You said:
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“The herd instinct in the individual is not a description of herd-like behavioural observations, you are fixating on the word “herd” for the wrong reason. What Nietzsche is saying is that morals are the byproduct of looking after the herd.”
I take your point, but there is a basic difference in the point of departure between Nietzschean/ Postmodern perspectives on humanity and what I believe to be the biblical Christian perspective. The former gives pre-eminence to community whereas the latter places primary importance on the individual (There is a strain of “Christians” who believe otherwise). I think the “herd” metaphor is used because it is a by-product of humanist and Darwinian analyses of the origin of the species, humankind. With that presupposition, an individual is looked at more as a primeval creature with certain innate, primordial instincts. With that background, it is logical to presume that human beings, like animals, will have a certain herd instinct; that is to behave in a manner that shows a concern for the preservation of the herd.
My understanding of what the Bible teaches about the origins of humankind is that the individual is primary and that the only primordial instinct in an individual, is for him or her to want to sin. A part of God’s Grace (unmerited favour) to humankind, is that, which is known by theologians as His “Universal Grace”; for example: He lets the rain fall and the sun shine on the wicked as well as the righteous. (Matthew 5:45). In a similar vein, He imputes a level of moral conscience in everyone, so that they may be able to intuitively determine good from evil, right from wrong. They may never hear the Gospel, but they will know instinctively that to kill a fellow human being, for instance, is wrong. It is with this emphasis on the individual that His sense of morality, fairness and justice is displayed. Some time in the future, every single person ever born on earth, will stand in front of God to be judged on how they lived their lives here. If communities were to be judged adversely, even if within those communities, there were individuals who subscribed to His laws, those individuals would be hard done by and unfairly punished, if they were punished for the sins of the community as a whole. So, whilst Christians engender altruism toward the other, or as Huber says,thou, be they individuals or communities, their moral sensibilities are not derived from them directly, or as a by-product, nor are they constituted for the purpose of ensuring its physical survival.
You say:
“So, similarly, morals as we experience them are the pressures on us as individuals to make sure that our flock / herd (the Christian community or the South African community or the Human race, whichever) survives. We must not kill because it endangers the herd, if everyone killed then there would be nobody left in the herd. We must not commit homosexual acts because if everyone did then there would be no new generations and the herd would die of old age. Etcetera, etcetera.”
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Apropos to what I said earlier, your (and Nietzsche’s) contention is that morality is derived and constituted from and for utilitarian considerations of survival and sustainability of the human species. My contention is that that is not a true and accurate rendition of what morality means. Immorality can easily be present in a society where people do not kill each other and do not take part in homosexual acts, not to speak of amorality. A moral code commands and demands people to live aright. The code is constituted by an encoder (God). With an autonomous, stand-alone code, the distinction between right and wrong can be made, not because of utilitarian considerations, but because of what its author designates to be righteous and unrighteous.