- The existence and attributes of God
- The truth of the One True Church established by Christ for the salvation of all
- The truth of a particular dogma or doctrine of the Church
- The truth of Catholic moral teaching
- The truth of the sedevacantist position as the only Catholic solution to what has happened since Vatican II
Did Morality Evolve?
To My Readers: This post tackles the attack against morality by skeptics, agnostics, atheists, and others who reject objective moral values. They claim that God is unnecessary to having morality; that it evolved as humans evolved. Darwinian evolution is false. The Church teaches that one may believe in the evolution of the body, but the soul is created out of nothing by Almighty God. I will not address whether or not evolution of the body should be believed. Following the example of the Angelic Doctor, St. Thomas Aquinas, I will admit ad arguendo, that the atheist's premise of Darwinian evolution is true, and then explain why it doesn't advance their false idea that morality evolved or is independent of God. I take no credit for the content of this post. Besides the cited works, I read many books and articles (online and print), that helped form this post. I take no credit except in condensing everything into a terse and readable post.
In Christian charity, I ask you all to say a prayer today for the repose of the soul of my spiritual father, Fr. Gommar A. DePauw, JCD, who went to Judgement exactly 19 years ago. He was God's chosen instrument to preserve the Church in the dawn of the Great Apostasy. I miss him greatly, and he is responsible for my conversion and my decision to start this blog; passing on the One True Faith he gave to me.
God bless you all, my dear readers---Introibo
"If there is no God, everything is permitted."---Attributed to Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821-1881)
The infamous American serial killer, Jefferey Dahmer (d. 1994) made this remarkable statement before his death:
If you don’t . . . think that there is a God to be accountable to . . . what’s the point of trying to modify your behavior to keep it within acceptable ranges? That’s how I thought, anyway. I always believed the theory of evolution as truth, that we all just came from the slime. When we . . . died, you know, that was it, there was nothing. (From transcript of Dateline NBC news program of 11/29/94).
Dahmer aka The Milwaukee Monster, murdered 17 young men in cold-blood from 1978-1991. He ate some of their body parts and committed necrophilia (i.e., sex with dead bodies). After his conviction, he began reading the Bible and became a "born-again" Protestant in 1994, just six months before his death. He made the above statement explaining that, since he had been an atheist when he committed the murders, he did not believe in objective moral values as a result.
Let me be clear: by the phrase objective moral values I mean certain things are morally right and certain things are morally wrong independent of the human mind. Therefore, even if Joseph Stalin had conquered the world for Communism, and brainwashed everyone in the world to believe that Communism, and all its evil ways was good--it would still be wrong. However, in order for that to be true, there must be something independent of the human mind; an external and eternal standard by which we can judge things as good or evil. That standard is to be found in the omnibenevolent nature of God. If there is no God, no objective standard, then moral beliefs are no more than mere opinions. You might not like it when people kill other people, but it's just your opinion. When an animal kills another animal, we don't call it "murder."
Some atheists/agnostics/skeptics believe that morality is an adaption—a survival aid—like opposable thumbs, feet, teeth, or ears. The implication? Moral beliefs like “Love your neighbor” and “Be kind to one another” aren’t true duties; they’re just evolutionarily hardwired into us to help us survive. Such ingrained beliefs aren’t objectively good; we’re biologically duped to believe them to be good. (For an example of such thinking, See Michael Ruse, The Darwinian Paradigm, [1989]).
A massive difficulty with the hardwiring theory is this: Why should we trust any of our beliefs? Naturalistic evolution isn’t interested in truth but in survival. In other words, we may hold beliefs that help us survive—for example, that we possess value and that we have moral obligations to fulfill. However, these beliefs may be completely false. In fact, if naturalistic evolution were responsible for our beliefs, and we happened to believe naturalistic evolution is true, then this would have come about completely by accident. We would hold accidentally true beliefs, which, in turn, would mean knowledge is impossible.
Remember: Generally, knowledge is a belief that is true and is warranted or "properly accounted for." In other words, knowledge excludes beliefs that are just true accidentally. For example, suppose it’s 12:30 p.m., and through an antique shop window I happen to look at a non-working clock, which by chance indicates 12:30. I would not be warranted in concluding that it’s 12:30 p.m. I may have a belief that is true—the first two components of knowledge—but I happened to get lucky. This doesn’t qualify for knowledge; it’s not properly warranted (which completes the definition of knowledge).
The genetic-and-social-conditioning explanation for morality, if true, turns out to be either trivial or incoherent. Consider what the behaviorist psychologist B. F. Skinner (1904–1990) declared:
If I am right about human behavior, I have written the autobiography of a nonperson. . . . So far as I know, my behavior at any given moment has been nothing more than the product of my genetic endowment, my personal history, and the current setting. (See Thomas W. Clark, Encountering Naturalism: A Worldview and Its Uses, [2007], pg. 94).
If so, then Skinner’s own views were nothing more than the product of his genetic endowment, personal history, and the current setting (trivial, and thus to be ignored). Now, if he was speaking for everyone’s belief-forming processes, then he had somehow risen above all deterministic influences to offer a reasoned, truthful conclusion (incoherent, since it completely goes against what he said).
Another Problem with "Evolving Morality
Here’s another problem: Given naturalism, it’s hard to avoid the theory’s arbitrariness of moral beliefs—even if they help us to survive. Atheist philosopher Michael Ruse’s gives an example of how people could have developed “termite values” (cannibalizing each other, needing to live in darkness) rather than those of “savannah-dwelling primates.” Supposedly, we could explain away certain abhorrent moral practices in other cultures by rationalizing that these somehow enhance their survival.
If a naturalist (i.e., an atheistic worldview that nature is all that exists) happens to think moral values are objective and that we are duty-bound to them (this is naturalistic moral realism), he still has to grapple with significant challenges. He faces the “is-ought problem” (also called “the naturalistic fallacy”): How do we move from what is (the descriptive) to what ought to be (the prescriptive). There are lots of “natural” phenomena with biological, survival-enhancing explanations that we intuitively know are profoundly wrong, however advantageous to creating progeny.
The atheist Michael Shermer (b. 1954) considers the question “Why should we be moral?” to be much like “Why should we be hungry or h***y?” He insists “the answer is that it is as much a part of human nature to be moral as it is to be hungry, h***y, jealous, and in love”; such drives are hardwired into us by evolution. (See Michael Shermer, The Science of Good and Evil: Why People Cheat, Gossip, Care, Share, and Follow the Golden Rule, [2004], pg. 57). So all Shermer can do is describe how human beings actually do function; based on scientific observation, he can’t prescribe how humans therefore ought to behave. There is no difference between whether I ought to be moral and whether I ought to be hungry; both are functions of evolutionary hardwiring. These states just are, and, randomly, we could have evolved quite differently.
To further illustrate the arbitrariness of this hardwiring, consider the book A Natural History of Rape: Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion, coauthored by an anthropologist and a biologist who maintain that the act of rape can be explained biologically. When a male can’t find a mate, his subconscious drive to reproduce his own species allegedly pushes him to force himself upon a female. Such beastly acts happen in the animal kingdom all the time (e.g., with mallards, orangutans, or scorpion flies).
While the authors don’t advocate rape (they don’t want to move from is to ought), my question is: If the rape impulse happens to be embedded in human nature from antiquity, and if it confers biological advantage, how can the authors imply that this behavior ought to be ended? Their resistance to rape, despite its “naturalness,” suggests that true moral values aren’t rooted in nature after all. Pure natural hardwiring may produce beliefs that enhance fitness (leaving us with more offspring), but it can’t produce goodness, and value.
Alternatively, God’s existence makes excellent sense of objective morality. Rather than moving from no value to value, the theist begins with value (God’s good character) and ends with value (divine-image-bearing humans with moral responsibility and rights). God perfectly bridges the chasm between is and ought.
The Insufficiency of Instinct
Another difficulty with naturalistic evolutionary morality is this: The naturalist’s viewpoint is hard to reconcile with acts of self-sacrifice that we typically consider morally praiseworthy and heroic. An individual ant or termite may feel compelled to sacrifice itself for the colony. But if it somehow knows it’s giving up all the existence it will ever have, then why is there any obligation to sacrifice itself for the colony if it can overcome its self-sacrificing instinct? If a man sees his child drowning but feels too scared to risk his life, why condemn him? He’s just acting in accordance accordance with his strongest instinct. Charles Darwin (1809–1882) himself doubted that humans have free will, since every action is “determined by heredity, constitution, example of others or teaching of others.” He claimed that this view “should teach one profound humility” since “one deserves no credit for anything . . . nor ought one to blame others.” (Ibid). Humility? Why not passivity? Why rescue the drowning child and risk losing your own life? What’s more, why sacrifice our lives for other merely advanced animals that are here by chance?
Even if morality were to have progressed through biological evolution and historical processes (e.g., abolishing slavery and widow-burning), this wouldn’t mean that morality is invented (as opposed to discovered), or that moral standards don’t exist, or that slavery and widow-burning were good “back then.” We’ve seen that moral reform or improvement strongly implies that ideal standards exist—even if humans have been slow to grasp them. Furthermore, moral progress through biological evolution (even if Darwinian evolution were true) doesn’t exclude God from the picture. Indeed, God is needed to ground the moral values and human rights we intuitively recognize. If biological evolution is true, and if people have progressed in moral understanding and recognition of humans being special, then God could have utilized these processes in the unfolding of his purposes. We begin with value (God), and so we need not be surprised that humans have value.
Can an Atheist/Agnostic/Skeptic Be Good Without God?
Many Traditionalists have made the classic mistake of assuming that lack of belief in God entails lack of morality. Even if they reject God’s existence, Confucians, Buddhists, and adherents to certain versions of Hinduism uphold certain moral beliefs that compare favorably with what Traditionalist Catholics uphold. In fact, there are some atheists a person would rather have as neighbors, than some of those who profess belief in God. Belief in God isn’t a requirement for being moral. Nevertheless, there’s something more basic to consider: The existence of a personal God is crucial as a coherent foundation of objective morality, and personal accountability. That is, one can’t be a moral being unless God exists—whether or not one believes God exists—and atheists as well as theists have been made in God’s image. Thus, both can recognize basic moral goodness and evil when they’re functioning properly.
Atheist philosophers have claimed that morality doesn’t depend on God; we don’t need God to be good. Protestant-turned-atheist William Rowe (d. 2015) writes: “The claim that God is needed for morality to be objective is absurd.” (See William Rowe, “Reflections on the Craig-Flew Debate,” in Does God Exist? The Craig-Flew Debate, ed. Stan W. Wallace, [2003], pg. 66). Atheist Michael Martin (b. 1932) argues that people can know that, e.g., rape is wrong, without appealing to God’s existence—it’s wrong because it violates the victim’s rights and tears apart the fabric of society. (See Atheism, Morality, and Meaning ,[2002]). Of course, neither Rowe nor Martin tells us how such rights or values could emerge from valueless matter. Matter has properties (shape, mass, color, texture, and so on), but moral value isn’t one of them.
Sam Harris, one of the emboldened so-called “New Atheists,” declares that we can know objective moral truths (right and wrong) without “the existence of a lawgiving God,” and we can judge Hitler to be morally reprehensible “without reference to Scripture.” (See Sam Harris, The End of Faith, [2004], pgs. 23-24). However, here we have an example of a common confusion: between knowing and being. One can know what’s right without believing in God, the Bible, or the Church. Nevertheless, the claim that goodness doesn’t depend on God fails to explain how valuable, rights-bearing beings could exist in the first place. Goodness is bound up with personhood, and without the existence of a personal God (who created all other persons), no moral values would exist, period.
If God doesn’t exist, moral values and duties must have emerged from valueless processes. In fact, and in contrast, from no values, values cannot come. However, God’s existence offers a ready explanation for the existence of value in the world. If goodness somehow existed as part of the furniture of the universe (reflecting Plato’s theory of forms), then it would be an astonishing cosmic coincidence that creatures would evolve over billions of years and somehow be duty-bound to moral values just waiting “out there” . . . as though these values were somehow anticipating the emergence of humans. Again, God’s existence connects preexisting goodness (in God’s character) with these valuable creatures (in God’s image).
Conclusion
A solely materialistic universe might produce in us feelings and beliefs of obligation—like the protection of our children or the survival of our species—but that’s a different matter from actually having such obligations we ought to carry out. False Darwinian evolution, even if true, does nothing to show there are objective moral values and duties. Atheists will often appeal to various secular ethical theories in hopes of finding morality without God—but they inevitably end in failure. May God have mercy on such people and lead them into His One True Church.
The people of our time no longer want to be subject to divine law and Christian morality, so they invent their own rules and moral values, such as: "love whom you will", or the right to kill one's child before birth. They have rejected the true God and become their own god, as the serpent said to our first parents: "And you shall be as Gods, knowing good and evil. (Gen 3:5)" And the Church, because it has been eclipsed, can no longer raise its voice to condemn these moral drifts that are dragging the world and the members of the V2 sect who claim to be Catholics into the abyss.
ReplyDeleteGod bless Fr. DePauw's soul ! He was a great defender of the true Faith ! May God send us other courageous priests and bishops during this dark time !
Simon,
DeleteYes, most people live as Satanist Aleister Crowley said, "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law." The days are evil, my friend
God Bless,
---Introibo
Introibo
ReplyDeleteI will indeed say 15 decades of the rosary for dear Father Gommar A . DePauw.
I have just left the Novus Ordo and come fully to the True position and Faith.I am attending a SSPV chapel. Thanks be to God.
What do you think of the modern Legion of Mary . I am sure that Frank Duff would be shocked.
God bless
@anon5:07
DeleteThank you for the rosary prayed for Father! The Legion of Mary, like everything else touched by Vatican II, is corrupted. God save us!
God Bless,
---Introibo
I do enjoy your comments Simon .You are no fool .Yes let us pray for more true bishops and priests.
ReplyDeleteHere in Canada, we have Bp. Pierre Roy, consecrated last January. I don't live near a Mass center, but you can visit his website here:
Deletehttps://www.latinmassmaritimes.org/
Please pray for him !
@anon7:36
DeleteI second that sentiment! I love reading Simon's comments each week!
God Bless,
---Introibo
I love reading your posts even more Introïbo ! It's been almost five years since I left the Novus Ordo and your posts are helping me to become a true Catholic. I hope they will do the same for others who have been fooled by the V2 sect and want to discover the true faith.
DeleteSimon
DeleteI pray for you daily. Your comments every week I look forward too as well as dear Joanna from Poland.
I too left the Novus Ordo last year.
Introibo .What was the last straw for me is a Novus Ordo 'cleric" saying both the True Mass and the Novus Ordo. He was also preaching with a forked mouth and would never look at me straight when he was talking when I was in a group of folk. I could write volumes.
@anon4:52
DeleteAll of us who fled the V2 sect have war stories! Mine go back to the 1970s!
God Bless,
---Introibo
Introibo
ReplyDeleteOn the subject of the Legion of Mary, do you know how corrupted they are .Once I ran into a member and they were pushing Medjugorje.
@anon11:35
DeleteYes, pushing the false Medjugore, and keeping people in the V2 sect by sounding traditional and abusing Marian piety for this purpose.
God Bless,
---Introibo
I would go far Introibo that the modern Legion of Mary commits blasphemy against our Lady. Those folk are so full of phony marian apparitions, Divine Mercy hoax , etc. You agree
Delete@anon4:30
DeleteI would agree, and would add that virtually everything the V2 sect does is blasphemous to one degree or another. Pope St. Pius X is said to have remarked that near the end times there will appear "a false and lying devotion to the Mother of God."
God Bless,
---Introibo
Hello Introibo.
ReplyDeleteDo you know anything about Og Mandino? Is he another guru preaching new age and gnosticism to make money? I added that "to make money" because these gurus are so aclaimed and loved for their whritings that they must make a lot of money selling books and stuffs.
My brother is deluded by these gurus, and they even dare to use the bible, blaspheming the truth.
Bruno,
DeleteI don't know much about him, but I know enough to stay away. His oft repeated line was "Failure will never overtake me if my determination to succeed is strong enough."
Notice his reliance on God? Me neither. He also paints St. Paul as a "salesman" of Christianity. Such a description is offensive to pious ears.
God Bless,
---Introibo
Introibo
ReplyDeleteWhat Church Fathers of the East are safe to read.
A young True Catholic man
Young True Catholic Man,
DeleteAny Church Father recognized by the Church is always safe to read. From the East, it includes St. Athanasius, St. John Chrysostom, St. Basil the Great, St. Gregory of Nyssa, and St. Gregory of Nazianzus. Outstanding Fathers and Saints of Holy Mother Church.
God Bless,
---Introibo
Introibo
ReplyDeleteWhen do you hope to do another Catholic Family Podcast?
@anon12:11
DeleteI'm thinking in June, when my schedule eases up and if Mr. Kevin Davis will be so gracious to have me on again. Any topic in particular of interest to you?
God Bless,
---Introibo
feminism must be destroyed. I notice that Feenyites, are basically Dimonites. They would never have came to that same conclusion if Dimonds were never around.
DeleteDimonds are like the sovereign citizen movement. They think they have the missing piece that the authority never considered or are hiding from the people.
They try to think they can interpret a law better than the church, even though the church has defined it already.
Like, the Sovereign Citizens, will turn to a common law principle and say that overrides the statute. But the statute actually is what defines it. They say that law does not apply to me because Common law is the law.
Same thing with these guys. Just different scenario.
@anon4:11
DeleteFred and Bobby Dimond are getting souls ensnared in heresy. It's ironic that while they name-call (liar, wretch, etc.) THEY are the ones who twist Church teaching to fit their heresy, making themselves the real liars. Bobby made the massive mistake of coming on my blog to comment, and it was my pleasure to take that heretical phony to pieces. See my posts:
https://introiboadaltaredei2.blogspot.com/2024/02/the-dimonds-ensoulment-and-baptism-of.html
and
https://introiboadaltaredei2.blogspot.com/2024/03/contending-for-faith-part-25.html
God Bless,
---Introibo
Thank you . No particular topic at this stage . Anything you will talk about will as always be excellent. A pleasure to hear you.
ReplyDelete@anon5:14
DeleteThank you, my friend!
God Bless,
---Introibo
"If there is no God, everything is permitted." Compare that to another quotation in the article: “The claim that God is needed for morality to be objective is absurd.” Ironic, that latter quote is what is really absurd.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the informative post, Introibo. A couple main takeaways for me are how rights and values cannot come from valueless matter or processes, and the is-ought problem.
On topics with Kevin: feminism sounds good, as well as what makes a marriage valid given our times and practical considerations. For example, someone grew up in the NO, and may or may not consider herself “Catholic”. She gets married in a chapel in Reno, with minimally religious vows. She gets divorced. What are the implications, if any, on whether or not she considered herself “Catholic” at the time of the marriage ceremony? Situations like that. I think there are many who grew up in the NO, practiced the faith to various degrees, and got married outside of the Vatican II canonical forum. Perhaps this could tie in with your future post on annulments.
I remembered to pray for the repose of Fr. DePauw’s soul.
God Bless,
-Seeking Truth
Seeking Truth,
DeleteAlways great to read your comments, my friend! Thank you for the suggestions.
God Bless,
---Introibo
This article is an excellent summation of the meaninglessness of atheism, naturalism, and their soullessness. People have to ask themselves whether they want one or not (they do, but will they take responsibility for it ?).
ReplyDeleteFrom Spain!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.diariodeburgos.es/noticia/z67ab9b1d-c2d0-6b54-1e927c602276f4b4/202405/cisma-en-la-iglesia-de-burgos-las-clarisas-de-belorado-se-van
Young reader from Spain
A seminarian at local Vatican II church was kind. He left, became V2 presider while I became sede. I found out he was back, wanted to convert him. We were making plans to meet. He said, I just want you to remember Church is indefactable.... I was stunned and realized his teachers had really twisted it, and he was going to try to convert me. I called it off.
ReplyDelete