Because we are tribal/social animals, so we need order and that has become part of out genes and our learned psychology. IE it has evolved as we have evolved.
2007-10-19 20:11:00
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answer #1
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answered by Freethinking Liberal 7
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Morality is the template for embracing what is right and rejecting what is wrong. If Right and Wrong are not grounded in notions of universal truth, they devolve to mere labels, simply tools of the powerful to more easily persuade the masses to adopt "convenient" behaviors. However, pragmatic explanations of morality are dysfunctional. They beg the question of why I "should" do something. Sure, evolution enhances the survival of the race if we don't murder. Big deal. Too abstract for someone who really want to kill another human being. What then? Are we inhibited solely by the sheer fear of punishment? True for some, but for many others, murder just seems Wrong. But what makes it seem Wrong to me personally, at my moment of crisis? What creates the "should" for me? Genetic impulse? But genes can be manipulated like so many tinker toys. Therefore there is no reliable, universal basis in either fear or genetics for an appeal to Right or Wrong.
What then? I believe there is a theological explanation that squares exactly with the core of your question. Why is there this fiercely persistent sense of basic Right and Wrong built into human psychology? Because, as the Apostle Paul says, there is written on every human heart a law that comes from the pen of the Creator. See Romans 1:15. It is written in indelible ink, so that, in the court of Heaven, every person shall have received notice that they must give an accounting for their deeds, whether they have been based on love, or on the baser instincts. Humankind has a higher calling than mere animality. We are creature made in the image of our Creator, and failure to live up to that destiny will always invite a rebuke from the most essential feature of our humanity, our conscience.
2007-10-20 02:32:29
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Didn't you know that before Moses got the 10 commandments, everybody on earth was raping, killing, stealing, cheating, lying and torturing each other?
Thank God came out from clouds and set everyone straight. Eh? =P
h nitrogen: It's our in bred morality that allowed for the creation of those laws. Think about it.
2007-10-20 02:11:42
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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What we consider basic morality actually goes flatly against many of our inbred survival instincts. So I would say that morality should be actually considered a step backward for evolution.
2007-10-20 01:52:07
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answer #4
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answered by SDW 6
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Interestingly enough..if it wasn't for laws and police forces, this inbred morality you speak of would reveal itself not to be so. And besides what you think is moral might be complete different to your neighbor or even your brother. There is no such thing as inate morality.
2007-10-20 02:06:15
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answer #5
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answered by h nitrogen 5
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I don't necessarily correlate morality with group survival. Many immoral societies existed in history and some still do.
2007-10-20 01:51:41
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answer #6
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answered by Prof Fruitcake 6
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Because there was a CREATOR who made man like that in His own image
2007-10-20 01:51:34
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answer #7
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answered by Wally 6
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Of coarse he is able to be moral without religion.
2007-10-20 01:52:14
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answer #8
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answered by Jonathan 3
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we have been for centuries, why would we stop now, unless religion interferes, and tells its followers to kill any who don't follow the same beliefs. Oh wait, that's happening now!
2007-10-20 01:57:27
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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