Don't assume that everybody has happiness as a goal.
Don't assume that everybody has happiness as a high priority or thinks that it is important.
And "happiness" is no less ambiguous and abstract than "meaning/purpose of life". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
What's that and why is it relevant? Is it because I'm not using the magic of imagination?That sounds a lot like what Ken Wilber calls "Flatland". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
These people who shun logic and care only about how their beliefs make them feel, where are they?
I doubt than any such people exist.
Speaking of evidence-based, no evidence has ever been presented to me to make me believe that such people exist.
— WISDOMfromPO-MO
Again, happiness is not necessarily a universal goal or universally desirable.
The same could be said about longevity and "being surrounded by those you love".
It could be a narcissistic, narrow, crippling image to some people. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
We don't actually need much, but we do want it.Mental, physical, and emotional fulfillment in this temporary life is the best end goal that I can offer. Compared to our greed for eternal paradise and other such grandiose ends, this portrait seems small and humble, and yet it is infinitely more achievable... — VagabondSpectre
Or maybe we should give people the benefit of the doubt and not call it "greed".
Maybe mental, physical and emotional fulfillment is not enough for some people. Maybe some people need more. I would not call the longing or effort to satisfy a need "greed". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
And how are we defining "eternal"? Ken Wilber defines it not as time with no beginning or end, but as no longer being in the stream of time. Maybe the latter, not the former, is the object of that aforementioned "greed".
Finally, instead of small, humble and achievable, it may seem narcissistic, prideful and repressive to some people. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
That makes worldviews sound like the work of a used car salesman or a spin doctor.
More importantly, it sounds extremely disrespectful and condescending.
And if a worldview is worth having, it should speak for itself. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Anybody who is secure in his/her own worldview should not care what other people think.
And anybody who is going to disrespect others based on their worldview is probably not secure in his/her own worldview. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I am talking about absolute truth. I believe Don Quixote is all men basically. — Beebert
Maybe earth is a biological super computer. — ThinkingMatt
The universe would in that case be an ignorant, brutish lout (carrying on with the mind-body analogy) fixated on a tiny planet. — Ciceronianus the White
I have always found the concept of learning for the sake of learning to be highly appealing, — VagabondSpectre
We're, especially mankind, the universe, specifically its mind, its conscisouness. Through us the universe has achieved self-awareness. People are very interested in Artificial Intelligence and the prospect of a self-aware machine is way up there in terms of human technological prowess BUT we forget that we:universe :: AI:humans, even more perhaps.
What would be the single most important purpose of a machine who's self-aware? Self-discovery of course. So, similarly, for us, the consciousness of the universe itself, the meaning of life is to understand the universe in all its glory. This meaning of life is ONE, OBJECTIVE and GRAND and should hopefully end our quest for the meaning of life.
Your valuable comments... — TheMadFool
What happens if we discover that there is nothing to discover except mechanisms and technological change? — schopenhauer1
At that moment the meaning of life will change — TheMadFool
That is contradictory to your OP. — Sir2u
No it's not. I should've been clearer. Think of how we function in our everyday lives. We set goals. If we achieve them we set new goals. It's the same thing with the meaning of life. — TheMadFool
If each person can define the meaning of his/her own life then we'll see variety but also controversy. — TheMadFool
But that is as individuals, not as a race. — Sir2u
As a race we would first have to agree on the meaning of life for it to be changed, and that is not going to happen your way. — Sir2u
If we accept that the meaning to life is to live it, then everyone will always agree and there will never be any reason to change it no matter what happens. — Sir2u
If they don't they'd be irrational. — TheMadFool
But the purpose of life being to live is a tautology. — TheMadFool
And most who disagree with you say you are irrational. — Sir2u
So prove it is untrue. — Sir2u
That makes no distinction between an ant, a pig, a dog, and a human. However, we know that ants, pigs, dogs, and humans differ from each other. So, shouldn't meaning of life for a human be different from that of an ant, a pig or a dog or a plant, etc? These real differences between living things not only serve to identify each species but also bear on the way these lifeforms live which includes the meaning of life. — TheMadFool
You still have not proven that there is a purpose or meaning to any life. — Sir2u
As per the conditions set in the OP I have. — TheMadFool
based on the reason that the universe is self-aware and able to comprehend itself through us — TheMadFool
And I don't want to be the eyeballs of the universe anyway. — Sir2u
As for myself, I (my mind) am definitely peering out and increasing awareness all the time of that which surrounds me - as it's every other life form. That is how life evolves. — Rich
Can you prove any of this beyond your belief in them. — Sir2u
So what is the reason you have for life? To make the universe self aware. So what did the universe do before humans came along, and what will it do after we are gone? What happens if the universe is not at all self aware, which I am sure it is not? We lose our reason to live so we won't exist anymore. — Sir2u
Why would something as vast as the universe pick some little fucked race like us in a very tiny little piece of itself to help it be self aware. It would be like the jolly green giant sending an atom of its toenail to to find out what is in its left ear. — Sir2u
1. Humans are the only lifeforms (on Earth) capable of studying the universe
2. Humans have an inherent drive for knowledge
The above facts — TheMadFool
The issue here, I believe, is that the above two facts are just your personal beliefs — Rich
To disprove 1 there has to be a nonhuman lifeform that has the same/greater mental faculties. Can you name one? — TheMadFool
This forum, many others, you, me, this conversation, all books written, research done, questions asked and answered are proof of 2. — TheMadFool
Not really. Just different. Anyway, there is no way to know one way or another unless humans define things in terms of putting themselves at the top of the hierarchy, as they normally do. It's good marketing. — Rich
If learning is knowledge, then all life forms do this. — Rich
I guess we can have a poll and see how well your facts are doing? — Rich
I asked you to disprove my claim that humans are the only lifeforms capable of understanding the universe. Can you do that please. — TheMadFool
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