Abstract
Most ethical principles, religious or not, are based on wisdom acquired over a few millennia. This may seem a long time, but even millennia are insignificant in a cosmological perspective. The field of evolutionary ethics makes a big leap by embracing evolutionary time scales (millions of years). Can we continue to extend our ethical reflections, principles, and theories up to the 13.8 billion years of cosmic evolution? What is the ultimate good in the universe? Evolutionary ethics concludes that survival is the most important value. But survival of what, and for how long? How can we aim for infinite survival, that is, for immortality? We first outline thermodynamic values, which are truly universal because they depend only on the concept of energy. We criticize the naturalistic fallacy and then, inspired by Aristotle’s theory of moral virtues, we outline evolutionary trade-offs (egoism–altruism, stability–adaptability, specialist–generalist, exploration–exploitation, competition–cooperation, and r-K selection) and hence a theory of evolutionary virtues. However, evolutionary values are insufficient for ethical purposes, since they give insights into how to adapt to any circumstance, for any purpose. To remedy this limitation, we outline developmental values for individuals (e.g. cognitive and moral development); developmental values for societies (e.g. increased rationality and decreased violence). Thermodynamic, evolutionary, and developmental values promise to be robust ethical principles, because they have been proven through the wisdom of billions of years of cosmic evolution. As an application, we examine the age-old will to immortality and propose a voyage to five kinds of immortality: spiritual, individual, creative, evolutionary, and cosmological. We conclude that the ultimate good is the infinite continuation of the evolutionary process.
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