As far as animal minds are concerned, they are much different from human minds. They are evolving in different directions. Bats, whales, homing pigeons, all very different. None more for than any other. — Rich
Well this is prima facie not the case since the materialist explanation, whatever it is, is changing all the time and is nothing more than a spaghetti bowl of ideas that are tossed about as much as finding will allow. In other words, it is an outright mess without any proof and any hope for proof. But if you are satisfied with "it" (no one can describe what "it" is), then that is your choice. Personally, I never subscribe to obvious obfuscation. — Rich
The Elan vital (Bergson's terminology) is nothing more than the creative will that the mind exerts. This stands in contrast to the mind's memory. If you feel you have a creative element and if you feel you have the will that you can utilize to try to manifest this creativity, then that is the Elan vital. It is only what one experiences every day. — Rich
If one ruminates over this statement one might find that understanding evolution is all about understanding life. That is why "natural selection" is sacrosanct to materialism, i.e. chemicals "naturally" come together and morph into life - and stay there. It is the greatest miracle ever told. — Rich
All minds are necessarily different and are on different paths. However, dog owners certainly feel very connected to them. — Rich
Imbuing genes with all kinds of human characteristics such surviving, reproducing, fittest, traits, etc. simply shifts the actions of the mind to gene. It doesn't explain anything. — Rich
Understanding life is not about proofs. — Rich
right, you are suggesting conservation of the allele diversity in the population, which I am arguing we should expect to see in the survival of the fittest model. — MikeL
So, how does that fit into divergent evolution where this 'approaching optimal form' says: 'You know what, stuff being a possum, I want to be a kangaroo.' — MikeL
Again, it's not survival of the fittest but survival of the adequate. — StreetlightX
And as for other factors, again, to list: sexual selection, niche construction, phenotypic plasticity, developmental robustness, evolvability, genotype networks, genetic 'mutations', gene flow, symbiogenesis, horizontal gene transfer, artificial selection, population isolation - all of these and more can and do 'factor' as relevant mechanisms of evolution. — StreetlightX
When a species is well adapted to its environment though the Survival of the Fittest model would suggest that DNA should be trying to minimize the amount of variant alleles in the population to help ensure its continued survival. — MikeL
I doubt that very much. — Bitter Crank
However, what is the logic of heaven and hell then? Why do all prophets preach it? Is it because we haven't matured enough to understand the true value of morality, thereby requiring a carrot-stick paradigm to encourage us to be moral? — TheMadFool
I mean not believing in God would be tantamount to not believing in Good, in morality. — TheMadFool
Seriously, man, re-read what you just wrote. If what you say is true, then all hypotheticals are absurd. Come on. — Pneumenon
Memorization isn't all bad. While one can summon information these days with a few flicks of five fingers, it helps to have some things installed on board--like grammar, spelling, and punctuation rules. It's one thing to find a quote from Shakespeare--it can make one look more learnéd than one is--it's something else to have read a few plays, poems, books... thoroughly. — Bitter Crank
Assumption: democracy is inherently good, not just a decision-making procedure. You can agree or disagree with this, but for the purposes of this discussion, I want you to assume that this is true. — Pneumenon
The education system has not changed much in the last 200-300 years. We still stick "students" in the classroom and have someone lecture at them for 45-60 minutes. The lecturers have varying degrees of enthusiasm and or skill at holding the interest of the captive audience. School may have been the most interesting part of one's day one hundred years ago, but school now competes with social media, media in general, technology and the internet. — prothero
For all that, at least at the collegiate and university level, American schools remain among the best in the world, and attract talented students from around the world. — prothero
And is that supposed to make my argument unsound? — TheMadFool
And the irony is you use words to describe what, according to you, is indescribable. How do you get this kind of privileged knowledge? — TheMadFool
I realize now I'm not talking about this forum. I don't give a fuck about this forum. I'm talking about the United States. — Mongrel
Infinity can't be known like the number 2 or 3,000. It simply extends without end. Asking O to give us the largest natural number will elicit the response that no such number exists. So, there are limits to knowledge but that, in my opinion, doesn't devalue omniscience. It's simply the nature of infinity. — TheMadFool
How you think is how you will feel. — TranscendedRealms
What I am willing to accept is that there is a
straight, bisexual, and gay male and female sexual template. — Bitter Crank
The Godhead, Christ, and the Holy Spirit all share their omnipotence in their trinity, although that even befuddled Aquinas. Allah and Yahweh are omnipotent. — John Harris