A reflection on morality and religion

The aim of this contribution is to reflect on the relation between religion and morality. An overview of the different theories of the origin of morality is provided. According to Blanchard, there are four traditional ways in which the origin of morality can be explained: (1) origin from nature, (2)...

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Main Author: Jaco Beyers
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2023-11-01
Series:Verbum et Ecclesia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2847
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author Jaco Beyers
author_facet Jaco Beyers
author_sort Jaco Beyers
collection DOAJ
description The aim of this contribution is to reflect on the relation between religion and morality. An overview of the different theories of the origin of morality is provided. According to Blanchard, there are four traditional ways in which the origin of morality can be explained: (1) origin from nature, (2) origin from ourselves, (3) origin from culture and (4) origin from an objective moral law. The last instance creates the possibility for religion to be identified as the origin of morality. In reflecting on the relation between religion and morality one realises that the question that needs to be discussed is whether religion is indeed the provider of morality or not. It is also necessary to determine if religion is the guarantor for morality. The aim of this contribution is to reflect on the relation between religion and morality. An overview of the different theories of the origin of morality is provided. In reflecting on the relation between religion and morality one realises that the question that needs to be discussed is whether religion is indeed the provider of morality or not. It is also necessary to determine if religion is the guarantor for morality. What happens in a secularised society? Is it still possible for morality to exist in a secularised society? It is clear from an understanding of secularisation as differentiation – the separation of spheres – religion and morality can be separated and can exist independently in a secularised society. The influence of the evolution theory by Charles Darwin led to a new way of understanding the nature of morality. Some reflection on the influence of evolution on morality is presented here. One prominent recommendation resulting from this investigation is to emphasise that religion can provide the morals for morality. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: This contribution reflects the intersection of anthropology, philosophy, religion studies and ethics. The discussion is based on a philosophical reflection on the relation between religion and morality.
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spelling doaj.art-b23b15efacbe4fda804fd10314c1ba612023-12-04T08:09:31ZafrAOSISVerbum et Ecclesia1609-99822074-77052023-11-01441e1e710.4102/ve.v44i1.28471880A reflection on morality and religionJaco Beyers0Department Religion Studies, Faculty of Theology, and Religion, University of Pretoria, PretoriaThe aim of this contribution is to reflect on the relation between religion and morality. An overview of the different theories of the origin of morality is provided. According to Blanchard, there are four traditional ways in which the origin of morality can be explained: (1) origin from nature, (2) origin from ourselves, (3) origin from culture and (4) origin from an objective moral law. The last instance creates the possibility for religion to be identified as the origin of morality. In reflecting on the relation between religion and morality one realises that the question that needs to be discussed is whether religion is indeed the provider of morality or not. It is also necessary to determine if religion is the guarantor for morality. The aim of this contribution is to reflect on the relation between religion and morality. An overview of the different theories of the origin of morality is provided. In reflecting on the relation between religion and morality one realises that the question that needs to be discussed is whether religion is indeed the provider of morality or not. It is also necessary to determine if religion is the guarantor for morality. What happens in a secularised society? Is it still possible for morality to exist in a secularised society? It is clear from an understanding of secularisation as differentiation – the separation of spheres – religion and morality can be separated and can exist independently in a secularised society. The influence of the evolution theory by Charles Darwin led to a new way of understanding the nature of morality. Some reflection on the influence of evolution on morality is presented here. One prominent recommendation resulting from this investigation is to emphasise that religion can provide the morals for morality. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: This contribution reflects the intersection of anthropology, philosophy, religion studies and ethics. The discussion is based on a philosophical reflection on the relation between religion and morality.https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2847moralityreligionsecularisationevolutiondarwinblanchardsecularism
spellingShingle Jaco Beyers
A reflection on morality and religion
Verbum et Ecclesia
morality
religion
secularisation
evolution
darwin
blanchard
secularism
title A reflection on morality and religion
title_full A reflection on morality and religion
title_fullStr A reflection on morality and religion
title_full_unstemmed A reflection on morality and religion
title_short A reflection on morality and religion
title_sort reflection on morality and religion
topic morality
religion
secularisation
evolution
darwin
blanchard
secularism
url https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2847
work_keys_str_mv AT jacobeyers areflectiononmoralityandreligion
AT jacobeyers reflectiononmoralityandreligion