| >the view seems quite unhinged when read together, but really I would view it as one misstep/lack of step on the way to interesting truth. Why "unhinged"? I don't know philosophy and English is not my language but I'll try to generalize: Living organisms take resources that they can, specially if there's a net positive gain from it. This happens because those that gain the most net positive tend to reproduce more and hence these traits (i.e. tendency to take resources which are a net benefit) gets passed on. Does evolutionary theory disagree with this? Humans are just a special (as opposed to general, I don't believe there's anything "special" special about humans) case of it. Let's say that there were just two human tribes. If the tribes are not equally powerful, the powerful one will kill most of them and take all the resources and the women. Let's imagine a case where they are almost equally powerful. Then, conflict would cause mutual destruction and it makes it worth it to have an understanding between them... in which they don't kill each other and not take each others' stuff. You could argue such cost benefits between families in tribes or individuals in families from the same framework. None of this needs "morality". You could argue that the very set of rules which make for an optimal balance between individual, family, tribal and inter-tribal interests is in fact "morality"... but when the resources and the power balance changes, whatever "morals" people thought existed will disappear and will be replaced by new set of "morals". |
The way you talk makes you sound like someone who would be an awful pain in the ass to be around. Pedantic and half baked.
While technically correct your analysis is only half formed.
You have much more reading to do.
Start with these books to get a clearer idea of why you're getting a negative response to your honestly held beliefs:
How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie
Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! by Richard Feynman
And some extra credit:
Maps of Meaning by Jordan Peterson
Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn