Seeker25
BC
The “Earth system” to which we belong, generates life, diversity, intelligence, and other emergent properties. — Seeker25
life swings like a pendulum backward and forward between pain and boredom — Seeker25
Seeker25
As products of the earth system, we are what we are — BC
The world at universal peace and contentment would require that we were in agreement about how to live good lives — BC
BC
But who are we? We are not merely evolved animals that behave according to instinct, that is, beings that produce similar reactions in response to similar stimuli. — Seeker25
Given that the Earth system behaves in this way, do we truly believe that we can achieve stability and well-being by killing people and destroying habitats rather than preserving them; by allowing those with different skin colours to starve; or by imprisoning those who think differently? Do we really think that these ideas (simple to explain and justify) cannot be understood and supported by large segments of humanity? — Seeker25
and so on, we are totally out of our element. We just can't act over long time periods, most of the time. Sure, some people are good mid-range planners. Doctors, for instance, have to plan for 12 years of training to be a specialist. Oil company execs have to think about how long an oil well will be productive. But oil executives may be completely unable to think about the long-term consequences of burning the oil in the well.how much water we can safely pump out of an aquifer
how long will it take to pay off the national debt
how much soil can we afford to lose every year
should we build houses on this flood plain which has been dry for 40 years
jkop
The “Earth system” to which we belong, generates life, diversity, intelligence, and other emergent properties. My purpose is to debate the long-term trends of this Earth system and examine how we, the humanity, must adapt to them to avoid instability, or potentially catastrophe. — Seeker25
A system is a group of interacting or interrelated elements that act according to a set of rules to form a unified whole. — Wikipedia
frank
I like to emphasize that we are part of a continuum of life which has been created over a long period of time. Our evolutionary history is why "we are what we are" and every other species is what it is as well. — BC
BC
Do you have thoughts about the end of our species? — frank
Seeker25
I like to emphasize that we are part of a continuum of life which has been created over a long period of time. Our evolutionary history is why "we are what we are" and every other species is what it is as well. — BC
Because our immediate concerns take precedence over more distant concerns (even if the consequences of ignoring ecology are grave). It's not that we are inherently evil, stupid, or insane. We simply are wired to prioritize the immediate over the distant when the immediate stakes are raised. — BC
Since there are many different smaller systems, based on different laws, some contradicting each other etc it seems implausible that a larger system could be intelligible as a system. — jkop
Seeker25
Do you have thoughts about the end of our species? I always thought it was kind of un-face-able, but do you feel like the possibility can be faced, and accepted? — frank
ChatteringMonkey
Humanity will eventually disappear. Our Sun, like many other stars, will exhaust its hydrogen fuel, then expand and engulf part of the Solar System. Fortunately, this is expected to occur in about five billion years.
However, we could disappear much earlier if we persist in imposing our own criteria while ignoring the evolutionary trends of the Earth system, which has—fortunately—endowed us with consciousness: the ability to understand ourselves, our place in the world, and the needs of others. — Seeker25
From this point onward, it is up to us, exercising our freedom, to decide what attitude we choose to adopt. — Seeker
ChatteringMonkey
The “Earth system” to which we belong, generates life, diversity, intelligence, and other emergent properties. My purpose is to debate the long-term trends of this Earth system and examine how we, the humanity, must adapt to them to avoid instability, or potentially catastrophe. — Seeker25
magritte
if we persist in imposing our own criteria while ignoring the evolutionary trends of the Earth system, which has—fortunately—endowed us with consciousness: the ability to understand ourselves, our place in the world, and the needs of others. From this point onward, it is up to us, exercising our freedom, to decide what attitude we choose to adopt. — Seeker25
frank
BC
We possess enormous capabilities that allow us to determine what kind of world we want and, if we choose, how to adapt it to the Earth system of which we are a part. — Seeker25
On the contrary, they can imagine long-term futures, reconciling them with collective interests, and devising ways to act accordingly. — Seeker25
ChatteringMonkey
Which just goes to show: we humans exist because of adversity. If we had utopia, we would just sit there. — frank
Joshs
Yes and this is, as you probably know, one of Nietzsches main issues with a purely utilitarian view on morality. We need some adversity to be able to grow. The quest to reduce all suffering would ultimately also reduce what we can be as human beings — ChatteringMonkey
“…the satisfaction of the will is not the cause of pleasure: I particularly want to combat this most superficial of theories. The absurd psychological counterfeiting of the nearest things . . . instead, that the will wants to move forwards, and again and again becomes master of what stands in its way: the feeling of pleasure lies precisely in the unsatisfaction of the will, in the way it is not yet satiated unless it has boundaries and resistances . . .
The normal unsatisfaction of our drives, e.g., of hunger, the sexual drive, the drive to move, does not in itself imply something dispiriting; instead, it has a piquing effect on the feeling of life, just as every rhythm of small painful stimuli strengthens that feeling, whatever the pessimists would have us believe. This unsatisfaction, far from blighting life, is life's great stimulus. - Perhaps one could even describe pleasure in general as a rhythm of small unpleasurable stimuli . . .
(Nietzsche’s Last Notebooks)
frank
Yes and this is, as you probably know, one of Nietzsches main issues with a purely utilitarian view on morality. We need some adversity to be able to grow. The quest to reduce all suffering would ultimately also reduce what we can be as human beings. — ChatteringMonkey
Seeker25
BC
A) that it does not end abruptly (for example, through a nuclear war or catastrophic climate overheating), and B) that life is not a continuous source of suffering for millions of people. — Seeker25
A propensity for life; diversity; fragile and ephemeral life; beauty; balance; freedom; intelligence; socialization; mutual dependence; complexity; and consciousness — Seeker25
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