what exactly are you referring to when you say "evolution"? — I like sushi
but the general outlook you’ve outlined – this along with the Gaia hypothesis – can easily be found in keeping with notions such as that of an Anima Mundi. One in which a pre-Abrahamic notion of Logos pervades all that is – be it living or nonliving. — javra
Perhaps you need to say more about what an evolutionary trend is? — J
Thesis
The evolution of the Earth, over 4.6 billion years, has given rise to the laws and principles that regulate both the natural environment and our existence. Within these evolutionary trends, we can find the essence of the ethical principles and moral norms that humanity seeks to identify. Therefore, understanding the evolution of our planet can help us establish and explain the foundations for more harmonious and sustainable coexistence. — Seeker25
How do these ideas fit in with your belief that we can find the essence of the ethical principles and moral norms that humanity seeks to identify within these evolutionary trends? — Agree-to-Disagree
So, which ethical principle were you talking about here? — Corvus
Biological evolution is not inclusive for all. Individuals being weeded out of the gene pool by natural selection is one of the important trends of evolution. — wonderer1
You can correlate the evolved traits you assign to humans with those you find desirable, or ethical, all day, but I don't think it validates your thesis — ToothyMaw
Couldn’t we also talk about trends of destruction, suffering, and death? — J
I wonder if the reliance on 'evolutionary principles' here may be leaning into an idealization. — Wayfarer
Ethics, it seems to me, is sui generis, arising through the evolution of human beings but once ethics came to be it created its own driving forces, — Fire Ologist
I think you need to give a description of these trends in value-neutral terms, so we can decide for ourselves whether they must necessarily be beneficial for humanity. — J
Respect for life — Seeker25
Promotion of health and well-being. — Seeker25
Coexistence in diversity, tolerance, and dialogue. Encouraging cooperation and minimizing confrontation. — Seeker25
I just don't see how this fact justifies the belief that looking to these trends for our morality is valid or would be effective. — ToothyMaw
How do you move from how things are to how things ought to be? — Banno
Even if "Science explains how things are and how events have unfolded over the past 4.6 billion years; these are facts" we cannot conclude from that alone how things ought to be. — Banno
I think what needs to be re-evaluated is this mentality itself. Clearly, the most moral thing is to prevent future people who suffer, but this is not following the dictates of evolution. And about these dictates of evolution, that is a complete fallacy (appeal to nature/naturalistic fallacy) to think that a sort of "law of nature" (evolution) is something we should act upon. — schopenhauer1
Ok, I thoroughly grant that to claim all this as some sort of definitive grounding for what ethics is and what ought to be would be fully sentimental, rather than rational. — javra
Moral realism is the view that ethical statements are either true or false. It is opposed to such notions as emotivism, which sees them as neither true nor false but as expressions of one's feelings. It is not the view that ethical tendencies are embedded in evolution. See SEP.Moral Realism: As I explained in the previous post, ethical values are embedded within the very tendencies of evolution. — Seeker25
There are, for example, antinatalists in this forum who will say rational considerations show that ending human evolution is a net good. So one might well act against the "tendencies of evolution"....one cannot act against the tendencies of evolution. — Seeker25
Your question about where ethics resided before life is well-posed, but I don’t know the answer—just as I don’t know where intelligence, life, or consciousness were, and yet no one doubts that all three exist. — Seeker25
Evolution generates diversity. Silencing, re-educating, or imprisoning those who express a different opinion goes against evolution. We must facilitate the integration of diversity, not reject it. — Seeker25
What it tells us is that one cannot derive ethical principles from evolution. If what you are espousing is some combination of pragmatism and constructivism, then say so and stop there, without the pretence that evolution somehow provides your imperative.However, it is not possible to deduce that ethical principles derived from evolution are false. — Seeker25
• The Earth evolves — Seeker25
• The Earth evolves according to tendencies that, thanks to science, we know.
• When we act in the same direction as these tendencies, we foster humanity’s positive evolution. — Seeker25
The evolution of the Earth, over 4.6 billion years, has given rise to the laws and principles that regulate both the natural environment and our existence. — Seeker25
whereas genocide is simply an act contrary to evolution, — Seeker25
I am increasingly convinced that everything aligned with the trends of evolution is good, everything that opposes it is bad, and everything else is indifferent. It is precisely in this "indifferent" space that people must exercise their freedom. — Seeker25
The global capitalist paradigm, preceded by state conquest, has done much to eliminate cultural and biological diversity. Why isn't this just another trend of evolution? — Nils Loc
Nature is indifferent to what comes next, even if the long term universal evolutionary trend is increased complexity. — Nils Loc
If what you are espousing is some combination of pragmatism and constructivism, then say so and stop there, without the pretence that evolution somehow provides your imperative. — Banno
I have trouble right out of the gate. I don't see that evolution occurs outside of life. The earth doesn't evolve. — Fire Ologist
we can't use evolutionary forces too explain how personal interactions have an ethical component to them — Fire Ologist
And we didn't just discover this gap between what is and what ought to be; we made it, when we did what we ought not do. We created the first gap between "is" and "ought". We created the first injustice in nature — Fire Ologist
Why should we do as evolution says? — Banno
I think you have mixed up your cause and effect. It's the other way around. The laws and principals that "regulate" nature gave rise to the diversity of life on earth. — Questioner
Every genocide ever carried out was done with the express fear that if the "other" were not exterminated, the survival of the exterminating group was threatened. So, if done in the interests of survival, it does seem to fit evolutionary principles. — Questioner
The theory of evolution merely says that life changes over time. The acts of humans only affect this in so far as they change the environment in which evolution is taking place. — Questioner
are not those second and third thoughts a result of our evolution, too? — Questioner
What do you think? — Seeker25
Nevertheless, here lies the real problem: humans making decisions contrary to evolutionary trends. A genocide can be the final wrong decision in a chain of errors. What criteria for solutions can be derived from evolutionary trends? We must respect life; the world is diverse, and we must manage that diversity rather than destroy it; we are entirely dependent on one another and must recognize the dignity of others; evolution is balance, imbalances and injustices generate problems. Finally, evolution has endowed us with a consciousness that we must individually develop (the capacity to understand our environment and the role we must adopt). — Seeker25
What happens when, for some reason, we fail to develop our consciousness? — Seeker25
How is a head of state who threatens or invades a neighbouring country different from an alpha male marking its territory? — Seeker25
How is someone insensitive to the suffering of others different from animals, who remain unaffected by the problems others in their species may face? — Seeker25
How is a dictator who clings to power any different from an alpha male that refuses to leave its position until defeated by a younger rival? — Seeker25
How is an animal that feeds on the weakest different from a sexual abuser? — Seeker25
However, neither aggression nor genocide are responses aligned with evolutionary trends. — Seeker25
Humans must decide whether to respect the powerful trends of evolutions or to challenge them. — Seeker25
Humanity’s progress, or a high risk of self-destruction, depends on our decisions. — Seeker25
Many human actions have little significance, but there are others—especially those carried out from positions of power—that challenge the trends of evolution. — Seeker25
Then how do we know which to heed -- the first, second, or third thought? Is the idea supposed to be that there is yet another evolutionary capacity that indicates the correct choice among thoughts? — J
However, neither aggression nor genocide are responses aligned with evolutionary trends. — Seeker25
But - the process of learning does not exist separate from our neurological capability to do so. — Questioner
and if evolution can explain anything we chose to do, it explains nothing. — Banno
whether there's also a neurological capability to discriminate true from false, and right from wrong, in the same way we discriminate red from green, or high pitches from low pitches. — J
we require reasons for saying and doing correct things — J
We have to find those for ourselves, and the method for doing so is entirely different from consulting hard-wired intuitions. — J
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