T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
399.1 | One answer | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Jun 30 1987 09:38 | 18 |
| Well, since you asked me....
If one understands the concept of a Savior, it is that the Savior
is one who redeems sinners from their sins. To paraphrase Rasputin,
the first thing one needs to do in order to be forgiven from sin
is to sin. In order to sin, one (or, in deference to some belief
structures, one's species) must be aware of or conscious of the
_concept_ of sin. Cannibalism and infanticide are generally considered
sins in most human clutures; fish do it all the time (a home aquarium,
as Will Cuppy once observed, is a terribly educational device).
Do fish thereby sin? No, because they're not aware (nor is it
relevant to them) of the act as a sin.
No sin, no need for a Savior.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
[Doesn't this begin to sound like REX::RELIGION?]
|
399.2 | Humans are just prototypes anyway... | EDEN::KLAES | The Universe is safe. | Tue Jun 30 1987 10:38 | 16 |
| Cetaceans (whales, dolphins, etc.) don't need Saviours, as they
are obviously far superior in intelligence and morality to humans
(when's the last time you saw a dolphin-made nuclear warhead?).
When God was designing the most intelligent species on Earth,
first He/She made humans, and soon realized that the biggest mistake
God did was in giving humans *hands*; so He/She then designed the
cetaceans, making sure they could only have fins, and placed them
in the water, so that the most they could do is catch fish and have
a lot of time to think.
(For those of you who miss the point, the above is mostly meant
to be satirical.)
Larry
|
399.3 | ...And Science Fiction. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Jun 30 1987 12:03 | 18 |
| RE: .1
A frequent theme (well, not that frequent, but it's been dealt with
a number of times) is the question of the Christian reaction to
alien intelligence. In traditional Christianity, humans "sin" because
they are descended from Adam and Eve who experienced the fall from
grace because they ate from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.
Whether or not this is interpretted symbolically, it raises questions
about the "natal state of grace" of those who are clearly *not*
descended from Adam and Eve. Does intelligence imply a soul? A
tough question.
Probably the best (not the most complete, but the best) treatment
of this is Blish's "A Case of Conscience", which is one of the true
clasics of SF, illustrating as it does the ability of SF to present
original insight on tough questions.
Topher
|
399.4 | | SUCCES::MULDOON | I'll be right back... - Godot | Wed Jul 01 1987 16:01 | 10 |
|
RE: .2
It may not be as far-fetched as you think, Larry. After all,
dolphins kill only for food and do not fight amongst themselves.
They work cooperatively for the good of the pod (?) and individuals
are important to the pod. Sometimes I wonder who has the superior
intelligence.
Steve_who_wouldn't_mind_coming_back_as_a_dolphin
|
399.5 | RE 399,4 | EDEN::KLAES | The Universe is safe. | Wed Jul 01 1987 17:39 | 6 |
| I read a quote in USENET once (and posted it in the NAC::SF
Conference) that humans on Earth are actually reincarnated dolphins
sent here as punishment for being evil in their past lives! :^)
Larry
|
399.6 | another dolphin lover | MANTIS::PARE | | Wed Jul 01 1987 17:45 | 2 |
| Animals never betray their nature...man sometimes doesn't recognize
what his nature is.
|
399.7 | | TLE::BRETT | | Wed Jul 01 1987 21:29 | 15 |
|
Its amazing that people who know so little about animals can say
so much about what they do/don't do.
Read Jane Goodall's "In the Shadow of Man" sometime, and find out
how murderous chimpanzees are.
When I kill my neighbor because he is getting in my way, its murder/sin;
when a male bear kills a cub because he's hungry, its nature/innocent.
There's a lot of anthropomoriphism (sp. wrong) going on here and very
little in the way of facts and theories that don't have "x is man,
therefore bad, y is not, therefore good" built into them.
/Bevin
|
399.8 | | SPIDER::PARE | | Thu Jul 02 1987 13:10 | 11 |
| Bevin,
It isn't in the nature of animals to even attempt to distinguish
between right and wrong,... they live according to their nature,
they live the way they live. Its man who has analyzed, studied,
and instutionalized his own nature into a myriad of complex social
mores and institutions. I don't know if intelligence as we know
it is what causes mankind to react as we do or if, in our quest
for ultimate truth, we have distorted our own nature beyond recognition
but to expect animals to be judged by the (often ridiculous) rules
of "good and evil" that we have set up for ourselves is arrogance
beyond belief.
|
399.9 | | TLE::BRETT | | Fri Jul 03 1987 09:14 | 15 |
|
How do you know whether or not dolphins and apes have a social concept
equivalent to our "right" and "wrong"? Certainly animals such as
elephants have the concept of a "rogue male" who has abandoned the
herd, which in some ways could be regarded as sort of reverse
ostracism.
It is very hard to tell what another person is thinking, difficult
to understand another society, and non-humans present REAL
understanding difficulties.
I am reminded of the arguments that it was alright to have negro
slaves because negros didn't have souls.
/Bevin
|
399.10 | Perhaps I misunderstood | MANTIS::PARE | | Mon Jul 06 1987 09:10 | 6 |
| Having a social concept equivalent to our right and wrong is certainly
different than us holding animals subject to OUR concepts of right
and wrong. I agree that animals certainly may have developed
equivalent moral systems. I take issue though that (and perhaps
this isn't what you ment and I am misunderstanding) OUR social concepts
can or should be projected onto animals as judgemental devices.
|
399.11 | Nature vs nature | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Jul 06 1987 11:40 | 33 |
| RE: Last bunch
There seems to be a rather complex dual standard being set up.
Animals are said to be somehow better because they "never do anything
which violates their nature." When cases of animals acting in ways
which it seems would have been pronounced "against their nature"
if done by a human being, the response has been "you can't judge
animals by our standards" (which I agree with).
It seems that animals always act according to their nature *by
definition* since we interpret anything they do as simply their
nature. People on the other hand are held up to a standard of behavior
which, as was pointed out, not expected of animals.
The question presented was not "should we judge animals by our
standards?" but "should we *judge* people by our standards?". Our
at least should we judge them by such standards and then insist
they come out poorly in comparison to the *unjudged* animals?
To put it differently, we like animals because we expect little
from them and so they don't disappoint us. We feel cynical about
humans because we have high expectations, and are frequently
disappointed.
Disliking your species is simply a way of disliking yourself.
Try to rejoice when someone exceeds their nature, which was "designed"
to allow small tribes of rather weak apes to survive in a harsh,
dangerous environment. It is not our nature which we violate (which
we can no more do than breath water) but our environment which makes
strange demands on us.
Topher
|
399.12 | We are all part of the Gland Scheme | KIRK::KOLKER | Conan the Librarian | Tue Jul 07 1987 10:23 | 17 |
| re .11
Bravo!
Part of the problem is the kind of theological exaggerations some
people like to construct. If you assume humans are special in that
we are created in G_D's image, while the dogs, cats and fleas are
not, then of course we are going to hold ourselve to a different
( I hesitate to say higher ) standard of behaviour.
I don't think there is a whit of empirical evidence that humans
act against their nature (by and large, excluding dysfunctional
behaviour brought about by fits, fevers and tumors of the brain).
People do what their genes and glands program them to do in response
to external conditions. That is why the "morality" of the human
species has not changed an iota since G_D invented dirt.
|
399.13 | | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Jul 07 1987 10:37 | 24 |
| Re .12
My friend, Bob, I'll have to take gentle exception to that.
>People do what their genes and glands program them to do in response
>to external conditions. That is why the "morality" of the human
>species has not changed an iota since G_D invented dirt.
But cultural morality _does_ change. Once upon a time, it was
perfectly acceptable for humans to consume other humans as food,
willingly and actively. Such people were callede "cannibals,"
and by modern standards throughout the world, this practice is
effectively considered immoral (with a few exceptions such as the
Andes airliner crash of some years ago). Likewise, incest [which
does occur] is culturally immoral in most societies now, even though
it was mandated in other cultures (the Pharaoh of Egypt was compelled,
by religious reasons to have his sister[s] as at least one of his
wives, for instance). There is some elasticity, culturally based,
in "moral" behavior. That's why this discussion has been pivoting
around the discussion of good and evil.
Steve Kallis, Jr,
|
399.14 | The more things change... | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Jul 07 1987 11:22 | 26 |
| RE: .13
We can skip the arguments about whether institutional canniballism
(as opposed to emergency canniballism, e.g., the Andes crash, or
pathological canniballism) has ever actually existed. It probably
does, but there is a small group of anthropologists who claim that
the evidence is much weaker than normally assumed, even by
anthropologists.
The details of what is considered moral behavior changes, but (and
I suspect this is what was meant in .11) it can be argued that there
has been no temporal trend in *conformance* to the prevailing moral
rules. (I would be willing to argue otherwise, but I would be on
awfully weak ground. The argument would depend on making a number
of assumptions which I feel are justified but which I can not prove
-- they are my biases. In other words, there is a sense in which
moral progress *has* probably been made, but it is not a sense that
everyone would except as meaningful).
By the way, I would suspect that if the average citizen, or even
nobel, of Pharaohic Egypt, tried to marry his/her sister/brother
they would be shunned at the least. The Pharaoh and his sister/wife
were an exception specifically because they were considered *exempt*
from "normal", mortal moral standards.
Topher
|
399.15 | the nature of man | MANTIS::PARE | | Tue Jul 07 1987 13:01 | 16 |
| Where does religion enter into human nature? How is the worship
of a "higher Being" inherent in our human nature? How would this
practice enhance the survival of the first mammalian slugs that
crawled up out of the primordial swamp? What "real" purpose
could there have possibly been for human intelligence to evolve
in that direction?
What part of human nature called out for human sacrifice in ancient
religious ceremonies? What did the trend of cultural religions away from
human sacrifice reflect in terms of human nature? Is war an inherent
part of the nature of humanity? If so, does humanity's obsession with
war on today's scale of magnitude reflect a facet or a distort of the
nature of humanity? How could war have been a contributing factor
to the survival of the species of mankind when he first developed/evolved?
Lets define the nature of man first because sometimes I don't think
I understand it at all.
|
399.16 | well.... | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Jul 07 1987 13:43 | 23 |
| Re .14:
> ... It probably
>does, but there is a small group of anthropologists who claim that
>the evidence is much weaker than normally assumed, even by
>anthropologists.
Well, even as ancient China was becoming civilized, there was
sufficient of it around so that they called a human prepared for
the table "long pig." [Human flesh reportedly tastes like sweet
pork.]
>By the way, I would suspect that if the average citizen, or even
>nobel, of Pharaohic Egypt, tried to marry his/her sister/brother
>they would be shunned at the least. The Pharaoh and his sister/wife
>were an exception specifically because they were considered *exempt*
>from "normal", mortal moral standards.
Good point. However, also look at the story of Lot _after_ the
destruction of Sodom in "Genesis." Nobody found anything too wrong,
there; even though it was done in a "noble cause."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
399.17 | Probably for Practical Reasons | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Tue Jul 07 1987 14:24 | 27 |
399.18 | | MANTIS::PARE | | Tue Jul 07 1987 15:14 | 14 |
| Not why one God, ...why any God? Groups of cats or lions or deer
don't APPEAR to gather together into a woodland grove to honor their
creator in traditional ceremony. They don't bury their dead with
circumspect care. They don't appear to attempt to plan beyond the
coming season. Whales and dolphins may share our proclivty for
the mystique, they gather together and communicate also. If we
are going to have a discussion centered around the nature of man
then it would be helpful to define the nature of man as we know
it. Some of the mores of our society developed, not from our nature
but from our experiences (as I believe are most of your examples).
As the results of our experiences change,...then so do the mores
of society that accompanied them. But the true nature of man ....
does or doesn't it change? Is it an inherent part of man's nature
if it does, or merely another reflection of historical experience?
|
399.19 | RE 399.18 | EDEN::KLAES | The Universe is safe. | Tue Jul 07 1987 17:06 | 9 |
| Humanity originally made up all those gods, goddesses, and spirits
to help explain the unknown and frightening world around them -
it made life a little easier to take if you anthromoephosized
everything.
A little early civilization psychotherapy, you might say.
Larry
|
399.20 | politics and religion | VINO::EVANS | | Wed Jul 08 1987 12:51 | 16 |
| RE: 17
Somebody correct me if I'm wrong, but was "fish on Friday" started
by the Pope to support the Spanish fish business?
Only one example of a political bent in "religious" or "spiritual"
matters. In fact, aren't most of our present religions WHAT they
are because of politics, one way or another? Christianity certainly
made many concessions to the other religions extant at the time
in order to get converts. (An getting converts is what it's all
about, either that or banning birth control so the numbers increase
anyway. If you don't do either...well, look what happened to the
Shakers)
Dawn
|
399.21 | Curiousity questions | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Tue Jul 14 1987 18:13 | 9 |
399.22 | cats, of course, answer to a higher authority ... | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Jul 15 1987 09:18 | 16 |
| re .21:
>re: .18
>
>Don't elephants bury their dead?
Apparently they do, ast least sometimes. An interesting anecdotal
story was picked up by Vance Packard and included in his book, _Animal
IQ_, published in the late 1940s or early 1950s, in which a hunter
had been knocked senseless near some elephants, and one went over
to him and sprinkled vegetation on him, as a cursory attempt to
bury him. The hunter opined that not only do elephants have some
idea of death, but that they extend it beyond species.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
399.23 | and cats of course...and dogs...and.... | MANTIS::PARE | | Wed Jul 15 1987 10:09 | 1 |
| I've always been fond of elephants_:-)
|
399.24 | I dunno | VINO::EVANS | | Wed Jul 15 1987 13:23 | 9 |
| RE: the pope and fish - I'm not real sure. I think because SPain
was (is) a Roman Catholic country, and was in some real economic
trouble. Maybe they appealled to him (if this Catholocism (sp?)
is worth anything, you'll help us out) or he took it upon himself.
Or maybe it didn't happen that way.
Dawn
|
399.25 | A fishy, but true piece of Catholic history | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Care for life. | Thu Jul 16 1987 12:43 | 7 |
| It wasn't Spain, but Italy. The fishing industry was going down
the drain when they asked the Pope for help. He decreeded that
all Catholics have to eat fish on fridays --I think the spiritual
reason given was "to cleanse the soul".
I heard the story many years ago on the Sunday Morning radio show
"Topic Religion" on WEEI am. It was told by the Priest...
|
399.26 | Thanks! I KNEW I'd heard it somewhere... | VINO::EVANS | | Thu Jul 16 1987 16:25 | 2 |
|
|
399.27 | Practical religion. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Jul 20 1987 15:08 | 33 |
| RE: .21
"... most religious matters probably evolved out of practical matters."
I doubt it. It is certainly true that *some* seemingly arbitrary
religious practices have practical roots (including, apparently,
this business of supporting the fishing industry) but for many others
you would have to stretch the definition of "practical" quite a
bit.
Many religious practices come about because someone "explains"
something (a physical phenomena or a religious conundrum) and that
explanation has consequences. For example, the classical banging
on pots to bring back the sun during an eclipse.
Many religious practices, particularly in the Judaic/Christian/Islamic
cluster, come from a need to distinguish one religion from another:
e.g., the milk with meat law, or the celebrating of the Sabath on
the *first* day of the week. In a sense this is "practical" but
not in the sense of supporting the fishing industry or avoiding
Salmonella poisoning.
Of course, all religions cater to the need for ritual, stability,
and belief affirmation; and religious practices always serve these
functions, but once again, this is a different sense of "practical".
Its fun to speculate about, and sometimes actually learn about,
practical roots to religious practices. But not all practices are
practical, including some which we can find plausible sounding
explanations for. Fundamentally, religion is non-rational, and
at times even irrational.
Topher
|
399.28 | If I could talk to the animals.... | POBOX::CROWE | I led the pigeons to the flag.. | Thu Sep 15 1988 18:04 | 7 |
| When reading some of the previous animal/man notes I was reminded
of a quote I once heard,
"The wolf and the hawk are the only creatures to mate for life."
Is that their 'nature'?? Too bad humans can't make the same
claim.
|
399.29 | Ouch... | JACOB::STANLEY | I need a miracle every day... | Thu Sep 15 1988 18:46 | 6 |
| > "The wolf and the hawk are the only creatures to mate for life."
I never would have known that. A wolf and a hawk really seems like and
unlikely couple. :-)
Dave
|
399.30 | other animals | COPA::CABANYA | | Fri Sep 16 1988 15:50 | 2 |
| geese too
|
399.31 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Sat Sep 17 1988 00:12 | 5 |
| and swans, among others which escape me at this moment.
Deb
|
399.32 | | MILVAX::GROSSE | | Mon Sep 19 1988 11:58 | 3 |
| and aardvaks....
|
399.33 | | AYOU17::NAYLOR | Drive a Jaguar, fly a Cheetah | Mon Sep 19 1988 12:15 | 3 |
| ... and while we're on the subject, black widow spiders .... even
if it is short ....
|
399.34 | | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Pushing back the limits of common sense | Mon Sep 19 1988 16:44 | 1 |
| Mantises...
|