The third topic is about normative systems, religions. First we recognize the importance of norms in determining the generation of conflict upon normative deviations leading to resolutions as normative compliance. Then we study the evolution of cultures as normative systems. In this segment we review how cultures evolved discovering the four relational modalities, changing norms and improving the family institution. We play a card game called Moral Monopoly integrating religions into the Moral Science. Again we use AI to enlighten us about the cultures as discoveries of the four types of resolving conflict.
THE FAILURE OF THE ABRAHAMIC RELIGIONS REQUIRES A PARADIGM SHIFT from ART TO THE MORAL SCIENCE
MORAL PARADIGMS EVOLVED RESTRUCTURING FAMILY ROLE RELATIONS, IMPROVING THE FAMILY INSTITUTION. THEY HAVE NOT COMPLETED THEIR MISSION FOR PEACE ON EARTH OR HAPPINESS IN THE FAMILY.
The sculpture of the Abrahamic family by Judith Brown, above, presents the three monumental patriarchs versus four diminutive women, the matriarchs, and two big birds, the chicks or the concubines. The installation dramatizes the inequity between men and women as defended by the three Abrahamic religions. The backdrop to the Abrahamic family illustrates the 9/11 Islamist attack on the towers of Judeo-Christian values dramatizes the failure of the current three theistic moral paradigms. The tragedy of 9/11, the reoccurrence of the destruction of the towers of Babel, illustrates the unresolved conflicts of the Abrahamic family representing the failure of the traditional moral paradigms to deliver the promised Peace of Earth.
The outstanding conflict in the Abrahamic religions is resolved by the scientific moral paradigm introducing the missing formal operation necessary in resolving conflicts: it is mutual respect between partners, here between the genders. The world needs Moral Science's scientific moral paradigm.