Cryssie
Ebonclad Enigma
A species that tended towards killing each other willy-nilly probably wouldn't last long. And yet we have! But no, really, I mean if the majority of individuals tended towards killing people.I have a few questions. And not rhetorical or sarcastic questions, real questions that I wish for someone to give clear and serious explanations on:
If God does not exist, where did these widely accepted ideals such as murder being wrong come from, especially when the result of a certain frowned-upon action would not truly have an effect on the population at large?
I don't see any reason why we would suddenly all think "oh, there are enough of us that it won't make a difference if I kill a few - murder time!"
See above. It's a sort of group will-to-live thing.What drove man to determine these specific morals, if man even made them?
Because apparently their sense of morality is violently at odds with the base morals of the rest of us, and because if they don't have that basic "killing is bad" instinct, they're something of an anomaly.Why is it that someone who thinks mass murder is right is clearly messed in the head?
By the way, by your reckoning, if someone thinks mass murder is right, what drove them to determine that? God? Or is it perfectly okay to put this one in particular down to humans?
Do something that negatively affects you/your immediate peers/your species and you may feel bad. If you feel bad after doing something, you should feel discouraged from doing it next time. So you should do it less, species benefits from it, you all thrive and everything is peachy.And most importantly: why do people feel guilt if moral is determined by man? If it wasn't determined by man, how could evolution give us guilt?
At least, that's the best I can explain it. There are probably better words.