First I want to apologize for a semi-necro. I said I'd reply, and gosh dangit I will, if it takes me a month to do so! I'll start with Ryan's post to me.
That WOULD be true if it were a matter of obtaining the resources required to survive. But it's not at all. It's about getting more than the next person. Wanting, rather than to be simply good, to be better.
Ever seen wolves take a kill from a bear in the wild? They will do it even if they're not particularly hungry at the moment and they'll continue to guard it well after they've eaten their fill. Is that pride? They take because they can, not out of need (at first glance).
No, that is not pride. From what I understand, wolves bury any spare meat after eating their fill. They aren't saying to the bear, "I'm better than you" by taking the kill, but merely ensuring an abundance of resources in the future. If it were pride, the wolves would take the food from the bear, and waste it, dumping it downstream or throwing it to another animal just to make the bear mad, to prove to the bear that it could.
There is a very good biological reason for pride as Lewis defines it (which isn't really pride, but anyway...), and its called natural selection. The organism that can take at will and retain resources is much more likely to survive and reproduce than the organism that eats its fill and move along (and before any ecology people jump on me, yes, I know, there's much more to resource competition than that but I'm making a point).
As I said, that's not true Pride. True Pride is where one animal has a mound of meat that it could never possibly eat in a million years, yet is still chasing another animal away from a single dead rabbit, just to prove to that other animal that it is better. Pride is what causes the jocks to hate the nerds in a class that isn't graded on a curve. It's the anger at someone else for showing any evidence of possibly having a benefit of society, because it might infringe on your getting noticed. Pride is competition for the sake of competition alone.
Ever notice how many prideful people tend to do economically and socially better than humble people? Our biological roots are still with us - much as we may resent the by-products of the emotion of pride as immoral and unreasonable, we also have a begrudging envy (oops, there's another functional sin) of the position pride can afford an individual if directed productively.
Economically maybe. But the Proud man will climb over the top of everyone ahead of him with the help of his good friend, and then turn and stab his friend in the back because he climbed up with him and is on the same level, and his Pride won’t let him settle for anything less than the top. That's not what I call socially healthy. Also, this thing you call envy, at the last part of that paragraph, is pride in us. Pride is something that, the more we have ourselves, the more of it we hate in others. Pride is, at its very nature, competitive, whereas other sins are competitive only by accident. But I've already touched on that aspect of it enough, I think. Another name Lewis gives it is "Self-Conceit." This is also why Pride is the greatest sin of all. When a man is faced with God, he is faced with something his Pride won’t let him accept, because there is no way he will be better than Him
Here enters the tautology of evolution: If a behaviour or emotion exists today, there's probably either a good reason for it which confers selective advantage to individuals exhibiting it, or it has no negative effects on survival. This holds true for all the deadly sins (what are they again, wrath, sloth, envy, pride, lust, gluttony, and greed). A wrathful individual will survive a fight.
A wrathful individual will bring fights his way more often. Wrath is not a measure of one's ability to fight, but rather one's affluence to starting fights.
A slothful individual will rest whenever possible to conserve strength and resources.
A slothful individual grows fat and lazy, thus making resources harder to obtain.
A prideful individual will be confident/assertive/aggressive, capable of taking what it wishes.
He will also be the object of hatred of every other prideful individual on the planet. He will also grow arrogant, thinking he can best anyone, until the day comes when he finds someone he cannot, and that will be his doom.
A lustful individual will spread its genes and reproduce as much as possible (I mean, this one is dead obvious).
And, as a byproduct, will destroy lives, spread desease, cause overpopulation problems, and have a whole lot of people angry at them.
An envious individual will not be content with the status quo, but seek to better itself. A gluttonous individual will be well-nourished with many resources available.
You forget the social interactions that take place in these acts. Generally, if you're invited to a Thanksgiving dinner, and you, by yourself, eat all the turkey, you probably won't be invited back, thus limiting your access to said resources.
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A greedy individual will take and hold as much as possible so that it commands the resources necessary to compete and survive.
That's if it thinks that said resources alone can keep others from coming after you. Additionally, the phrase "you can't take it with you" comes to mind. You will cease to survive eventually, regardless of the resources you accumulate. I doubt a shelter of dollar bills would save a person from bullets for very long.
Arguably, one reason for Christianity's opposition to the seven deadly sins is that they are traits which refer back to our basic biological nature, while Christianity presents a construction of man as a chosen species, above all the rest. Which is nonsense - we're a product of our evolutionary history, just like every other species on the planet.
I believe we are indeed set apart. When was the last time you saw a dog mulling over whether or not it was the "right" thing to do to bark at the mailman? The "myth" of Genesis states that God breathed life into Adam. I believe God gave humankind a piece of His own soul, by which we are capable of all of our moral decision-making that rises above mere instinct.
Genghis Khan was a prideful individual - he is also the ancestor of 1 of every 200 men alive on this planet today. Pride seems to have gotten his genes in a pretty good position =)
Define "Good position." Kahn is long dead. What does he care how many people are related to him?
Whether or not Genesis is taken to be literal is insignificant next to a risen Christ. So is the whole question of how we came to be, for that matter. I believe the primary intent of Genesis is to illustrate how we (humanity) came to be in our present state of dispair.
Now you're backpedaling. The risen Christ wasn't part of this discussion. I was pointing out the likely origin of serpent symbolism, and you were claiming the natural biological fear of snakes in all primate species (that's humans, chimps, monkeys, apes, etc) is because it is associated with evil. You haven't addressed that yet - do you honestly believe that all primate species fear reptiles, and especially snakes, because humans have come to associate them with evil due to mythology?
I've never seen any other primate species besides humans interact with snakes, so I wouldn't know. That much might be genetic. Mice are afraid of snakes too, aren't they? Also, what of people who aren't afraid of snakes? There are many of them.
Something else I'd like to ask you: What makes you believe that there is no God? Actually, scratch that, that's just an assumption I've made. What do you believe as far as God?
Oh, and I have found, in Revelation, where it does reveal that the Serpent is indeed Satan.
Revelation 12:7-12
And there was war in heaven. Michael and his angels fought against the dragon, and the dragon and his angels fought back. But he was not strong enough, and they lost their place in heaven. The great dragon was hurled down—that ancient serpent called the devil, or Satan, who leads the whole world astray. He was hurled to the earth, and his angels with him.
Then I heard a loud voice in heaven say:
"Now have come the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God,
and the authority of his Christ.
For the accuser of our brothers,
who accuses them before our God day and night,
has been hurled down.
They overcame him
by the blood of the Lamb
and by the word of their testimony;
they did not love their lives so much
as to shrink from death.
Therefore rejoice, you heavens
and you who dwell in them!
But woe to the earth and the sea,
because the devil has gone down to you!
He is filled with fury,
because he knows that his time is short."
Satan, the deceiver of nations. Take it as a metaphor, take it word for word, take it however you like. This is how it goes, though. Satan deceived Man in the first days, "Did God really say you'd die if you ate of the tree of knowledge of good and evil? He is merely afraid of you! You could become just like Him if you eat the fruit of this tree!" So we ate of the tree of knowledge. What do we have now? We have diseases that are highly resistant to our medicines. We have a climate shift which many claim is due to us, and is allegedly going to destroy us. We have enough nukes to obliterate the world 20 times over at least. We have death. We've been deceived into thinking knowledge would save us, when we merely destroy ourselves with it. War is the single greatest driving factor to our "progress" as a species. Our greatest motivation for making ourselves better is killing one another. What beautiful things we've used this knowledge for! /sarcasm
I believe we've already signed our own death warrant, and that's what God was trying to save us from in the Garden of Eden, when He told us not to eat. Some say God wanted to make us blind, I say God knew we either weren't ready to see, or weren't meant to.
That's my philosophy on the matter, anyway. And the present state of the World backs it up. 5 minutes to Midnight, last I checked.