seems". Again we see the theist will store all of their unconfirmable 'knowledge' in the god box.
I will not be drawn into supporting claims I've not made.
You can remain a Christian till I start liking rap for all I care.Moses Yoder wrote: If you can prove some sort of start without God, and the evolution of life on earth, I will disavow my Christianity instantly.
Opinion noted.Moses Yoder wrote: In my opinion the believers in evolution have more faith with less evidence than I do in Christianity.
Now, are you willing to support the claims I've challenged, or are you most comfortable leaving the observer considering if an opinion or position based on bald assertion is worthy of adopting?
I might be Teddy Roosevelt, but I ain't.
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Re: Atheism, Evolution and Moral Nihilism
Post #22I think it should be made clear that the theory of evolution only accounts for changes in physical traits. The ToE does not address changes of ideas and cultural phenomena such as morality (memetics). Though memetics has gained popularity it is still speculative. I think it would take a major breakthrough in our understanding of the brain/mind before memetics could be supported with anything more than circumstantial evidence and speculation.Adamoriens wrote:It is often argued by atheist and theist alike that evolutionary explanations for morality refute the idea that there are any "spooky" moral facts, and that therefore atheists ought to think there are no moral facts. But nobody on this board (so far as I have observed) has actually made a good argument toward this end. Here is the best I can come up with:
The moral beliefs of humans have been created and conditioned by, apart from cultural factors, the impersonal demands of evolution. Thus we find that our moral beliefs tend to facilitate reproduction and the passing of healthy genetic material onto the next generation. The universal tendency to especially value one's own immediate family, offspring and friends, the protection of children and women (chivalry, perhaps), the (general) disgust for murder, rape and incestuous sex, etc. are all explained by evolution's blind selection for adaptive behaviours. Assuming this is true, we can conclude that our moral beliefs are not sensitive to "spooky" moral facts, but rather to the impersonal pressures demanded by survival. And since knowledge requires a causal connection between facts and beliefs, it follows that none of our moral beliefs are knowledge; they have never tracked facts, only evolutionary pressures.
There are two points I'd like to make here. The first is that this challenge to moral beliefs must be met by theists as well; the evolutionary explanations are impersonal, which means that their success in explaining moral beliefs entails that the idea God has endowed us with reliable moral faculties is less probable (probably false). The second is that both the theist and the atheist can conceivably get around the challenge by positing that evolution happened to select for moral beliefs that actually correlate with moral facts; theists might come out in better shape here.
Any thoughts?
So, while it may be interesting to discuss the consequences of morality being a product purely of evolution, i think its a bit hasty to presume that this is the only reasonable possibility.
What is a "spooky" moral fact?
Religion remains the only mode of discourse that encourages grown men and women to pretend to know things they manifestly do not know.
Post #23
Sure, I'm quite alright with that. I've never believed that evolution explains everything that is human and our "moral intuitions" aren't adept anyhow. Maybe they provide a beneficial impetus in some cases, but there are other cases where they provide no beneficial, and perhaps even a malignant, consequence.Adamoriens wrote:I don't think it quite answered my question. If we take evolutionary explanations for our moral beliefs to be compelling over-and-above other accounts, we are challenged by the fact that our moral beliefs were selected for their utility in survival, reproduction and prosperity. They were not selected because of their truth.
Evolution doesn't select for truth, I thought this was something already widely accepted. It selects for survivability and breedability, neither of which are intrinsically truth-seeking functions. They're syntactical operations.
For a truly religious man nothing is tragic.
~Ludwig Wittgenstein
~Ludwig Wittgenstein
Post #24
God founds all possibilities; this includes the set of everything which serves to make moral creatures happy. It's purely analytic.JoeyKnothead wrote:Can you offer some means to confirm God is the "fount of all possible happiness"?
Maybe my use of the word "nature" strays from the colloquial to the technical, at occasion, where it is warranted.Given that mankind has been at war lo these many eons, is it now fair to say that all war is moral?
For a truly religious man nothing is tragic.
~Ludwig Wittgenstein
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Re: Atheism, Evolution and Moral Nihilism
Post #25I'm talking about evolutionary psychology, not memetics. By "spooky" I mean to refer to non-natural or supernatural moral facts.scourge99 wrote: I think it should be made clear that the theory of evolution only accounts for changes in physical traits. The ToE does not address changes of ideas and cultural phenomena such as morality (memetics). Though memetics has gained popularity it is still speculative. I think it would take a major breakthrough in our understanding of the brain/mind before memetics could be supported with anything more than circumstantial evidence and speculation.
So, while it may be interesting to discuss the consequences of morality being a product purely of evolution, i think its a bit hasty to presume that this is the only reasonable possibility.
What is a "spooky" moral fact?
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Post #26
It's one thing to say that moral intuitions aren't adept; another to say that they intuit nothing at all.AquinasD wrote:Sure, I'm quite alright with that. I've never believed that evolution explains everything that is human and our "moral intuitions" aren't adept anyhow. Maybe they provide a beneficial impetus in some cases, but there are other cases where they provide no beneficial, and perhaps even a malignant, consequence.
Actually, evolution probably does select for truth-tracking cognitive faculties in most cases, where truth-tracking benefits survival, but that doesn't seem to be the case with regard to morality.Evolution doesn't select for truth, I thought this was something already widely accepted. It selects for survivability and breedability, neither of which are intrinsically truth-seeking functions. They're syntactical operations.
Post #27
Moses Yoder wrote:
I have represented thousands of people accused of crime in my day, mostly despicable criminals, and almost all of them were Christians.I appears to come from the people who didn't fill out the mulitiple choice question, or perhaps claimed other religions like Buddhism who I don't think believe in a christian type God. have no idea how they came up with the determination that .21% of the inmates were athiest, as it is not an option on the multiple choice question. That statistic
Post #28
Moses Yoder wrote:
You apparently are not familiar with the scientific process, nor do you know any scientists. Your statement here is completely false. Scientists must, to be taken seriously in the scientific community, submit all hypotheticals and the verifiable testing of them to the scientific community at large via publication in order that theories may be subjected to continuous re-testing and critical analysis.I believe there is very little evidence to support evolution. There are a lot of assumptions made then assumed to be right because "scientists" don't accept any alternatives, thus they pat each other on the back and say "Yea, that must be it."
Post #29
Well consider.Adamoriens wrote:It's one thing to say that moral intuitions aren't adept; another to say that they intuit nothing at all.
A trolley running down the tracks. It's going to kill five people, unless you hit a switch that will change it course. However, then it will kill one person. What's the right thing to do?
Suppose you accept that the right thing to do is to hit the switch. (Even if you don't know, your moral intuitions will be reeling.)
What if it is the case that there isn't a switch, but a very fat man who you can push into the way who you know will cause the train to stop before it kills those five people?
Our "moral intuitions" tend to be very confused in these sorts of cases.
I could point to more controversial cases. Consider how in the 19th century many found racism perfectly acceptable; it didn't confuse their moral intuitions in the least. In the modern day, our moral intuitions are completely opposite; racism is deplorable.
Or, consider the moral intuitions people possess about premarital sex. Abortion. Homosexuality. War. Capitalism. Government. Anything.
There are lots of places where people's moral intuitions reflect no underlying principles, and appear to be culturally conditioned. Eating a cow? A lot of Hindus would tell you they find it not merely wrong in the abstract sense, but intuitionally deplorable. And so on.
My conscious awareness is not a product of evolution, though, and that is where truth-tracking occurs. If there were some way to go around my conscious awareness of my environment to the formulating of a decision about how to react, to go straight from stimuli to response, that would be more evolutionarily adapted than our slow ratiocination.Actually, evolution probably does select for truth-tracking cognitive faculties in most cases, where truth-tracking benefits survival, but that doesn't seem to be the case with regard to morality.
Even if it were the case, that doesn't mean our ability to track the truth of predators in the bush translates into our ability to track the truth of, say, mathematical and metaphysical truths.
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Post #30
This is very funny, and I don't mean that maliciously. My original argument was against our having moral knowledge on the basis of intuitions; you appear to be handing me nails as I close up the coffin. Is that moral realism dead and done with, then?AquinasD wrote:Well consider.Adamoriens wrote:It's one thing to say that moral intuitions aren't adept; another to say that they intuit nothing at all.
A trolley running down the tracks. It's going to kill five people, unless you hit a switch that will change it course. However, then it will kill one person. What's the right thing to do?
Suppose you accept that the right thing to do is to hit the switch. (Even if you don't know, your moral intuitions will be reeling.)
What if it is the case that there isn't a switch, but a very fat man who you can push into the way who you know will cause the train to stop before it kills those five people?
Our "moral intuitions" tend to be very confused in these sorts of cases.
I could point to more controversial cases. Consider how in the 19th century many found racism perfectly acceptable; it didn't confuse their moral intuitions in the least. In the modern day, our moral intuitions are completely opposite; racism is deplorable.
Or, consider the moral intuitions people possess about premarital sex. Abortion. Homosexuality. War. Capitalism. Government. Anything.
There are lots of places where people's moral intuitions reflect no underlying principles, and appear to be culturally conditioned. Eating a cow? A lot of Hindus would tell you they find it not merely wrong in the abstract sense, but intuitionally deplorable. And so on.
The original challenge was against an intuitionist account of moral knowledge, where knowledge of basic moral facts like "it is good for a being to be satisfied or at peace with it's nature" is acquired through a faculty sensitive to the moral realm. By contrast, evolution would favour at least rudimentary knowledge of mathematical facts and the laws of logic, since this knowledge is required for any coherent thought (which is surely advantageous) and for any assurance that it is three tigers, not two, that are chasing you.My conscious awareness is not a product of evolution, though, and that is where truth-tracking occurs. If there were some way to go around my conscious awareness of my environment to the formulating of a decision about how to react, to go straight from stimuli to response, that would be more evolutionarily adapted than our slow ratiocination.
Even if it were the case, that doesn't mean our ability to track the truth of predators in the bush translates into our ability to track the truth of, say, mathematical and metaphysical truths.
But I agree that the human mind is subject to a number of vagaries which probably have the messy process of evolution as their ultimate source, and that it takes a great amount of conscious effort and learning to overcome them.