page 2 has a high tolerance for ambiguity, and knows it can go through life without having to validate with eiter scripture or solemn godlessnes, every little self affirming emotion that reminds it that it exists
4/25/2007 9:49:07 PM
^ I shall ponder this.
4/26/2007 1:03:34 AM
4/26/2007 2:42:48 AM
^ youre either a troll or a retard.so, which is it?
4/26/2007 3:11:08 AM
4/26/2007 4:47:32 AM
^ That is a basic premise of ethics. But some believe that their religious beliefs are inextricable from their moral standards.
4/26/2007 5:39:46 AM
4/26/2007 9:04:20 AM
^nice
4/26/2007 9:35:24 AM
4/26/2007 11:40:29 AM
4/26/2007 12:48:11 PM
4/26/2007 1:34:48 PM
Why is it impossible for the notion that murder is wrong to have come from nature? One would think that evolution would instill a directive into a species that tells each individual member of that species not to go around mindlessly killing its own kind (or at the very least, members of its own family/community), otherwise that species would kill itself out of the gene pool.
4/26/2007 1:37:30 PM
4/26/2007 2:09:52 PM
4/26/2007 3:06:25 PM
^ http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=evolution+of+altruism+primate&btnG=SearchRead some of those.[Edited on April 26, 2007 at 3:21 PM. Reason : ]
4/26/2007 3:17:40 PM
Because natural selection has developed in us a sense of community. It could be that someone who is sick actually has a vital role in a given community, so seeing him towards better health is for the best. Or perhaps the elderly in a community have valuable knowledge/experience that warrants the rest of is troupe taking care of him. Or maybe groups of animals just work better when each individual feels that he can count on the others to be there in his time of need. There isn't any one perfect explanation for why natural selection has endowed us with "morals," although there were obviously selective pressures that encouraged and fostered their incorporation.
4/26/2007 3:27:00 PM
4/26/2007 4:28:57 PM
Everyone left
5/1/2007 12:02:16 PM
^ The answer to the question at the topic of the thread?
5/1/2007 12:05:25 PM
^Sadness that people quit responding.
5/1/2007 4:30:18 PM
Where is atheism bad things happen? I'll tell you where... IT'S THERE CAUSING THOSE BAD THINGS TO HAPPEN!!!
5/1/2007 4:53:00 PM
5/2/2007 12:56:46 AM
I don't know how that's supposed to be different from goodness to everyone and independent of everyone, but whatever. It's clear that your conception of good is based on whatever you think God says is right, not on what has any actual positive consequences.
5/2/2007 11:46:02 AM
If you need a god to have morals, how do you know which god to pick?
5/2/2007 4:54:46 PM
I was disappointed.The entire article ceased being interesting to me early on when I realized that atheists don't go whining to "God" or resort to the sort of culturally-conditioned outward expressions of comforting sorrow and grieving that religious people do. They sit around momentarily frightened that they're just as likely to be next, then comforted that they're still not that likely to be next, get a little pissed that life's a game of survival, and then move on.I've had the uncommonly atheistic response to the VT shootings described above despite a great sense to "need to feel bad" for what happened.Half of me feels like I've abandoned my soul because of this, the other half just says I've learned to cope and find social rituals bizarre.
5/2/2007 7:00:53 PM
5/22/2007 4:32:40 PM
5/22/2007 4:47:03 PM
that was very well writtenI applaud Mr. Dawkins
5/24/2007 10:37:40 AM
Good opinion piece.
5/24/2007 2:51:59 PM