What's with the need to propagate ourselves through time? — MikeL
Perhaps you don't find it interesting because you don't understand what it is saying; which would be a bit ironic since you claim to be a "curious"/unbiased person. — dclements
It's interesting to think there is a masked program running in us, making us think one thing when another thing is true. — MikeL
Why the fancy programming? — MikeL
Why not just be eaten by the tiger so we can become part of the tiger? — MikeL
Why do we tend to our offspring so diligently, protect them so fiercely, ensure they have a much better chance of success in this world than we did? — MikeL
In the case of why we desire to preserve and reproduce ourselves, "evolutionary theory" is the mask, where there is no meaning or purpose to "why", but rather, only a series of random encounters between atomic particles. This is why evolutionary theory suggests a process which happens over billions of years; it needs that much time for all the trial and error because there is nothing guiding the atoms in how they interact. — John Days
I don't know. It simply does not make sense. Is there another mask? Why not be, and then be gone? — MikeL
but I just can't accept that this process is able to create organisms that possess a higher sense of their environment then their apparent senses allow. — MikeL
...a driving force ... that makes us do one thing for one reason when another reason is the real motivation, we introduce the ... notion of dualism: ... programmer and programmed, and this can easily flow into a creator/created debate, but I will not go there today. — MikeL
And I do agree that there is a very good reason for these masks... the perpetuation of the species... but my question was, who decided that was important anyway? — MikeL
The cyclical argument that we survive because survival was selected for by evolution is also interesting and a little illuminating if we let it shed a new light on time itself. Because what we really mean is that Time was selected for by evolution. Survival is, of course, survival through time. — MikeL
For the most part we are motivated by survival, boredom, and dissatisfaction. — schopenhauer1
There isn't any "reason" for any creature to reproduce — Bitter Crank
Ugh. You are merely relating your own experiences. For the most part I am motivated by creativity and nicely in all arts, and it brings me joy. — Rich
Is it? Artistic pursuits are just a second order effect of your underlying boredom — schopenhauer1
It's interesting to think there is a masked program running in us, making us think one thing when another thing is true.
But back to self-preservation and replication. Why do we want to preserve ourselves anyway? Why the fancy programming? Why not just be eaten by the tiger so we can become part of the tiger? Why do we tend to our offspring so diligently, protect them so fiercely, ensure they have a much better chance of success in this world than we did? — MikeL
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