Andrew L. wrote:[confidential to Gramsci: so you're saying morality is indexed in the human genome? That there are merely genetic determinants for the moral differences between Genghis Khan and Mao Zedong, Jesus Christ and Mahatma Ghandi? Further, are you saying that individuals of certain cultures are literally "more evolved" than those of others?]
I have no idea, but since the physical universe is all that we can prove exists, it is feasible, but don't ask me to follow up on that idea. From the little details I do know about evolution I can't see why not, however genes aren't everything, ask a scientist. I'd look into the idea of Memes.
You seem to be keen to add value judgments to various different human actions, which doesn't make any sense. You seem to wish to impose a Western Liberal ideology on the morality of human behaviour, i.e Jesus good, Mao bad, which seems a little odd. You seem to be implying that humans are some kind of special case. I suggest you read [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ancestor’s_Tale:_A_Pilgrimage_to_the_Dawn_of_Life]The Ancestor’s Tale[/url] by Richard Dawkins. It is really interesting and offers some great insights into evolution; like the common and wrong idea that something can be "more evolved" than something else, as if there is some kind of final perfect form everything will eventually evolve into. It's great stuff.
To be blunt I am not a genetic science or evolutionary biologist, but it would seem rather obvious to me that if you take the position of evolution as fact, as seems to be the case for most sane people and that there is no God or even "intelligent" creator -whatever that means- then everything must be the result of evolution. Where the hell else does it come from. a God? Not likely, as I said every culture reflects their "social values" back into their religion.
In the end, god(s) just doesn't exist, so human ideas of morality can't come from there, so we should study where they do come from.