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1 yr. ago

  • Haha, I thought you'd say that! Well no, given how widspread and old religion and spiritually is that's not possible for anyone but a child raised by wolves to say it hasn't been an influence!

    My centre point of discussion is to look back before, wayyyy before any of these ideas could be cultivated. I feel that you are starting somewhere at a point where these morals are in the process of being developed and refined, if in early days, so your arguments are somewhat self supporting (happy to be corrected, just the impression I'm getting).

    You say there's no point in discussing what cannot be proven with evidence...well that makes this whole discussion somewhat defunct then unfortunately!! I'd already written the below so I'll leave it should you wish to discuss further despite this :)

    You say it was necessary for formation of larger social groups etc but...I go back to my basic starting point of "I don't like.." As you say there needs to be discussion, development and unity of belief for it to become a recognisable, repeatable, lasting moral system. But that just demonstrates my point that basic, individualistic morals came first then once complex language started to develop then shared likes and dislikes become more prevalent. Imagine what it was like before? Just take a look at chimpanzees.

    The developement of shared beliefs, religious or otherwise, will no doubt have occurred simultaneously. Overlapping, replacing and morphing over millions of generations. Some ideas being discarded/diminished as other new ones arose - e.g. that great 1 in 1000 year volcano eruption replacing the end of the 20 year flood occurance, to use my natural disaster example again.

    But "I don't like..." is still the starting point for pretty much any discussion about morals as far as I believe.

  • Glad you took the time to read this. The paragraph "Religion likely evolved by building on morality, introducing supernatural agents to encourage cooperation and restrain selfishness, which enhanced group survival. Additionally, emotions like disgust play a key evolutionary role in moral judgments by helping to avoid threats to health, reproduction, and social cohesion." Describes much of what I've discussed so far. Though my thoughts re disasters is omitted. I think that they are very significant if you look at e.g. Roman and Greek gods.

    You say that it's required to bring together larger populations, but plant cultivation - the beginnings of farming will be far more significant.

    As a slightly sideways thought, take a look at e.g. African tribal social structures - relatively small population groups (villages) may exists with low/intermittent positive interaction (not fighting over resources), but can still share similar or near identical spiritual beliefs and moral codes. I.e. one does not automatically determine the other. They can develop side by side or independently.

  • I'd disagree with that as well. I believe that "why did that storm happen?" "Why did drought kill everyone?" Etc - "the spirits and gods are angry!" As an answer in the absence of the level of scientific knowledge to expain it is the starting point.

    Bear in mind that these questions will have existed before complex language developed. And you can't develop a widespread religion without consistant communication. You can't form the concept of a spirit or god without generations of discussion.

  • Some came from religious teaching, but mostly I got my moral code from my peers and personal experience. I very much start with treating others as I'd be happy/like to be treated. If you follow that principal to start with then most other morals fall into place.

    Not sure what you're getting at about how far back you have to go but perhaps I can head off that discussion by saying that most morals can exist in the absence of religion and spirituality.

    Re your second question. No. And I doubt anyone has, but that's because morals form a part of religious beliefs. As I discussed, morals first then religion based morals after.

    Religion or spirituality of some form or another has existed for as long as we have any detailed information on any societies. The main problem with this discussion is that spiritual, religious and plain moral beliefs long predate any written language system so we can't refer to any solid evidence.

    If you start with "I don't like that" as a simplistic moral, then that predates any language as well and therefore spirtuality or religion.

  • I also disagree. All you need is to say "I don't want/like that" and to understand that something could be lost or suffered to yourself or others, given a particular scenario. That can then be used to create a system of morality where the majority are in agreement with each aspect.

    Oh and empathy. That's pretty critical!

    I'd say that spirituality and religion is then formed off the back of and alongside general or universal moral beliefs and that many aspects cannot exist without morals in the first place.

  • At least a decade. I did a small module at uni about a decade ago on colony collapse disorder and varroa mites were a prime culprit, alongside various viruses. Plenty of research already done then, but no concrete answer at that time.

    This is hardly news per se, rather a typical attention grabbing media headline saying that they came to a conclusion what the cause was last year after 6 months, whilst blaming cutbacks.

  • There's tonnes of blackthorn and a lot of sheep in the UK and I've never heard it to be problematic. Sheep ate pretty dim, but bramble is definitely not thorny/spiney enough to get caught bar the odd occasion. I'm sure I heard about a shrub (African maybe) that sheep can get completely ensnared in and die, but can't find it!

  • Many species of butterlies and moths eat honeydew, aka aphid poop, so no nectar needed. Also the larvae do the bulk of the eating. Imagos of lepidoptera only need to survive not grow so food requirements are fairly low.

  • Because they live in environments lacking in the nutrients that can be gained from invertebrates (e.g. in highly acidic soil). This allows them to compete better against other plants. I guess non-flowering plants don't need the same nutrients so can go without. Only a beginnner+ at ecological botany so someone here can surely explain better knowing lemmy!

  • Iirc, the phrase "bat shit crazy" comes from the harvesting of tropical bat guano (poop) for use as a fertliser. The poop is highly toxic, or contains toxic bacteria, which makes the harvesters go a little crazy! Not all bat species have this toxic poop.

  • If my understanding of physics is correct, they'd have to be slap bang in the centre of the reflected image (assuming a perfect sphere), so somewhere on the framework of the corner of the building.

  • Yeah I get this one too. I can't focus on any particular person, struggle to make out what someone sat next to me is saying, even if talking to me, and makes me very tired after a while.