How in the world is the social stuff supposed to explain morality in a way that the big bang doesn't? — Terrapin Station
The difference between his administration and past administrations is that this administration means what they say and say what they mean, for better or for worse. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
This seems obvious too, until we realize that we aren't actually looking in the real world, but in the symbolic world ( words, theories, polemics, factions etc).
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We are rarely really looking or listening to the real world. Instead we are typically so very busy thinking and talking about the real world, something else entirely.
If our approach is to be reality based we might remember that the overwhelming vast majority of reality is.... nothing. — Jake
I see you can name some logical fallacies. That's nice. But there's a bit more to it than that. — S
Our material lives are not sustained by religious tradition or mystical knowledge, but by electrical systems, construction principles, engineering principles, manufacturing principles, scientific principles, and the maintenance principles that maintain them. This is an immense undertaking, requiring millions of people with specialized, complex, and difficult-to-obtain knowledge. Many people are alienated from these processes, and even those who are highly engaged with them (let's say a measily computer programmer), they are but a small part.
However, religion is a system that offers less technical knowledge. — schopenhauer1
Shame it took fifteen pages. — S
When it is stimulated electrically, animals respond with aggression. And if the amygdala is removed, animals get very tame and no longer respond to things that would have caused rage before. But there is more to it than just anger: When removed, animals also become indifferent to stimuli that would have otherwise have caused fear and even sexual responses.
Anyone can think they are a master of knowledge in the realm of mysticism. — schopenhauer1
I do not believe that this argument has been made before — Ilya B Shambat
I approached the topic from the angle of neurobiology. It can explain a heck of a lot about emotion — S
What you're mentioning is a bit like mentioning tables and chairs when others are mentioning neutrons and electrons. You're further from the source. — S
In fact, someone might happen to agree with almost every rule. So they'd not be able to live both creatively and authentically, per this definition of what it is to live creatively. — Terrapin Station
"Weekly Religious Attendance Nearly as Effective as Statins and Exercise in Extending Life." — Daniel Cox
Love to me is more important than science, or I guess I would say, "Love and science must be joined at the hip for maximum existential penetration." — Daniel Cox
The word 'God' has a bad rap from the God hater position and that's why I didn't use it in the comment you replied to. — Daniel Cox
It could have been a more productive discussion, but then began the whining about inadequacy, and things were taken out of context. Instead of talking about what we know through science about the source of morality, it became an opportunity to attack the limits of science. Yawn. — S
Are there really rules that aren't laws, though? And even if there are, what if someone doesn't want to break (some of) them? Do they have to live inauthentically to live creatively? That would seem odd. — Terrapin Station
Evolutionary psychology is problematic because evolution has no interest in the truth about anything. — Daniel Cox
The question we are considering is whether or not neurobiology can adequately explain the source of morality without supplemental explanations from nonscientific disciplines.
— Merkwurdichliebe
That was not the original question. This discussion about adequacy stemmed from a later comment by praxis, and he was never clear on what criteria he was going by — S
It's like some people are just looking for an argument. — S
And you had already seemingly lost track of the subject, which isn't about computers. — S
I'm wondering why you didn't answer my questions — S
We can consciously endeavor to condition ourselves so that our responses or subconscious predictions are of a desirable quality. At least in that way we are responsible.
— praxis
Your are mistaking responsibility for recognition. — Merkwurdichliebe
What you are talking about is an aesthetic assessment, the part about "conditioning" is only a matter of self interest, it has nothing to do with the ethical. — Merkwurdichliebe
Surprisingly, recent research suggests that conscious choice plays a smaller role in our actions than most people assume. In particular, it often comes after brain activity that initiates bodily movements, and many researchers conclude that the conscious choice does not cause the movement (cf. Melillo and Leisman, 2009a,b). That conclusion raises the disturbing questions of whether and how we can ever really be responsible for anything.
Re identity politics, can someone enlighten as to what other kind of politics there is? — unenlightened
we shouldn't move on to explaining them if we can't even identify what they are/where they occur. — Terrapin Station
