I already gave you two. Did Zeus dictate what was right and wrong to the Greeks? Why is it that when we consider the Ancient Greeks and their notions of democracy which form some of the basis of our modern notions of democracy, do we relate that more to the origins of philosophy, debate, and quorum? Or to Athena or Persephone, or Neptune?
What are the main key differences between democracy, theocracy, and dictatorship? No need to elaborate deeply, just a few sentences.
Neither Buddhism, nor Confucianism, nor Shinto command morality via authority and supernatural edict. These are different. There is religion, but not a god-mandated framework of morality as described in my premise.
The premise of this thread is that morality can be found independent of God. If this were true, we would have a single example of a country, anywhere, through-out all of human history, that developed independently from the concepts of God. Of right and wrong. Nothing "Supernatural" whatsoever.
Japan does not fit this bill.
Ancient Greece does not fit this bill.
If there is a belief in a "greater being," in a "more," in something other than just man, it will have an affect on
everything in that society, whether explicit or not. There will always be questions of how to not anger the Gods, how to please them, etc.
So far the idea that "The existence of god, a god, or many gods is not required in order for a society to have a positive moral framework," is a resounding "No."
Or at least, "Not until a religion does all the heavy lifting of making the society actually stable and functional before being discarded by """""intellectuals""""" and collapsing into nothing, being conquered by groups with much stronger beliefs."
Countries in the West are suffering from crazy pants lunacy right now because they've left God for their own "creations." It is not by coincidence that Europe is seeing massive influxes of Muslims, it is not by coincidence that Japan's birth rates have plummeted, it is not by coincidence that crazy White Liberals are literally kneeling before Black people.
The irony of this whole thread, of course, is that atheism is decreasing world-wide, not increasing.
Though the percentage of religiously "nones" in America has risen, the global share of religiously unaffiliated people is expected to fall in coming decades.
www.pewresearch.org
This relative decline is largely attributable to the fact that religious “nones” are, on average, older and have fewer children than people who are affiliated with a religion.
Atheists have fewer children. Japan, a country that is less religious today, has demographics issues as does many countries in the West. It is almost like atheism / secularism isn't capable of creating societies from scratch (which require religious frameworks), or even maintaining them.
TL;DR: Until you can give a single example of a society that,
from inception, has never dealt with religion or Gods in general, we will be dealing with hypothetical's. I can't change your mind on a hypothetical because it isn't real. It is the same reason why Communists never concede their ideas don't work, because to them "It has never really been tried!" It is all hypothetical's.
You may think that "right and wrong" comes innately, but there is no society that demonstrates this. The "secularism" always ends up bumming off the foundation building of religion and Gods. The belief in the Divine pierces deep in any man's soul, and will always be inseparable from the societies history, development, tribulations, and current state.
And when that piercing blunts and ceases to exist, that society dies with it. Always. Without fail. And for the worse.
You don't think the Old Testament counts?
Of course it counts, but Christianity is the Old and New. If it were just Old it would be Judaism (sorta). New Testament is God sending his only begotten son to die for everyone's sins. Christianity by its very nature leans on the New Testament, though.