What Motivates an Atheist to Do Good

It is asked, what motives an Atheist can have to do good? The motive to please himself and his fellow-creatures; to live happily and peaceably; to gain the affection and esteem of men. "Can he, who fears not the gods, fear any thing?" He can fear men; he can fear contempt, dishonour, the punishment of the laws; in short, he can fear himself, and the remorse felt by all those who are conscious of having incurred or merited the hatred of their fellow-creatures.

Conscience is the internal testimony, which we bear to ourselves, of having acted so as to merit the esteem or blame of the beings, with whom we live; and it is founded upon the clear knowledge we have of men, and of the sentiments which our actions must produce in them. The Conscience of the religious man consists in imagining that he has pleased or displeased his God, of whom he has no idea, and whose obscure and doubtful intentions are explained to him only by men of doubtful veracity, who, like him, are utterly unacquainted with the essence of the Deity, and are little agreed upon what can please or displease him. In a word, the conscience of the credulous is directed by men, who have themselves an erroneous conscience, or whose interest stifles knowledge.

"Can an Atheist have a Conscience? What are his motives to abstain from hidden vices and secret crimes of which other men are ignorant, and which are beyond the reach of laws?" He may be assured by constant experience, that there is no vice, which, by the nature of things, does not punish itself. Would he preserve this life? he will avoid every excess, that may impair his health; he will not wish to lead a languishing life, which would render him a burden to himself and others. As for secret crimes, he will abstain from them, for fear he shall be forced to blush at himself, from whom he cannot flee. If he has any reason, he will know the value of the esteem which an honest man ought to have for himself. He will see, that unforeseen circumstances may unveil the conduct, which he feels interested in concealing from others. The other world furnishes no motives for doing good, to him, who finds none on earth.

Notes:

Folksonomies: enlightenment atheism morality

Taxonomies:
/religion and spirituality/atheism and agnosticism (0.893097)
/society/crime (0.757803)
/family and parenting/children (0.675828)

Concepts:
God (0.970814): dbpedia_resource
Guilt (0.739921): dbpedia_resource
Reason (0.738210): dbpedia_resource
Religion (0.706892): dbpedia_resource
Plato (0.701569): dbpedia_resource
Epistemology (0.649064): dbpedia_resource
Virtue (0.594057): dbpedia_resource
Criminal justice (0.589763): dbpedia_resource

 Good Sense Without God
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  d'Holbach, Baron (1900), Good Sense Without God, Retrieved on 2021-10-06
  • Source Material [www.gutenberg.org]
  • Folksonomies: enlightenment atheism