Oh no. I do not want a holocaust of pregnant women. — javi2541997
I guess people who are irresponsible with their own lives shouldn't have the right of breed — javi2541997
Neither I want laws which order to courts punish all them who despite they are irresponsible they have kids. It is an Utopia. — javi2541997
We can't avoid biology and the instinct of having kids from women. Nevertheless, I guess it is at least so critically flawed. We cannot sit here and then spreading kids out of nowhere for no reason. I think it doesn't depend on laws but in sexual education. What do you think? Probably with a proper sexual education people would be more matured at the time of thinking about having kids. — javi2541997
The explanation of the apparent expansion of the universe at speeds greater than that of light I have heard is that the expansion of the fabric of space-time itself is not subject to the speed limit. Seems like a cheat to me, but people who know more than I do accept it. — T Clark
Thank you and i just thought of my next quandry to ponder. There is a school down the road a ways. The building has a 6 foot retainer wall around the north side. The wall has sections of slits in pairs at 10 foot intervals. I am going to run full tilt and throw myself at one of those pair of slits. If quantum mechanics is correct tomorrow i will be two of me. If that happens will i have to get another drivers license? — Steve Leard
Baden is a tough guy to debate — Gregory
Rabelaisian Carnivalesque — Joe0082
Schooled. Thx. Think i see the flaw in my argument. Phew. You have no idea how long i have been obsessing over this problem. Problem is now i won't know what to do tomorrow. — Steve Leard
Ok. Just trying to wrap my wee brain around this. If i had knowledge of how wrong my actions were while committing the crime then i would be guilty of said crime and should be judged accordingly. If my actions are a result of decisions i made, and those decisions were formulated within my mind, then i am guilty. Would an injustice be created by prosecuting me when my brain has been altered and is no longer a cause of deviant thoughts but is essentially a mind born anew and without any conciousness of guilt or responsibility. The body is not the brain/mind/soul....or what have. — Steve Leard
I'm sorry. What is "mens rea". — Steve Leard
Indeed, but the evidence proves otherwise. — Gus Lamarch
Fdrake, just ban the guy. Point. — Gus Lamarch
someone please put this thread out of its misery.......:vomit: — Wayfarer
Have you seen factory farm conditions? — Pfhorrest
I do agree that morality is a form of aesthetics. — SteveMinjares
Morality is fundamentally a sense; like humour or aesthetics. It was drilled into the human organism by evolution in the context of the hunter gatherer tribe. Chimpanzees have morality of sorts - they share food and groom each other, and remember who reciprocates, and withhold such favours accordingly in future.
Insofar as we can assume human evolution was similar, the evidence suggests morality is a pre-intellectual sensitivity to moral implication, advantageous to the individual within the tribe, and advantageous to the tribe composed of moral individuals, in competition with other organisms.
The attempt to explicitly define morality, only begins after the occurrence of intellectual intelligence in human beings; and only became objectively codified, and attributed to God, when hunter gatherer tribes joined together to form multi-tribal social groups - and needed an external authority for moral laws in society. — counterpunch
I guess people who are irresponsible with their own lives shouldn't have the right of breed not only Kids but animals. Having kid is a serious issue that not all the people are ready or capable to do it so. Imagine someone who in their regular days has a lot of problems which make them not living properly: Bankruptcy, drug addiction, violence, etc... And then they want have kids? Hmm... I still think it is not the best option in context like this — javi2541997
Yes it is a theory, — FlaccidDoor
Have you ever been in a spaceship, and watched the sun, moon and earth move in relationship of each other, — FlaccidDoor
"truth" should be called reliable ideas, if not just scientific theories, however, in practice, they can be close to "truths." — FlaccidDoor
There's little reason to think about events that only happen .001% of the time in real life after all. — FlaccidDoor
"Does Existence have any objective/universal meaning?". — SmartIdiot
And on the question of why Descartes withdrew his paper - I studied Descartes as an undergrad, wrote a term paper on him, but never encountered this question, can you provide some references for it. — Wayfarer
In any case, the conclusion you draw is in line with the conflict thesis. It’s something which is widely assumed but simplistic, in my view. — Wayfarer
The upshot is, I don’t accept the ‘science versus religion’ conflict in the black-and-white terms in which you’re attempting to depict it. — Wayfarer
I agree with your remarks elsewhere that science is indispensable for saving the planet from climate change. But let’s also not loose sight of the fact that science has developed the means to destroy everything on the planet a thousand times over. — Wayfarer
science has developed the means to destroy everything on the planet a thousand times over. — Wayfarer
Indeed we can, but I’m arguing that this ability is only partially explicable with respect to evolution. It’s not ‘instinctIve’ but culturally imbued in us. Bridging in the ‘is’ and ‘ought’ is something human beings often fail to do, both collectively and individually. I’m sure guilty of that. — Wayfarer
Well the thing is that science does not purport to speak any truths. I'm assuming by "actual truths" you meant scientific theories. — FlaccidDoor
we didn't switch out those presumed truths, when actual truths emerged. — counterpunch
What I mean is that evolutionary biology, and science in general, now provides the kind of background guide to what intelligent people should believe - in the same way that religious culture used to in times past. — Wayfarer
I don't subscribe to your reading of history viz a viz the Trial of Galileo but it is too large a topic to argue in a forum such as this. — Wayfarer
If it were programmed, you would expect it to be uniform. Birds, after all, build nests pretty much exactly the same way every time. Instinctive behaviours are very minutely prescribed. — Wayfarer
The point about the human situation is that humans get to decide, in large part, how they should live and what they should do. That gives a huge scope to possible outcomes, signified by the vast range of cultures and behaviours and societies. Our choices are under-determined by our biological descent. Sure, biological descent plays a role , no disputing that, but other factors come into play for h. sapiens, new horizons of the possible appear. — Wayfarer
This second bit here is why I mentioned the super-person the first bit is about. It sounds to me like you’re saying that if you were a better person, you would care about everyone more than you in fact do; thus, that your idea of what a good person would answer is 1.
I bring that up because what I’m asking about is what you think the morally correct answer is, not just what you’re personally emotionally motivated to act on. Like, if you could be a better person, however you conceive “better” to be, what do you conceive that that better you would care about? And it sounds like you conceive that it would be 1. — Pfhorrest
I don't want to fall into the science v religion dichotomy. — Wayfarer
My view is that when h. sapiens evolved to the point of being language-using, meaning-seeking beings, those capacities aren't meaningfully viewed through the prism of evolutionary biology. It's an over-reach, due to the fact that evolutionary biology has displaced religion as the kind of 'arbiter of meaning'. But, as I say, that's not it's function, even though that's exactly how the Dennett's and Dawkins treat it. — Wayfarer
This is germane to the OP also, as viewing ethics through the lens of biology can only ever yield some form of utilitarianism. And that's because there's really only one criterion for success in evolutionary biology, which is successful propogation. Any other kind of end is out of scope for the theory. — Wayfarer
I'm actually a big fan of Jordan Peterson as well. I grew up in a rather religious family, and he helped me bridge the gap I held between the world of the sciences and religion. I view them to be one in the same thing now, so what you said confuses me a bit. What is science if not a religion that follows a bible written by countless scientists and praises a God that is the progression of knowledge? I guess where I mainly disagree is the part where you say you "view religion from the outside," but I think that's impossible because you cannot not be religious. — FlaccidDoor
If you think it ought to be morally relevant to some kind of super perfectly ethical person, some saint or hero, even though you personally (like pretty much everyone) fall short of that, then I'd say that's answer #1 to the second question. — Pfhorrest
Is it everyone's pleasure or pain that's relevant, or only some people's / your own?
1. Everyone's is relevant
2. Only some people's / mine is relevant
3. Nobody's is relevant (I said "no" above already) — Pfhorrest
Not everything about human kind is determined by biology. When we evolved to the point of language, reason, and even (dare I say) spiritual transcendence, then we're no longer definable in purely biological terms; we've 'transcended the biological' is how I put it. And I absolutely don't buy Dennett's ultra-darwinism. He, Dawkins, and several others, personify the tendency of making a religion out of evolution -not in the sense of seeking transcendence through it, but by regarding it as the definition of human possibility. That's as much a consequence of Enlightenment rhetorics than of science as such. — Wayfarer
Evolutionary biology is intended to provide an account of the origin of species. Evolutionary rationales of religion, music, and other aspects of human culture are too often just so stories. — Wayfarer