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Morals without God - A Secular System of Ethics

Morals without God - A Secular System of Ethics. Ian Bryce Secular Party www.secular.org.au Ethics teacher www.primaryethics.org.au. A Secular System of Ethics. Can we have morals without a god?

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Morals without God - A Secular System of Ethics

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  1. Morals without God - A Secular System of Ethics Ian Bryce Secular Party www.secular.org.au Ethics teacher www.primaryethics.org.au

  2. A Secular System of Ethics Can we have morals without a god? We will try to construct a system of ethics based instead on scientific principles and reason.

  3. Golden Rule - do unto others… Allow rape of daughters Slay heretics Love and respect all beings Torture the innocent in order to forgive the guilty Help others in your family Be nice to others in your pack Attack anyone outside your tribe What to practice? Examples of ethics

  4. Because the Chief said Because God said Because its written in our Holy book Because the priest said Its good to be good (Kant) Duty for Duty’s sake For my own benefit (reciprocity) For reward in the Afterlife Survival value The Altruistic gene Family benefit To make society function To avoid jail It feels good Why practice it? Examples of reasons given

  5. Dark Ages 300 AD-1500 AD The Church was in charge. Witchcraft, drownings, Inquisition Chronology

  6. Cartoon

  7. The Enlightenment • The Age of Enlightenment (or simply the Enlightenment or Age of Reason) was an elite cultural movement of intellectuals in 18th century Europe that sought to mobilize the power of reason in order to reform society and advance knowledge. It promoted intellectual interchange and opposed intolerance and abuses in Church and state.

  8. THE ADVANCE OF SCIENCE Galileo - described planetary orbits -1610 (earth no longer at the center) Newton - gravity, laws of motion - 1687 Lavoisier - chemistry - 1877 Ampere - electric current - 1820 Darwin - 1858 - attributed species to nature not a deity THE ENLIGHTENMENT The advance of Reason in human affairs 1600-1800 Spinoza - 1660 - criticized the Bible, the mind is the body John Locke - 1680 - consciousness, monetarism, knowledge is gained through perception Didero - 1750 Newton Voltaire Benjamin Franklin Thomas Jefferson Chronology

  9. Classical philosophers contributing to secular ethics • David Hume 1743 • Immanual Kant 1785 • John Stuart Mill 1861 • Friedrich Nietzsche 1887 • George Holyoake 1896 • Bertrand Russell 1927 • Ludwig Wittgenstein ?

  10. Classical contributors to secular ethics • David Hume 1743 “A Treatise on Human Nature” • Ethical questions are subjective, unlike matters of fact • Hence, Reward & punishment - only to change future behavior

  11. Classical contributors to secular ethics John Stuart Mill (and his father James Mill, and Jeremy Bentham) 1861 “Utilitarianism” • Use experience not intuition • Greatest happiness principle: • Actions are “right” of they promote happiness • “Wrong” of they promote pain • Happiness of everyone, not just the doer - “nobleness”

  12. Classical contributors to secular ethics Friedrich Nietzsche 1887 On the Genealogy of Morality • Rejected Christianity - “God is dead”

  13. Classical contributors to secular ethics George Holyoake 1896 “English Secularism” • Work for this life (not an afterlife) • Uses material means and science • It is good to do good

  14. Classical contributors to secular ethics Bertrand Russell 1927 “Why I am not a Christian” • Religion …is the enemy of moral progress in the world • Promoted science and reason • A good world needs knowledge, kindliness, and courage • Political activist - Anti-war stance • Sexual freedoms

  15. Modern secular ethicists(or contributors) • Peter Singer 1977 • Richard Dawkins • Michael Shermer 1991 • Christopher Hitchens 2007 • Michel Onfray 2007 • Tenzin Gyatso ~2000

  16. Modern secular ethicists Peter Singer 1977 Animal Liberation • The Expanding Circle Utilitarianism Ethical reasoning since primitive times • Large perspective: equal concern for all human beings • We should bear a small pain to relieve another’s large pain • Thus, are Americans immoral? • Greater happiness through sharing

  17. Modern secular ethicists Christopher Hitchens 2007 “God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything” • Religion misrepresents the origins of humankind and the cosmos • Religion demands unreasonable suppression of human nature • Religion inclines people to violence and blind submission to authority • Religion expresses hostility to free inquiry

  18. Modern secular ethicists Ayaan Hirsi Ali 2007 “Infidel: my life” • Recounts her story as a Moslem woman • Has suffered all the indignities including genital mutilation and forced marriage. • She blames Moslems who refer to the marriage of the prophet Mohammad to a girl of nine to justify these things (even in Melbourne). • And the West has failed to speak out.

  19. Modern secular ethicists Tenzin Gyatso ~2000 many speeches • If science proves religion to be wrong, then religion must change. • Progress in research, especially in the life sciences, needs to be directed by 'secular ethics': ethical principals that transcend religious barriers and are common to everyone. Who?

  20. Modern secular ethicists Tenzin Gyatso ~2000 many speeches • “If science proves Buddhism to be wrong, then religion must change.” • “Progress in research, especially in the life sciences, needs to be directed by 'secular ethics': ethical principals that transcend religious barriers and are common to everyone.” 14th Dalai Lama Leader of Tibetan Buddhism Popular leader of Tibet

  21. Facts - Religion • See Table - broad • Highlighted comparisons: • Sacred texts • Prophet-founder • Gods • Beliefs • Chosen race • Thus, a comparative analysis establishes, on many different bases, and beyond any doubt, that of any 100 religions or sects, no two can be true. 99 of them are wrong or 100 are wrong.

  22. More Facts - Religion • Scientific evidence discounts intervention by any supernatural being • All thorough tests of prayer show zero effect • The biblical miracles are impossible, according to the laws of physics, which have held since the Big Bang • Most religions have a known (and very human) origin. The holy books, prophets and miracles are clearly designed to give power to a particular sect. • This does nothing to trouble the believers. • Christianity - basis: Ancient Sin - Adam, Eve, nakedness, hence the crucifixion.

  23. Morality of the religions • Much of human folklore and legends convey moral principles and altruism • Many have been incorporated into religion, such as the Parables of the Old and New Testaments • Good and bad instructions have become mixed • Eg Thou shalt not steal, but you should slaughter any nonbelievers.

  24. Morality of the religions • The teachings of churches vary through history, according to the whims of the person in power, eg Henry 8th. • The instructions for extreme cruelty have been used to justify most wars, genocide, inquisitions etc in history. • Religious leaders hold up their sacred texts as their moral authority - yet they are full of immoral instructions

  25. Morality of the religions • Religious leaders themselves have a long history of using prostitutes, child sex, abusing boys etc • Those instructions and actions of the churches which are sound, clearly do not come from their holy books • Hence are available to secular thinkers too

  26. Morality of the religions • Religious leaders of most creeds have a consistent history of oppressing minorities, eg the unmarried, the unhappily married, the pregnant, gays, and particularly women • It is virtually impossible to improve this - can’t argue with their authority

  27. Morality of the religions How can belief systems which are both false and harmful be propagated for thousands of years? • Passed down by fathers and clerics • To those most vulnerable - to children, who are programmed to accept all they are taught. • By the time they reach outside the family, it is too late - others seem like aliens • Need to break the cycle - stop lying to the children

  28. Disagreements and science • Unlike religions, science offers a path to resolving disagreements. • Both parties are asked to present their evidence or analysis (for example the experiments they are relying on). • These tests can then be examined and repeated by others. • The methods and results are visible to all parties, so eventually a consensus will be achieved. • When these principles are applied to a conflict, there is a path towards resolution.

  29. Enlightenment through science • Cosmology has revealed the origins of the universe • The first generation of stars - making heavy elements (of which we are now made) • The gas clouds condensing into new stars and planets • The solar system clearing of dust, the earth accumulating water and gases

  30. Enlightenment through science • Physics has shown we live in a material world • No evidence of a supernatural or spiritual realm, hence no theoretical basis for religions • There is apparently no way a supernatural being could influence the universe - the four known forces account for all phenomena, no “gaps” for spooks • At least in our domain - might be different at extreme energies and gravity in black holes etc • Hence physics strongly rules out the gods claimed by religions

  31. Enlightenment through science • Biology has shown us how life works, and reproduced using DNA • Evolution shows we are descended from common ancestors with other primates • Our sharing DNA with all life on earth, and the relatively insignificant differences between races and minority groups, is a powerful source of respect and harmony.

  32. Origin of morals • The Evolution cycle: Heredity, Random variation, Survival value • Genes (packages of DNA) • & memes (ideas) • Reciprocity - altruistic gene

  33. Origin of morals - How to enforce? • Chief of tribe • Rules, laws • Stab in back? Need a higher authority • Powerful, invisible friend • Prophet, holy book - religion • Kings, rules, laws • Favor those who agree, convert or murder those who don’t

  34. So ethics, morals, religions etc are inventions of man • We are free to invent our own!

  35. Enlightenment through science • Neuroscience has shown us that the mind is what the brain does. Thinking is patterns of electro-chemical activity. • The human mind has no extension in space outside the brain - astral travel is out. • The human mind has no extension in time outside the brain - no previous lives or afterlife.

  36. Our Core paradigm for ethics: The welfare of sentient beings • Our basis for ethics is: Respect for sentient beings. • Because they are aware, or conscious, and capable of experiencing pleasure and pain • Their welfare is important to us.

  37. Utilitarianism • How to maximize the welfare of sentient beings? • We know (because we experience it) that we humans (and animals) are self aware and conscious • And thus capable of feeling pain, sorrow, joy, love, appreciation of nature etc. • Our lives also rely on many social structures, such as: • learning from the responses of others to our actions, • establishing friendships where helpful actions are likely to be repaid, • making plans for the future, • enjoying success, • and regretting failure. • These capabilities add to our pleasure and pain, and hence to the value we place on life.

  38. Application to specific issues Family Minorities Behavior Law and courts Environment Population growth Animals Aliens Religious education Enlightened education Contraception and abortion Right to die Euthanasia

  39. Application to specific issues • Animals • More primitive creatures with simpler brains probably experience such consciousness and social structures also – to a lesser degree. • Thus, their feelings also deserve respect – but to a lesser degree than humans. • A dog is worth less consideration than a human, • a mouse less again, a worm less still, and so on. • Thus, animals are deserve our respect, to varying degrees. • But to a lesser degree than humans.

  40. Application to specific issues • Aliens #1 • If we meet (or talk to) aliens? • What would the churches do? Scan the sacred texts, conclude that they were heretics, infidels, atheists etc, and try to convert or exterminate them. • What would we do? Observe that they are sentient, so we would respect them (treat them well).

  41. Application to specific issues • Aliens #2 • BUT the aliens will have vastly superior technology… • If THEY are religious…scan their sacred text, do humans believe in the Flying Dog Poo God? NO? Convert or exterminate! • Let us hope the aliens practise secular ethics! • Life on Mars…

  42. Application to specific issues • Religious Education • Religion and hatred propagated by indoctrinating children • When most vulnerable. Clear chain of events to: • False beliefs about origins • Supernatural beings • Hatred of other races • Them indoctrinating next generation. We believe children have the right not to be lied to, in matters of origins and deities Many forms of child abuse are outlawed already This would impact parental behavior and “faith schools”.

  43. Application to specific issues • Religious Education Telling parents what they can tell their children would be very difficult. Even ABC’s Rachael Kohn says parents should have the right to “bring up their children in their faith”. Does that include “inculcating hatred in other creeds”? • Meanwhile, a less ambitious plan: Enlightened education

  44. Application to specific issues • Enlightened Education • Step 1: Teach “Comparative religion” in all schools • Step 2: Teach “Origins” in schools • Step 3: Teach “Universal Ethics” in schools

  45. Application to specific issues • Enlightened Education Step 1: teach “Comparative religion” in all schools • Teaches all the variety of sacred texts, prophets, gods and beliefs around the world (see the big Table) • Will dilute the dogma from home, church and ethnic enclaves in Australia.

  46. Application to specific issues • Enlightened Education Step 2: Teach “Origins” in schools • The basic tool in an enlightened education is to teach children the real origins of the world, of life, and of humans. • They will gain a wonder at the natural environment, and a desire to preserve the ecosystems. • They will also gain appreciation and acceptance of the variety of peoples surrounding them.

  47. Application to specific issues • Enlightened Education Step 3: Teach “Universal Ethics” in schools Secular ethics, as suggested by this material should be taught in schools – universal human values - based on respect for all sentient beings (humans and animals).

  48. Application to specific issues Contraception and Abortion A woman should be in charge of her own body She can choose whether or not to reproduce. The mother’s rights come first. A foetus also has some rights, which slowly increase as it develops. Thus both mother and baby have rights, which need to be considered. Most assuredly, no religious figure has the right to dictate what she does.

  49. Sentience Chart

  50. Application to specific issues • Right to Die • Any person has the right to choose whether to live or to die. • We would support the right of people of sound mind to plan for their future, anticipating that they might for example become senile (known as a living will). • The stigma on suicide imposed by the Catholic Church, which causes much pointless distress, must be overcome.

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