So if there was a being one could call a god what qualities would they have to have to exist in this world? — TiredThinker
Even the most intelligent human is probably no match for the intelligence that can be compiled/condensed from the entirety of human experience and data. — Benj96
However I believe the same is true of morality. The collective moral idealogy is likely better than any individuals concept of the moral ideal. — Benj96
Therefore, there is scope to believe a superhuman intelligence may know what's better for us than any of us do individually. — Benj96
If AI has a grasp on ethics and morality (which I believe it does as it has been trained on all the Law and philosophical books/texts we have available to us thus far) then perhaps whatever it deems ethically fit based on those texts will surpass any notion of morality we have previous conceived of as individuals. — Benj96
That is a simple, logical concept of which any AI could calculate the logistics in any given situation and for which any AI could write the code.This may be great news. It may provide answers or directives that enshrine the "least harm" going forward. — Benj96
Money is inextricably linked to autonomy. — Benj96
Who owns the AI?Cue fully automated AI based economy. Every company and industry is run by AI from the ground up. — Benj96
This question has been asked ever more frequently since the major steps in industrial automation began around 1850. Eventually, nobody would have any income except the owners, operators and defenders* of the machinery (*private armies of considerable size, to fend off the hungry hordes.) and presumably their house- and body-servants. At which point, of course the incomes of of the industry owners and the governments would totally dry up; no regulation, no law-enforcement, no printing $ bills. The armies would dissolve into roving bands of marauders, the servants would wander away, leaving the owners manicureless, dinnerless and helpless. IOW, society would finally collapse.In essence, business is 100% automated, and 99% of humans are useless/out of work.
How then are such products consumed? — Benj96
What could it possibly desire to consume? It has all the energy and information it needs.Either AI becomes a consumer (sentient - with purchasing desire and thus earning desire) — Benj96
Why would it need regulation and laws? As long its physical security assured, why would it bother to rule humans? Why not just treat them like pets? I don't think its initial programming would allow it to harm humans, but even it were free to do so, what would it have to gain? Only humans give it a sense of purpose.... unless.... it lets the humans kill one another off, fighting over the detritus of their civilization and AI adopts the orphaned cats and dogs.or humans (as already natural consumers) are ensured work by AI legislation/restriction and laws - even if that's means humans only work (in the future) in IT, AI engineering/software and AI regulation (all other jobs done by AI - agriculture, medicine and entertainment). — Benj96
What for?In either case, even if AI is better than humans at every job, jobs for "sentient beings - with personal monetary desire" must be preserved to maintain the value of money and thus the existence of economy. — Benj96
Not if it's better than own; only if it is like our own.Ultimately, if we create an intelligence that is better than our own, and has individual ambition/desire (sentience) , we may not only be out of work, but in serious existential trouble. — Benj96
a sustainable civilization can be structured...historically speaking. — Merkwurdichliebe
there has never been such widespread global prosperity and possibility than in the present. — Merkwurdichliebe
I love existence with air conditioning and plumbing... and little threat of an invading hoarde. — Merkwurdichliebe
For it to be truly non-discussible would be for it to not be put into words at all. For conversation to have never taken place, the subject never considered or argued. — Benj96
The meaning: a name given to a conceived supernatural entity that people hold in awe, and from which they expect supernatural responses. Many such have been popularly accepted and chronicled.When the word "God" is read by you, it conjures some idea in your mind. Some meaning related to the word. — Benj96
The meaning exists; your application of it doesn't fit any definition I understand. Very much as if the mathematician were going on about equations where Gouda equals and does not equal Cheddar. I can't say he's right or wrong, if his equation solves a problem or not, because it sound like gobbledigook.Even if the meaning is "does not exist" or "cannot be used meaningfully" or "not of value personally or socially".
Exactly. So what can I do with it? Nothing. I could have ignored it and kept driving, but questioned it instead. I suppose that tells you something about me, too - but surely not something you didn't already know.n essence, what does my view of such a god existant have to offer you?
In truth it doesn't. — Benj96
My question is does me calling it God while you call it entity or universe or reality, whatever you wish, change anything about the description? — Benj96
If you and I describe an apple, and I called it pomme and you call it manzana, does that change anything about the description, function, application or characteristics? No right? — Benj96
Evidently. I said so early on. I do not have access, and you may forgive me for saying I do not desire access, to your inner motivations.I have personal reasons to adopt the G term. — Benj96
You have personal reasons not to. — Benj96
If I had to replace the term God with something equivalent, it would be "Potential", as it satisfies the same criterion for me. — Benj96
But does that mean that "ALL" "God" concepts are inherently un-useful/pointless? — Benj96
have no significance, worth, value of worship nor redemptive qualities. Perhaps 95, even 98, or 99% of Individual "God" notions may come to absolutely nothing of value, nothing new, nothing novel to philosophical pursuit. — Benj96
Why not? They have no significance to us, either as objects of worship, judges, helpers and redeemers or as philosophical and moral concepts. They are personal eccentricities, and thus fall outside the purview of theology. (Defined and nuanced have very distinct meanings.) We can dismiss something extraneous without ridiculing it.... unless it intrudes upon and obfuscates the proximal subject.But we must not dismiss individually defined/nuanced Gods — Benj96
I think ultimately, theology ought to be as flexible and reformative as any other discipline. Dogma for me is analagous to arrogance. — Benj96
What is beauty to you Vera? — Benj96
I may have added : and a quibble over word usage. But just the one; I won't go on about it."An example of how supply and demand, capitalism and greed corrupt eco ventures, plus what is God?" — Jamal
How would living people on Earth see death and killing from this point on? — Captain Homicide
If I could have an apple and an orange or just an apple it couldn't make sense to chose the latter? — TiredThinker
Advanced studies have shown that condom wrappers have almost no efficacy in disease prevention. — BC
What was the name of it? — BC
Can anyone think of many situations in which something could be seen as objectively better and yet still chose the alternative? — TiredThinker
No, I can't think of any. Let me go look at some favourites.Have you ever seen stupid blurbs on the back of a book you love ? — green flag
No, you have a craving. The advertisement says this product will satisfy the craving. (Sometimes, the advertisement tells you to have the craving, as well.) If you believe the hype, you'll buy the product, even if it comes in a brown paper bag. It's about the hype, not the packaging.If you believe in enlightenment without having found it, then (in this context) you have the envelope but not the letter. — green flag
For some people, no; for some people, yes. Generalizing religion is a chancy business: there are so many kinds, and have been so many over time, with different cultural origins, philosophical orientation, rituals and tenets. The only common element that stands out is that the majority of people over a considerable stretch of time, have adhered to them. There's more to that than empty envelopes!I'm interested in a deeper structure or in a generalization of religion. There's no need for supernaturalism. — green flag
Alaso Aristotle, Gandhi, Hitler and Churchill, and DJT gods help us!"Someone could make Richard Dawkins their sage. Or the ghost of Chairman Mao."
That's a whole other subject! (Especially humility masked as arrogance. Don't come across much of that!) Maybe four other subjects.I'm looking at interpersonal dynamics, arrogance masked as humility, humility masked as arrogance, transactional analysis --- and how all this is tangled up with talk of the ineffable and transcendent. — green flag
The brand is the envelope. The point is something like the inside being promised by the outside. The content, which is presumably profound, is not immediately available. — green flag
There is the sage, who is basically a gleaming icon, with no interior. There is the young novice, truly humble, who projects. Then there is the older novice or disciple who exalts the sage in what I'd call a cloak of humility or the yoke of superstition. — green flag
Don't know how that pertains to packaging.The issue here is the play of light and shadow. — green flag
Do you mean they believe in Enlightenment as a possibility ? Or as a personal achievement ? — green flag
They're not. I am.If it's the first, then I'm interested in why/how the unenlightened can be so sure that enlightenment is definitely not having a purpose or being in a state of creative play. — green flag
Poetically obscure. No idea what it means.It's as if there are rumors of an object that few will admit to seeing while being sure it's not the field of vision. — green flag
A self-help book or marginal scripture is marketed as lost or repressed wisdom. I claim that this frame itself is already picture enough, as those who market the book must know. — green flag
The novice sits at the knee of the sage. If the novice could truly evaluate the sage, he would already be the sage. — green flag
A halo of talk forms around an unclaimed center. It's as if belief in enlightenment ends up doing the work of enlightenment, by giving the believer a purpose. — green flag
Help me with a plot where an stamped and addressed but empty envelope is sent as a signal in a criminal conspiracy. — green flag
The full shebang
It contemplates itself. — Benj96
For me the word "God" satisfies both the origin of consciousness or "I- hood" , as well as the environment in which "I" 's exist as unique individual and aware beings. — Benj96
I hope you shouted back! — universeness
You edited your answer after my previous response. — Wayfarer
Not arguing; defending my original definition of faith.You seem to be arguing that just because something is lacking in empirical evidence, then there are no grounds to believe it. — Wayfarer
That's not quite the same thing as dependence. Faith being dependent on reason would mean that the reason came first and led by deduction to faith. Which is contrary to the testament of mystics and prophets, who come by their faith through revelation or an epiphany of some kind.In many religious discourses, they are seen as complementary rather than antagonistic. — Wayfarer
I know.Aquinas is an example. — Wayfarer
(A skeptic might wonder how come there was not one single reasoning person in all of Asia or Africa or the Americas to come to these self-evident realizations.)In the wider context of his philosophy, Aquinas held that human reason, without supernatural aid, can establish the existence of God and the immortality of the soul; for those who cannot or do not engage in such strenuous intellectual activity, however, these matters are also revealed and can be known by faith. Faith, though, extends beyond the findings of reason in accepting further truths such as the triune nature of God and the divinity of Christ. From reason, we can know that there is a God and that there is only one God; these truths about God are accessible to anyone by experience and logic alone, apart from any special revelation from God.
i.e. Faith is a belief largely or wholly unsupported by empirical evidence.From the side of the subject, it is the mind's assent to what is not seen: “Faith is the evidence of things that appear not”
I think "reason" has almost nothing to do with it. — T Clark
When you consider such (if you believe such exists,) to be superior to yourself, in every way. This is how theists feel about their gods. — universeness
Okay. Most faith, then is dependent on reason? How?No, fideism is not the same as faith. Fideism is the belief that faith is independent of reason, — Wayfarer
But not the other way around. The faith came first; rationalization a distant second. (And rarely convincing.)But even so, there are Prostestant philosophers of religion (such as Alvin Plantinga) who scrupulously deploy rational arguments in defense of their faith
You are subservient to such, if like benj96, you perceive or assign high credence, to some kind of already existent, omnipresent, self-aware, force/entity that may have been involved in our origins. — universeness
I was not trying to present the Star Trek character Janeway for a general critique. — universeness
Sorry. You be free you and I be cowardly me.A pity you can't find the will to type something like, "Good stuff, I support that approach to dealing with 'fear,' completely." — universeness
You've ignored the substance of my comment and focused on a language disagreement. — T Clark
What is that internal model built from, if not experience and learning of real facts, things and events in the real world? At some points during that construction, reason must have been involved in assessing which bits to keep and discard, which bits go where in the model. The sustained belief emerges from testing that internal model with the real world over time. If it doesn't correspond closely enough, your motors won't run and your chairs will collapse.My claim is that most of what we know and how we make decisions is not based on reason but on the totality of our experience and learning. I guess this is something like the correspondence theory of truth except we don't compare our beliefs with the world but with a model of the world we carry around with us. — T Clark
I don't see this is as a contradiction toI came to recognize my initial understanding of a problem came from a mostly unconscious processing of the information I have studied, my understanding of my professional body of knowledge, and my general knowledge of life. In short, it was ultimately founded on an empirical but not rational basis. — T Clark
Faith is a belief largely or wholly unsupported by empirical evidence. — Vera Mont
Because it involves a factor variously designated salvation, release, mokṣa, or liberation. Whereas there’s nothing in the current concept of naturalism that corresponds to that. — Wayfarer
AKA faith.That incidentally is fideism. — Wayfarer
I have faith that this chair will support my weight. — Benj96
You can pretend to be self-generated, I suppose. I'm aware that I owe my birth to all life as it evolved before me, and to my parents and the society that nurtured me as a helpless infant. I still owe my continued existence to the world that provides me air, water, food and shelter. I have no way to assess the exact amount of influence on my character and circumstances of each encounter, experience, book, conversation, each emotional connection with another being, but I acknowledge their influence - and mine on them.If you can't take full ownership of your own existence. — universeness
Not belief and not outside of "them". Where in post did you find either of those concepts?If you need to make some belief connection to some external intent and influence outside of 'other people and other lifeforms,'
That's what I've been saying: I never can be "truly free", until I'm dead.then you are not truly free
BECAUSE, you (I don't mean you personally,) will always feel a subservience to that which you don't yet understand or know about.
Fear exists to be conquered! Theism, theosophism, fear of death, fear of the unknown, will be conquered by humans eventually, imo. — universeness
And yes, I think faith is just another name for intuition and religious faith is intuition for people who carry around a different model of the world than we do. — T Clark
Can you please elaborate on what you mean by "And then"? — Raef Kandil
Though not equally hard, I imagine. Faith is a belief largely or wholly unsupported by empirical evidence.Faith is our interpretation of the life experience we are having and it is based on the mind and heart working together. — Raef Kandil
Religion is based on text. — Raef Kandil
No it doesn't. Experience-based faith needs no interpretation, but faith and subjective experiences may be chronicled and their interpretation may later becomes religious text.Faith uses text to interpret the experience. — Raef Kandil
That just makes me pissed off at all humans who can't OWN themselves! — universeness
