Pygoscelis
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It would be odd to surmise that nobody thought murder and rape and torture and theft may be wrong before Moses came down from the mountain, or before whatever other "revelation" was made to whatever "prophet" you care to name. Of course there was brutality and violation of such moral feelings before religion, but there has been since religion too, and religion has even been used to justify it at times.
As noted above, empathy goes a long way in explaining a lot about our sense of morality. On top of empathy we have social contracts and traditions which further flesh out our individual views on what morality is. Much of it is cultural yes, and that culture has been embedded in various religions. So for a muslim it may be wrong to eat pork and for a hindu it may be wrong to eat beef, etc. Various other esoteric and seemingly arbitrary "moral" rules came about in the same way. At the core though is basic empathy, which all but sociopaths have and which we evolved as a species, as have some other species (we are not alone in this).
Religion is not the source of human empathy. But it is one of the sources (there are other ideological sources as well) of the other "moral" rules we build into our societies.
Religion also serves as an authority to pin our moral values to, perhaps keeping some sociopaths who would otherwise behave immorally in line. But this sword runs in both directions, as authoritarianism can just as easily lead to bad as to good. It *DOES* become a real problem when people start to confuse obedience with morality itself, and do good only to obey God rather than for the sake of doing good.
That is especially problematic given bible stories like Abraham and Isaac, where obedience and morality are put up against one another and obedience is said to be more important (God demands Abraham do a morally wrong action and the obedience to God wins). People of this mindset are vulnerable to be used as tools for any sort of attrocity (all you have to do is convince them God wants that attrocity)
As noted above, empathy goes a long way in explaining a lot about our sense of morality. On top of empathy we have social contracts and traditions which further flesh out our individual views on what morality is. Much of it is cultural yes, and that culture has been embedded in various religions. So for a muslim it may be wrong to eat pork and for a hindu it may be wrong to eat beef, etc. Various other esoteric and seemingly arbitrary "moral" rules came about in the same way. At the core though is basic empathy, which all but sociopaths have and which we evolved as a species, as have some other species (we are not alone in this).
Religion is not the source of human empathy. But it is one of the sources (there are other ideological sources as well) of the other "moral" rules we build into our societies.
Religion also serves as an authority to pin our moral values to, perhaps keeping some sociopaths who would otherwise behave immorally in line. But this sword runs in both directions, as authoritarianism can just as easily lead to bad as to good. It *DOES* become a real problem when people start to confuse obedience with morality itself, and do good only to obey God rather than for the sake of doing good.
That is especially problematic given bible stories like Abraham and Isaac, where obedience and morality are put up against one another and obedience is said to be more important (God demands Abraham do a morally wrong action and the obedience to God wins). People of this mindset are vulnerable to be used as tools for any sort of attrocity (all you have to do is convince them God wants that attrocity)