Betruger wrote:So... Diogenes.
How do you explain how childishly easy it is to get to as respectable a moral livelihood as your pet fav Christianity, without as you put it being infected or otherwise fait-accompli'd into said fair livelihood by Christianity's influence?
Livelihood? As in vocation? Your choice of words is very confusing, but I think the gist of what you are asking is how do you demonstrate equivalent moral social structure in an society absent Christian influence.
You create one. Or perhaps I should say,
You try to create one.
Betruger wrote:
A large part of it requires only to know oneself, as put by some guy from round where the original Diogenes made a name for himself, and recognizing that there is just no actual gain in others' suffering and much gain in helping them be Good.
Too intellectual for the lowest common denominator. Without them, it won't work. The advantage of religion is that it is simple to understand.
Betruger wrote:
Because, at this point in human evolution at least, we humans have the same Goodness at the heart of us all; even when it's buried so deep under trauma, delusion, etc, as to be out of reach for today's various methods of "therapy".
To be sure, there *IS* goodness in the human heart, but what steers it best is badness. To paraphrase H. L. Mencken, Nobody ever went broke underestimating the goodness of the human race.
Betruger wrote:
And how is it impossible to be fair without religion if those monkeys do it?
If you read my earlier comment on the subject, you will notice that monkeys aren't fair. They viciously beat and kill other monkeys outside of their tribe.
They also viciously beat and kill monkey's INSIDE their tribe, especially if those monkeys attempt to leave the tribe and set up their own tribe. You should read more about monkeys than just that one experiment which you misinterpret as supporting your position.
Besides that, what about monkey society addresses my point that Christianity was a necessary aspect of an advanced human society? We already know that humans can live a monkey like existence. That's not the point. Whether they can create a large and advanced society with monkey rules of conduct is the point.
Betruger wrote:
Would you say they are necessarily religious somehow, in their little monkey brains? If I wasn't sitting next to the same kinda 21st century hardware as you are, to have this conversation, I swear I might wink my eyes and suspect I was arguing with some doctor of phrenology.
I know the feeling. I'm getting the impression i'm arguing with someone who thinks we can make a society work by copying monkeys.

‘What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the damned fools said would happen has come to pass.’
— Lord Melbourne —