BaylorFTW said:https://www.thevintagenews.com/2018/06/09/genghis-khan/quash said:BaylorFTW said:So does rape by force Genghis Khan style.quash said:Sam Lowry said:You know what I believe. I'm interested in what you can prove. Scientific proofs have certain elements and a certain form. They require more than rhetorical questions.TexasScientist said:Don't you believe morality is better determined by what is in others best interests in terms of harm and well being, as opposed to a theocratic approach, based upon interpretation of primitive writings and claims of divine revelation by a cleric du jour?Sam Lowry said:
Value and agency are quantifiable phenomena with objectively observable qualities of mass, volume, and weight. Determining the answer to any moral question is therefore a simple matter of measuring moral values under laboratory conditions. The scientific research in this area is voluminous and readily available.
At least I assume this is what TS will say. I'll be disappointed if all we get is another version of "the feel good answer is good because logic."
I'm not asking you to tell me I should care about the best interests of others. Even religion can tell me that. I'm asking you to prove it scientifically.
Altruism provides an evolutionary advantage.
Cite?
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/2/mongolia-genghis-khan-dna/#close
Not even close. From your article:
"They suggest that the unique set of circumstances surrounding the establishment of the Mongol empire led to the spread.
"This is a clear example that culture plays a very big role in patterns of genetic variation and diversity in human populations,"
Rape is common in wartime, without any obvious evolutionary advantage. Harems, concubines, prima notte, those are ways for one powerful man to make a ton of babies. And power also increases the chance of survival of offspring; rape, not so much
“Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place.” (The Law, p.6) Frederic Bastiat