Tuesday, February 23, 2010

www.youtube.com/watch%253Fv%253DgNYZH9kuaYM

There is not much in this world that can have me crying from laughing so hard, rolling on the floor absolutely doubled up for minutes.
This is one such discovery. Enjoy.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Oh really now? Oh Churches...

Thank you Harvard. Atheists, spread this around EVERYWHERE! http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/7189188/Atheists-just-as-ethical-as-churchgoers.html


Atheists 'just as ethical as churchgoers'
Atheists are just as ethical and have as strong a moral compass as churchgoers, new research shows.


Published: 7:30AM GMT 09 Feb 2010

People who have no religion know right from wrong just as well as regular worshippers, according to the study.

The team behind the research found that most religions were similar and had a moral code which helped to organise society.


But people who did not have a religious background still appeared to have intuitive judgments of right and wrong in common with believers, according to the findings, published in the journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

Dr Marc Hauser, from Harvard University, one of the co-authors of the research, said that he and his colleagues were interested in the roots of religion and morality.

"For some, there is no morality without religion, while others see religion as merely one way of expressing one's moral intuitions," he said.

The team looked at several psychological studies which were designed to test an individual’s morality.

Dr Hauser added: "The research suggests that intuitive judgments of right and wrong seem to operate independently of explicit religious commitments.

"However, although it appears as if co-operation is made possible by mental mechanisms that are not specific to religion, religion can play a role in facilitating and stabilising co-operation between groups."

He added that the findings could help to explain the complex relationship between morality and religion.

"It seems that in many cultures religious concepts and beliefs have become the standard way of conceptualising moral intuitions,” he said.

"Although, as we discuss in our paper, this link is not a necessary one, many people have become so accustomed to using it, that criticism targeted at religion is experienced as a fundamental threat to our moral existence."

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Quotes I love, from college textbooks.

The following quotes should be taught to every student in the nation around the age of 14.

"ccording to Hobbes, life in the state of nature prior to the formation of government was “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short.” Rather than an era of peace and tranquility populated with noble savages, Hobbes envisioned a nightmare of violence where each individual decided only for himself and against all others. In this version of a state of nature, there could be no industry, no crops grown, no security or peace found, and certainly no rights whose claims were equally understood and honored."

"We are either living in an age of sudden awareness where we have evolved and are now aware of a whole new set of rights, or we are confusing what we want with what is somehow our due. The gross multiplication of rights threatens to make the very issue of rights associated with real claims almost meaningless. It appears too easy to move from 'I want X' to 'I have a right to X.' "

- Ethics of Health Care: A Guide for Clinical Practice, 3e
Chapter 4: The Nature of Rights in Ethical Discourse
ISBN: 1401861830 Author: Raymond S. Edge, John Randall Groves
copyright © 2006, 1999, 1994 Thomson Delmar Learning, a part of the Thomson Corporation