Subject: The morality question.
Author:
Posted on: 2015-06-28 18:28:00 UTC
I actually find this very interesting to think about. For a bit of context, I am a spiritual person, and my spirituality involves a great awe and wonder at all of existence. I personally find it more wondrous if it happened on its own rather than at the hand of some creator, because just think of everything that had to go right! It's amazing! It makes me so grateful to be alive and healthy, because I know there are thousands, maybe millions of ways it can all go wrong. The revelations of science are therefore a spiritual matter for me.
That's not to say science is my religion, though. My religion is Unitarian Universalism, and what makes me a UU is basically how I behave and relate in society. I try to follow the seven principles, the first of which is that every person has inherent worth and dignity (and should be treated as such). That right there makes murder wrong.
But why? Where does morality come from, if there is no supreme authority such as God (which I think is really what Alleb means here)?
Well, I think it comes from us, together. We humans are unique in that we can choose, consciously, how to behave. We are uniquely capable of introspection, self-reflection, and recognizing that what we might want to do is not always what is best to do. Somehow, when a bunch of human beings get together, all of that comes together in recognition of the fact that letting people kill people whenever they feel like it is not what is best. If nothing else, if we let the killer murder that person, what's to stop them from killing me? And further, we have empathy (once our brains finish cooking at about the age of 25-30, anyway). We recognize the suffering that a person's death causes their friends and family, and we understand that should someone kill our friend or family, we would suffer, too. We don't want to suffer because it feels bad, and we don't want others to suffer because we recognize that they would feel bad, too.
I don't know how much sense I'm making, but it's really a difficult question. I think ultimately I feel the same way about morality that I do about other aspects of existence, though: it is a far, far greater thing if we do it because we recognize the good in it for ourselves, rather than only doing it because some god tells us we have to or else.
~Neshomeh