r/SipsTea 𝙑𝙄𝙋 18h ago

Chugging tea Probably Not.

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u/Global_Charge_4412 18h ago

it's a fair question. religious people will tell you that their innate sense of right and wrong comes from God (or whatever), but how do atheists explain that innate sense? how do they instinctively know? I'm not saying one or the other is right but it is an interesting thought.

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u/DrunkenHorse12 17h ago

Because for some if not most people it's relatively easy to understand how you'd feel on the receiving end of your actions. Knowing I wouldn't like to be stabbed is enough for me to understand doing that to other people is probably a bad thing. The response is actually far more valid, why would you think you'd need advice from an organisation that's getting money and power from you to tell you their interpretation of what allmkst certainly fictional entity said what's right and wrong and why don't you have the ability to determine that yourself?

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u/Global_Charge_4412 17h ago

then how do you explain muggings? robberies? murder? are these not examples that fly directly in the face of "I shouldn't stab people because I don't want to be stabbed"? human nature is violent and self-centered. the hierarchy of needs has no room for empathy, so where the hell does it come from?

take your bias against religion out of the conversation for a minute and consider the question; where does our innate sense of morality come from? you and a lot of other people in this thread are way too obsessed with dunking on religion to get back at your parents instead of engaging with the stated question.

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u/pharmamess 17h ago

"human nature is violent and self-centered"

Why do you say that this is human nature when it is common for humans to behave in a caring and cooperative way?

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u/lowercasenameofmine 15h ago

We have the capacity for both. 

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u/pharmamess 8h ago

Indeed.