In the everyday common sense term, progress just means to move forward. If we obtain a goal, we progress. If we acquire something better, we progress. If something changes, it progresses, thus progress is tied inherently to process (a process can progress through stages). — darthbarracuda
In the more philosophical, existential sense, progress, in my opinion, is an unsustainable process that can only happen in a "bubble", or in more scientific terms, a system with a consistent source of energy. The environment we call Earth can be harnessed to produce technology that better aids our societies. We can progress out of more archaic moral ideas. All of this progress exists and is entirely dependent upon the "bubble" we call Earth. — darthbarracuda
I think we should make a distinction here between progress: forward or onward movement toward a destination. versus progress: advance or develop toward a better, more complete, or more modern state. I'm using the second term. — schopenhauer1
Is there something that is "shown" to us in this understanding that we can "progress"? Sure, much of it is habituation that gets stronger over time, or accumulation that gets more integrated, but it is a function of the human experience to experience this "getting better" "getting more refined" or just progressing. I'm not sure I have this fully fleshed out, but there is something I am trying to get at, and perhaps a dialogue will tease it out. Don't worry, I'm not trying to get all Nietzschean or rosy-eyed optimistic here, but I am just trying to work with this concept of progress in the individual and group sense. — schopenhauer1
But eventually Earth will be destroyed as the Sun loses hydrogen and helium to fuse and begins to expand and contract in a fluctuating process before it slowly simmers out. If humans haven't moved on from Earth, all of our progress will have been destroyed. The "bubble" will have been popped. — darthbarracuda
It won't be necessary to wait that long. By any stretch of the imagination, the 'bubble' will have burst long before then. — Bitter Crank
1) What is everyone's definition of "progress"? If you practice something real hard, you get "better" at it. Does progress have to do with getting better, for example? And if it does, what is the epistemological judgement for what is better? — schopenhauer1
2) Is progress real in some metaphysical sense? — schopenhauer1
3) Does progress occur at only the personal level, or can it describe humanity or the world as a whole? Some people claim that progress is the aim of existence. Here, I think of people like Hegel and his notion of historical dialectic. Some people claim that things are the same as they ever were. Here I think of Schopenhauer and his idea that all is really Will, and no matter how Will manifests itself, it is pretty much the same thing. — schopenhauer1
It can describe humanity as a whole, viewed as a collection of individuals. — Thorongil
I would like to know exactly "what" it is in some sort of epistemological sense (how do we go about knowing it") and and metaphysical sense ("how/why/what it is"). — schopenhauer1
It doesn't exist metaphysically. It's just an abstract concept used to describe the movement towards a particular goal. I would not link it to virtue, seeing as there is all around us the steady progress of injustice, ignorance, and evil just as much, if not greatly more so, than there is of justice, knowledge, and goodness. — Thorongil
What I'm saying is that perhaps at some point in ancient history, it was perceived that having certain "virtues" meant better survival. — schopenhauer1
I think the truly virtuous understand that the good is pursued for its own sake. To instrumentalize it is to take away all meaning and uniqueness from it. But pursuing the good is not to pursue progress. Progress can be made in the pursuit of it, but progress in and of itself is value-neutral. One can make progress towards anything. including evil. — Thorongil
Anyways, I just wanted to see if progress is just another thing we look at and hold as a "see existence is showing us some meaning" when really things are more instrumental than that. Life itself is instrumental. We do, we do things better, but what of it? We are doing things, but we simply do because we are striving forward. We cannot help but do otherwise. — schopenhauer1
Levinas said it well when he proclaimed fatigue as being a fundamental aspect of a human. — darthbarracuda
Nagel also was correct in that anything, anywhere, can be seen as absurd. — darthbarracuda
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