[quote=So Boerd]No, you haven't. QUOTE to me where you posted an authoritative link with numbers.[/quote] I don't have any, and you doubt it, like a skeptic. So, as I said before: [i]Good... Good...[/i] [quote=So Boerd]You are right. However, if you were raised Catholic, and are a practicing Catholic in good standing with your church, I can safely say you have a Catholic inspired morality.[/quote] Except absolutely not. If a person followed the Catholic religious morality completely, following the teachings of the bible, they would become a deranged, schizophrenic psychopath. A religious morality from a catholic upbringing would tell someone to compulsively kill people who blaspheme god's name, or work on Sunday, or who don't scream for help loudly enough while being raped. Morality is used to pick apart the bible, to take the things that make sense and throw away the stuff that is utter psychotic nonsense, like murdering people for working on Sunday. We've had morality since our species was formulated, and it's evolved over time as our societies have become more complex, entirely independent of religion. We have empathy and sympathy--these tell us not to harm our fellow human being where it can be avoided and make us feel for them when they are in pain. We [b]evolved[/b] the basis of morality, because it's a survival trait in a social species. You can even see hints of morality here and there in less intellectually developed species on Earth, like dolphins will not leave their wounded family members behind, and wolves are willing to die for one another's pups even where it would be irrational and not save any of them. Last I checked, wolves and dolphins don't have religion. So explain their basic morality, or how ours is somehow superior through religion when that very same religion has to have significant portions of its morality picked apart and tossed aside in order to keep society [i]functional[/i].