ruby sparks
Contributor
But unfortunately the draw back with this notion of morality is its subjective nature to be variant among individuals or different groups.
There are literally many thousands upon thousands of different varieties of religion (and many gods and types of gods) and more if we include those no longer being practiced or believed in (Greek gods for example, or ancient African or South American deities/religions). Then we might consider superstitions (which religions are sophisticated versions of, imo*) and the moralities behind those more informal beliefs (involving folk tales, fairy stories, etc). Things get even more interesting if we consider things like occultism, demonology and druidism, or what more established or dominant religions prefer to call cults.
Add to all that the fact that any particular person or subgroup of people in any particular religion can during any given time or era or set of circumstances selectively choose which rules to highlight and which to de-emphasise (or ignore) and the fact that many religions evolve and/or change over time, and/or involve apparent contradictions, and you end up with a scenario where it can't reasonably be said with any confidence or accuracy that religious morality is any more invariant than secular.
Note that I am not claiming superiority of secular morality over religious morality. There are and have been too many versions of either (and possibly several hybrids of both) to make an easy comparison in any case, with adherents of any of them generally tending to believe that theirs is the best, and/or the 'right' one. But all moralities, imo, have plusses and minuses, even if we only choose to consider the interests of and outcomes for our own species.
I might be tempted to opine that if one happens to believe that one's adopted or favoured moral rules are in fact set by a higher or perfect being of some sort rather than being human-created and inspired, that it might make it harder for one to consider the validity or the pros and cons of alternatives (see for example: 'heresies') or to change one's mind, but in principle I think we are all capable of change and of appreciating a wider perspective, and in any case one doesn't have to be religious to adhere strongly (often arguably too strongly) to this or that worldview or set of beliefs or opinions. In any case, if such inflexibility or confirmation bias were to exist in those scenarios (religious or otherwise) even that would likely have benefits too (a greater sense of certainty perhaps).
Most of us seem, generally, to be in search of (at least more) certainly. Though oddly, rational skepticism (of which I am a fan) often goes about it by seeking and embracing a lack of certainty in the first instance, and throughout. I'm not suggesting that religions or religious individuals don't encounter and attempt to deal with uncertainty too. It's part of the human condition.
* that's not meant to be a snide dig at any particular religion, it's just my honest appraisal.
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