Cognitive Gear wrote:This thread is fairly confusing for me. I've yet to have met an atheist who ever claimed that morals were not societal, evolutionary, and subjective.
This, also, is true. In fact, in reading Dawkins' work, you will see that he, like many others, have said that morality evolved along with human conscience.
To many atheists, morality is an important survival trait of mankind (and even of animals). Without it, mankind, and possibly all complex life on earth, would not survive. This is unacceptable, because we are living things. Each one of us is lucky to have even existed, so we should all make the best of it. Morality helps to facilitate that survival.
Yep, this is why I brought up the point that a single ant wouldn't last very long, but when they come together as a colony, their survivability is greater. Chimpanzees have been noted to be able to experience shame if they "misbehave." You know the saying "No man is an island?" That's the whole point, is that teamwork, society, helps to ensure survivability.
Essentially, atheists (and I would be prone to agree) would argue that you don't need the threat of eternal or divine punishment to make morality important. That's basically it in a nutshell.
This also. I find it interesting to note that if you tell an atheist there's no objective morality, they'll go "So?" The response to this is "But then you can do anything you want!" An atheist will respond "Maybe, but I have empathy for my fellow human beings and can extend respect to them."
I'm not sure why Christians make this argument. Are we saying if it isn't for Christianity, we'd all be psychopaths incapable of empathy? Why are atheists seemingly capable of it without religion, but we're not? That's a frightening thought that all Christians would become amoral serial killers and rapists if we didn't have religion.
"Live life to the fullest." Still, I ask you, "Why?"
Because it's there.
Those famous words were spoken by British climber George Mallory in 1924 when he was asked why he wanted to climb Mount Everest.
Would human knowledge be increased if he climbed it? Would he find gold at the top? Would he become rich? Would he get famous? Would he discover a cure for disease?
Nope. So why did he climb the mountain?
Because it's there.
An atheist seeks to give his/her own life meaning because they exist. The existence justifies itself. If you think life is meaningless without religion, that is sad because you can't see the inherent wonder and beauty in life existing solely for its own sake. You'll never look at a tree and say "I think I'll climb that tree...just because it's there." Not because God commanded you to climb that tree. Not because you feel "God is calling me to climb that tree." Not because you feel "God gave me a gift of climbing trees and I am using that gift." You are climbing it because you, of your own free will, without any external influence, want to. And because you feel that nothing will happen if you climb that tree. Maybe you'll even fall out and get hurt. But still, you want to climb it. Just because it exists, and you exist.
I really don't see how the argument "Life is meaningless without God!" works. The only way it works is if you assume that there HAS to be an objective meaning to existing. If you assume that, then yes, perhaps life is meaningless without God. But you are making an assumption you cannot prove. Prove that there is an objective meaning to life first, then you can use that to prove God exists.
I balk at the suggestion that this life is meaningless to the Christian. It is this life into which we are born, in which we grow, physically, mentally, spiritually. It is this life which nurtures who we are and we choose to be. Accountability and personal choice, which Christianity holds so close, so crucial, can only be realized in a world such as this. Calling this world meaningless simply because there is another one cheapens the importance of transition.
Without getting too deep in theology, I don't buy this because of one important thing: children who die at young ages, including infants. Though we cannot ever know in this life what happens to these children (the Bible doesn't say), we like to assume that they go to Heaven automatically. I think this is probably true, though again, I can't prove it. So then, what about the child who is stillborn? They never lived in the first place, but they will experience eternal life in Heaven. They in fact will receive the same reward we do, who live on this earth and suffer and hurt. They just get to it sooner.
I'm not trying to say "Oh it'd be better if I was never born!" or anything like that. What I'm saying is, you say "Who can walk without first crawling?" but if we assume children get an automatic ticket into Heaven without ever having really lived, it is pretty clear that this life IS particularly meaningless, does it not? I mean sure, we have experiences and joy and all that stuff, but will we even remember that when we go to Heaven? I've never been, so I don't know what we'll remember or even IF we will. Will we even care, being in God's fully glory for eternity? Will we even want to remember? What does it matter? Mortal life is, truly, meaningless for the Christian, only our eternal life is important. That's why you see those signs that are all "Eternity is long, don't be wrong!" Our life is so meaningless that it merely serves as a true/false question on God's test.
This raises the peculiarity as to why humans are aware of our condition when other animals are not - as under atheism man is just another animal, fortunate in his heightened, adaptable intelligence. Furthermore, from where does the drive to exist come from? What is the origin point of the desire to remain alive in a random system?
I'm not a biologist, so I can't say. However, I'm sure there are many biologists who have written books on evolutionary theory on self-awareness, so you might want to start there as to answers to those questions, since I'm not educated in that area. You can even ask biology professors you know in real life these questions.
As I've stated already, however glorious or inglorious you think mere survival is on any level, instinctual or acknowledged, that still doesn't instill it with any value in purposeless universe. You have to remove your ego from the equation to think about these things.
Why do I have to remove my ego? You haven't proven that no God existing (or indeed, even no objective meaning existing) makes life valueless. You're assuming your premise is already true without proving it. You can't do that. It's like if I said "Plants are obviously not alive because all living things can produce sounds." I'm assuming my premise (all living things can produce sounds) is true without proving it. I'm merely using it to further assert that under my premise, trees cannot possibly be living things. And if I assume my premise is true without proof, then what I said is logically correct. But if my premise is WRONG, then it undermines my whole statement.
You say we should extend that respect to others.
Why?
Because I'm not a psychopath who is incapable of empathy for other living things and requires an invisible man up in the sky to keep me from becoming an antisocial monster.
Again, Dawkins has written about the evolution of empathy, so you can read that if you'd like more information about how empathy works.
In a universe without purpose, yes (doing anything is meaningless).
Again, only if you assume an OBJECTIVE purpose, which I already stated the problem with assuming your premise is true without having proven it. If the universe has a SUBJECTIVE purpose, then no, doing things is not meaningless.