The idea is pretty simple at this stage, which is why I wanted to flesh it out here first. I don't have a really good handle on it, but its simply this:
Allow me to unpack this. Morality evolves is the main part, the important thing here is that morality is first, I do not put evolution first (for reasons the are more subconscious at the moment).
The second part is standard to the theory of evolution that survival pressure has to exist for the necessary culling to take place, that pushes a group of creatures forward, towards the optimum for that survival pressure, what ever it is.
The third part is important, because it adds a humane aspect to the theory: cooperation being possible. Typically an evolutionist will take cooperation for granted, the whole time they are saying everything is survival of the fittest. But there isn't any point (aint any point) for something to attempt evolving if there is no resource to draw upon, for which you refer to the physical sciences outside of biology.
Now, unless you have corrected me on something up to this point, I assume you are up to part four, which is where the meat is "if the subject doesn't change" in other words morality applies to a certain subject, before moral law evolves. This is a selection pressure for coherence, since one creatures morality will out compete another's if its coherence, with the constancy of the requirement for morality, as a selection pressure, is greatest. If one animal is more moral, it wins.
It is basically the last part that I want to push. Saying so, I realize that there is a tentative nature to the proposition that for morality to be coherent it has to be able to stay on subject. The point being of course, that for morality to evolve, there has to be an evolved conscience and an evolved conscience does not appear unless it applies to all subjects. A breach in subject, being a breach in the conscience, and therefore a breach in morality, and therefore a breach in the creature's integrity.
Now I can see this rabbit trailing into all sorts of arguments about whether the conscience is actually a thing, and whether you need to be moral about everything in order to be moral just once, and whether you can change the subject of morality, be moral, and then go back to the old subject, but the point I want to make clear is that morality comes from somewhere, and if there is time in your theory for change, then there is time in your theory for morality to emerge. Keeping the subject the same is the key to proving that sooner or later you will face the question of morality, because of differences in behaviour being noticed from one iteration to the next (actually yes, that is the point, I realize).
And if you face the question of morality, then you face the question of whether or not there is a Moralizer, who we know to be the Holy Spirit...
What do you think?
Morality evolves, if survival pressure exists, cooperation is possible, and the subject does not change
Allow me to unpack this. Morality evolves is the main part, the important thing here is that morality is first, I do not put evolution first (for reasons the are more subconscious at the moment).
The second part is standard to the theory of evolution that survival pressure has to exist for the necessary culling to take place, that pushes a group of creatures forward, towards the optimum for that survival pressure, what ever it is.
The third part is important, because it adds a humane aspect to the theory: cooperation being possible. Typically an evolutionist will take cooperation for granted, the whole time they are saying everything is survival of the fittest. But there isn't any point (aint any point) for something to attempt evolving if there is no resource to draw upon, for which you refer to the physical sciences outside of biology.
Now, unless you have corrected me on something up to this point, I assume you are up to part four, which is where the meat is "if the subject doesn't change" in other words morality applies to a certain subject, before moral law evolves. This is a selection pressure for coherence, since one creatures morality will out compete another's if its coherence, with the constancy of the requirement for morality, as a selection pressure, is greatest. If one animal is more moral, it wins.
It is basically the last part that I want to push. Saying so, I realize that there is a tentative nature to the proposition that for morality to be coherent it has to be able to stay on subject. The point being of course, that for morality to evolve, there has to be an evolved conscience and an evolved conscience does not appear unless it applies to all subjects. A breach in subject, being a breach in the conscience, and therefore a breach in morality, and therefore a breach in the creature's integrity.
Now I can see this rabbit trailing into all sorts of arguments about whether the conscience is actually a thing, and whether you need to be moral about everything in order to be moral just once, and whether you can change the subject of morality, be moral, and then go back to the old subject, but the point I want to make clear is that morality comes from somewhere, and if there is time in your theory for change, then there is time in your theory for morality to emerge. Keeping the subject the same is the key to proving that sooner or later you will face the question of morality, because of differences in behaviour being noticed from one iteration to the next (actually yes, that is the point, I realize).
And if you face the question of morality, then you face the question of whether or not there is a Moralizer, who we know to be the Holy Spirit...
What do you think?