Do androids dream of electric sheep, is a question that keeps on bothering me when I see your posts with that avatar. Hehe. — Posty McPostface
As long as we were dependent on horsepower and the firepower of cannons firing mere projectiles, we were protected by the limits of our grasp. — BitterCrank
My concept of a change in the human condition is hard to properly describe, and I'm conflicted about the concept itself. My view of it is based in a Judeo-Christian conception of morality, admittedly, even though I'm no longer a Christian per se. I try to avoid that aspect, simply because I want to deal with the ideas as objectively as I can without introducing assumptions and baggage, both my own, and your's/the reader's, etc. Making all of this more confusing, I'm on the fence as to whether the human condition is something that we can change ourselves. I see a conflict between the heights that humanity can arrive at, and the depths that we can fall into. And so I have a fundamental tension in my view of whether we can and should strive to change our condition, or whether it's hubris. BUT, one thing that I'm sure of is that our physical striving to change our condition, tech, is utterly inert and unable to change our condition. I think I've already made my points about that. To the contrary, the human condition is an inner condition, in the sense of an esoteric, rather than an exoteric condition; the human condition is not a material condition; it's a spiritual condition. We live in a world of spiritual poverty. The human condition is spiritual poverty. For that to change from spiritual poverty to spiritual nourishment would require a profound shift. I don't know how it can be done. But I refuse nihilism on the shear basis of my own living and breathing existence, and so I have to entertain the possibility of a shift from spiritual poverty to spiritual nourishment. It's apophatic; I know it's possible because I feel it's lack. — Noble Dust
Solar sounds good. But you don't do solar; you do the business of doing solar - unless you want to be the guy screwing the panels on someone's roof. Nothing mysterious here, the same could be said for any endeavor. It's a little like liking hamburgers, so you decide to open a hamburger business - the business of hamburgers isn't eating hamburgers, it's getting other people to buy the hamburgers. That's all, and you already know this, right?Which is what exactly? I'm afraid of committing if there's something I haven't considered here. — Posty McPostface
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