See what the folks at the UCC forums think:
http://forums.ucc.org/viewtopic.php?t=3040I'm not going to make this a long-winded rant about how lacking I think the Ten Commandments and the Bible are as moral instructors (compare to, say, the
Humanist Manifesto), but instead I invite you all to write your own set of New Ten Commandments, just for fun. Mine are rather long, but feel free to be as detailed or brief as you like. I'm interested about what you think.
1. Act according to what will result in the most pleasure and happiness possible for the most entities, present and future, who can experience pleasure and happiness possible, and the least pain and suffering for every entity that can be in pain or suffer. Do not limit your concern to consequences within lifetime. Value the future in its entirety.
2. Be as proactive and involved as possible in increasing and safeguarding the well-being of all conscious beings. Do not be lethargic, do not turn a blind eye, and do not become stone in the face of your obligations as a sentient being; selfishness, greed, ignorance, apathy, and laziness cannot be accepted. Be diligent, inform yourself, concern yourself, take responsibility, and do as much as you can to achieve the best as you can. Do not let any suffering befall a creature who can experience emotion if you can prevent it; if it is possible you can bring joy to a consciousness, do so.
3. Be diligent and inquire, observe and research, reason and philosophize. Educate yourself and others in all matters and all areas, especially ethics and morality, and enjoy learning about the Universe. Constantly strive towards knowledge and truth and practice humility in your pursuits and discourse. Do not be afraid to unweave rainbows. Do not accept or embrace ignorant: fight it.
4. Do not accept any proposition, idea, theory, opinion, ethic, or supposition as fact, truth, or reality, no matter how many people believe and espouse it and no matter how much you love or trust those people, unless it agrees with your own reason. Probe, question, and challenge everything.
5. Do not indoctrinate your children or your peers or imbue them with hypotheses while presenting them as facts. Teach your children that they ought to think, not what they ought to think. Show them all the evidence, educate them, show them the beauty of the world, and do not let them be ignorant, apathetic, lazy, or unethical.
6. As far as is possible, do not discriminate or oppress based on sex, race, culture, sexual orientation, or species. Don't give different treatment to a being because you consider it to be the same species as you, or because it is organic or non-organic like you: concern yourself only with a creature's ability to appreciate the consequences of your actions; its ability to be happy and to suffer.
7. Enjoy life and make yourself happy as much as possible, so long as it doesn't interfere with the happiness and others. Make the most of all your experiences, your luck, your life, and your limited time existing. Enjoy your sex life, and leave others to do what they please in private.
8. Do not injure, abuse, oppress, enslave, insult, torment, torture, or kill any creature or living being* for your own satisfaction, do not seek revenge, do not destroy beauty and rarity for pleasure. Do not do things to others that they dislike (whether you like those actions being done to you or not, whether you like those creatures or not), only perform deeds that will cheer them. Love, cherish, and respect every creature and living being.
9. Be wary of those who claim to do good but whose actions are immoral. Every evil deed has been done in the name of good, none have been done in the name of evil. Do not overlook intentional suffering, but be prepared to forgive and reconcile.
10. Learn all you can about morality, study ethics, and determine right and wrong. Be prepared to throw out your old ideas for the well-being of all people and creatures. After you feel you have enough knowledge, write your own commandments – or better yet: realize you have no need for them.
*Not my line: I plagiarized that one from the Jains.