Maybe it's an attempt to keep the focus on race since the events of the summer. Every year this happens. Every year nothing changes. — frank
according to the video, the classic Romans thought "genius" is synonymous with "individuality." — Nagel
Is there a race war underway? — frank
I think it's safe to say that most Americans don't realize a race war is underway. — frank
both ‘will’ and ‘intentionality’ have broader meanings than simply human will or conscious intention. — Wayfarer
Chinese philosophy doesn’t really have a bearing on these questions which really are peculiar to the modern West. I think Schopenhauer’s conception of ‘will’ as a universal striving or wanting is much nearer the mark. — Wayfarer
Yes, I do. Of course, a bacterium doesn't *think* anything, or say 'oh shit I'm in trouble'. It's not a conscious being, or reflective, or intelligent. But it's a living organism, and living things are characterised by homeostasis. Note the action-verb in the definition of homeostasis: 'seeks equilibrium'. — Wayfarer
Would I be right in guessing that is the sum total of your knowledge of that book ;-) — Wayfarer
the ability to survive, the will to survive, are not present in inorganic nature. — Wayfarer
I had the view that everything in theory is reducible to physics and that everything is matter and energy. Recently I came across emergentism and holism and complexity theory. Which is making me confused. The statement that the sum of parts can't explain the whole and that higher order phenomenon even in principle can't be reduced to physics is quite disturbing to me. — Swimmingwithfishes
The problem it articulates is that of intention - that life, even the very simplest forms of life, seem to possess an intentional aim, namely, to survive and propagate. And it's hard to imagine how 'the intention to survive' could even be concieved in terms of chemical replication. — Wayfarer
What concerns me about the scientific analysis, is that it often can't help but be reductionist: to declare that life is simply a complex transactional relationship between various classes of molecules. I can see why that kind of analysis appeals to engineers (like yourself!), but I think it leaves something out. — Wayfarer
One of the questions to ask, is if the origin of life occurs naturally as a result of the concatenation of favourable circumstances, why doesn't it continue to happen? — Wayfarer
It is generally portrayed by media outlets that the origin of life can simply be explained by Evolution - yet the only known mechanism for evolution that we have discovered in the universe simply cannot do it. — Gary Enfield
Abiogenesis has failed to show that all of the 22 necessary amino acids for life can be generated from the same chemical mix/start point, because chemical environments necessary for some amino acids would be harmful to others. They also require a certain mix of base chemicals to achieve the chemical make up of DNA and RNA - chemicals - and those chemicals were not thought to be present on earth - but only in surrounding space at best. — Gary Enfield
...forming just a simple average protein (involving a thousand or more amino acids) from just the necessary 22 amino acid components, (out of a selection of 500), by chance alone, — Gary Enfield
Perhaps your reason 3 is the most important to consider. — Jack Cummins
The working definition of religion which I will offer is one offered by William James in, 'The Varieties of Religious Experience' :
'Were one asked to characterise the life of religion in the broadest and most general terms possible, one might say that it consists of the belief that there is an unseen order, and that our supreme good lies in harmoniously adjusting ourselves thereto.' — Jack Cummins
Why do people need religious beliefs and ideas? — Jack Cummins
I think that we evolved slowly over a period of 350 million years. — Ken Edwards
No ather animal has self awarenes. — Ken Edwards
Eternal life in exchange for Philosophy Forums and Hershey bars with almonds? — Ken Edwards
The question still remains, why do you set up an explicit chain of inference? Can you epistemically justify doing it? — Curious Layman
Why you don't do it when building your opinion about the world? — Curious Layman
It seems your definition of foundationalism only applies to the physical world. For instance, do you set up an explicit chain of inference when making a moral decision? — Curious Layman
I really aspire towards greatness, but I can't seem to grasp it. — Noble Dust
I don't feel qualified, but I'm up for the task. Reminds me of the days when I accidentally became...the arbiter of truth in some bizarre thread of yours? What was that again? — Noble Dust
Exactly! That seems to make sense because fitness (whatever that is actually thought to be) does nothing to guarantee reproduction on an individual level, but simply makes it more likely if averaged out over sufficiently large populations; so there is no correlation of fitness with genetic inheritance on the individual level, but only on the group or species level. — Janus
“Given facts about population growth, *if* the human species lasts for a long time into the
future, then the great majority of humans who ever live will turn out to have
lived at a later time than now, in a more advanced society than this. If that’s the
case, then you should view it as surprising that you would find yourself living in
this primitive time, rather than in the advanced future with the high population.
On the other hand, if the human species is not going to last much longer, then it
wouldn’t be surprising that you’d be living now rather than in the advanced
future. Therefore, the fact that you find yourself living now is *evidence that*
the human species will not last long into the future.” — PhilosophyAttempter
The 'species' doesn't think, react, hunt, shop, cook, and eat. — Bitter Crank
This is not really the case, although it is often thought to be. Natural selection acts on any entity or entities which exhibit variation, reproduction and heritability. Although individual organisms fit this bill nicely, these constraints are broad enough to be applicable to genes, populations, and even species. That this is the case is captured in the idea that natural selection operates at various levels of selection. Thus for a long time it was argued that genes were the only units of natural selection, and not organisms at all. This has changed in recent times with the acknowledgement that all aspects in a developmental system can be subject to selection, up to and including the entire system itself. The unit of natural selection doesn't even have to be alive. You can use natural selection principles to come up with new circuit boards or even architecture. — StreetlightX
Hayseeds of the Bread Basket Unite. The urban parasites have nothing to lose but their bread and butter, their pate foi gras, their fried chicken McNugguts; their almond milk, salad greens, chick peas, and steak tartare. — Bitter Crank
Instead of entering into a cold and indifferent world where one must contrive one’s own meaning, morality, and destiny - to the absurdity of a hopeless mortality - one enters into a world with all of these metaphysical concepts pre-established in the fabric of reality. It is, indeed, the idea that “essence precedes existence”, rather than “existence precedes essence.”
Instead of straining toward a feigned delusion as a mode of subsistence, one is settling into benevolent design as a mode of true fulfillment.
This concept is intriguing, and even exhilarating. Not as wishful thinking or blissful ignorance, but as a philosophical and logical validity. Apparently, it is just as reasonable to presume theism as it is atheism. And, it seems to me, starting with theism can infuse significant hope into our perplexing existential realities. — CS Stewart
Most of the work the average person does has nothing to do with their survival. With this being the case, it doesn't make sense to talk about survival of the fittest/fit, or whatever. Some hayseed living close to the land, self-reliant, will out survive the infants consummately dependent on each other through the market/boob lactating its milk/money. — Anthony
'Fitness' is a species-level designation in evolutionary theory, and not an individual one (or species-in-an-ecological-niche if one is being strict). If you're asking about the 'fitness' of individuals, one is no longer talking about evolutionary theory, but something else. Per that theory, if the species is not fit, it is extinct, or on its way to extinction. That's it. — StreetlightX
'Evolution' applies to groups, not individuals - genes, species & ecologies (Darwin), not organisms & persons (Spenser) - the latter merely expressing traits adapted to proliferating the former. — 180 Proof
As a hypothetical imperative, I suppose, if one's goal is to "survive very long and/or reproduce", then one should work, or collaborate with others, to bricole (or engineer) tools which help facilitate that goal. This is irrelevant, however, to "fitness" or the lack of it with respective to the adaptive pressures of natural selection. (vide Dennett, Dawkins, Gould, et al). — 180 Proof
your post seems to suggest that reproducing is the meaning of life? You imply without it, what is the point. Many humans CHOOSE not to have children. Evolutionarily (is that a word, haha), those people (me) are unfit. But so what? — ZhouBoTong
Yes, the Tao - another example of a highly abstract idealistic metaphysical theory. — Daniel C
Except that there CAN'T be three of you, according to the Tao Unified Cosmos theory. — god must be atheist
While many humans are fit enough to continue the life cycle of finding a partner and producing healthy offspring, many don't make it. — Purple Pond
If this is confusing - it confuses me - think about a time you have attempted to share, say, some Bach or Beethoven with an adolescent (younger children, especially young children, can be transfixed - stopped in their tracks - by those composers), only to have that adolescent not comprehend even a little bit what he's hearing, certainly incapable of any appreciation. — tim wood
