Hypothesis: Religion and Morals are correlated, but do not have a causal relation. Rather, individuals use religion as a mean of reinforcing previously held beliefs. Religion is not a source of morals, but a mirror of morals.
Reasoning:If religion has a causal effect on morals, then all individuals of a given religion would have much in common in regards to morals. All christians would have similar morals, all muslims would have similar morals. There may be some outliers (charlie hebdo attacks by a few individuals), however the overwhelming majority will share common beliefs about morality.
However that is not the case in real life (existence of muslim who condone war crimes as well as muslim who condemn war crimes). Where we have a new caliphate and a sizeable population of this caliphate has radically different ideas about morality than other muslims. The existence of extremist parties in all major religions also point to this.
Issue: Smaller sects of religious organisation will have more homogenous moral beliefs. "fundamentalist muslim sects, latter day saints, west-boro baptists, christian scientists (the sub group of Christianity, not scientists who are christian), therevada buddhists,etc. Does this mean that when in a smaller community, a specific sub grouping religion does have an effect on values? Or is this merely a case of classifying interpretations of religion (and as such it would be true by definition that people with the same interpretation of religion would have similar morals).
conclusion:?????????????
edit:CAN SOMEONE PLEASE MAKE THIS FORUM MORE COPY PASTE FRIENDLY FROM BLACK TEXT???????? If i leave it in white those responding to me via quote will have a harder time reffering to my post. If i leave it black....
This post has been edited by D'rek: 23 March 2015 - 07:20 PM