Wayfarer         
         
Paine         
         This newfound autonomy freed individuals from dogmatic authority but also cut them adrift from any shared sense of purpose. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         The algebra stuff was good. — Paine
But a lot of the received ideas and practices in the past also sucked. — Paine
Janus         
         
Wayfarer         
         That being a different standard of measure from a golden age idea. — Paine
Tom Storm         
         
Wayfarer         
         Yes, the only possibility for a return to universally shared life purpose is totalitarian. Given inherent human diversity and creativity, why would we ever want something so stultifying as a universally held meaning or purpose? — Janus
I am unconvinced that there is a “meaning crisis.” — Tom Storm
Tom Storm         
         The world is converging on a series of overlapping crises, political, economic, existential and environmental. If you can't see that, then I won't try and persuade you otherwise. — Wayfarer
ChatteringMonkey         
         
Wayfarer         
         When has the world not appeared to be in some kind of crisis? — Tom Storm
Tom Storm         
         it seems to me, at least, that for very long periods of time, in pre-history at least, that almost nothing happened that is remotely comparable to the crises facing current culture. — Wayfarer
It is about the way in which our collective culture has engendered that sense of meaningless, alienation and anomie, which I think is unarguably a characteristic of globalised Western culture. — Wayfarer
The task now, as John Vervaeke spells it out in his Awakening from the Meaning Crisis is to rediscover a living integration of science, meaning, and wisdom—to awaken from or see through the divisions that underlie the meaning crisis. — Wayfarer
Paine         
         
Wayfarer         
         there’s the assumption that before we “took the wrong fork in the road,” everything was fine and that if only we hadn’t taken it, we would never have ended up in this mess. — Tom Storm
Or do we need to use the freedoms of Western culture to find better ways of living, grounded in more pragmatic approaches to survival? — Tom Storm
Janus         
         You need to understand that the search for meaning is not a script or a dogma. It is not about returning to some imagined pre-modern utopia at all. Every time this is discussed, that is what you assume that I'm talking about, hence your mistaken depiction of me as a 'proselytizing dogmatist'. — Wayfarer
Yes, the only possibility for a return to universally shared life purpose is totalitarian.
— Janus
:meh: — 180 Proof
Maybe because meaningful is only really meaningful if it transcends mere individual preferences, because it plays a part in a larger whole... that would be the reason for it. — ChatteringMonkey
Tom Storm         
         But the key point is, to overcome or transcend that sense of the Universe being fundamentally meaningless and life as a kind of fluke set of circumstances - even knowing what we know about the Cosmos, which is vastly more, and vastly different, to what our forbears could have known. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         Can you explain how the search for and finding of meaning could be universally shared in a world of human diversity? — Janus
Janus         
         Look, we’ve had about 150 years of genuine secularism in the West (and the journey began before that), but to imagine that thousands of years of theism and religious values are not at least partly to blame for our presuppositions and our current predicament seems distorted. — Tom Storm
ChatteringMonkey         
         Okay, that's an assertion―can you provide an argument for it? I mean, we all, as members of a society, and to one degree of consciousness or another, play a part in a larger whole―we have no choice but to do that. — Janus
Wayfarer         
         
Tom Storm         
         
ChatteringMonkey         
         Science remains indispensable, but it cannot by itself tell us what anything means. One can retain plenty of respect for science while recognising that fact, which is built into the very foundations of the method. — Wayfarer
Apustimelogist         
         
Janus         
         But the societies we are a part of aren't recognized as being an end in themselves, they are just there to fulfil the desires of it's members. — ChatteringMonkey
I don’t disagree that education, greed, and social dysfunction are serious issues, but those are symptoms rather than the root. — Wayfarer
Vague, oversimplistic, poorly motivated ideologies that claim to solve all our problems like this are distractions from actual problems and actual solutions, imo. — Apustimelogist
Tom Storm         
         it’s about the underlying ontology of modernity — the way the scientific worldview, as inherited from Galileo and Descartes, implicitly defines reality as value-free and mindless. Once meaning is exiled from the fabric of being, everything else — from consumerism to the instrumentalisation of knowledge — follows naturally. — Wayfarer
So the crisis isn’t a call to religion, but a call to re-examine the metaphysical assumptions we’ve inherited. Science remains indispensable, but it cannot by itself tell us what anything means. One can retain plenty of respect for science while recognising that fact, which is built into the very foundations of the method. — Wayfarer
T Clark         
         I am unconvinced that there is a “meaning crisis.” — Tom Storm
Can we point to a time before modernity when the worldview was coherent and therefore life was better for most human beings? — Tom Storm
environmental destruction and many of the ills of modernity, how much of this can be more accurately attributed to the form of capitalism and corporate control under which we live — Tom Storm
When has the world not appeared to be in some kind of crisis? That's the point, surely. You are talking about a Meaning Crisis and I've asked a few questions about this, that's all. — Tom Storm
Isn’t this simply a factor of population growth and the successes and failures of technology and capitalism? We were always flawed; it’s just that our present technology and population size makes those flaws more dangerous. — Tom Storm
Or do we need to use the freedoms of Western culture to find better ways of living, grounded in more pragmatic approaches to survival? — Tom Storm
ChatteringMonkey         
         But the societies we are a part of aren't recognized as being an end in themselves, they are just there to fulfil the desires of it's members.
— ChatteringMonkey
If the desires are conditioned into the people rather than being critically realized by them, then of course that's a problem. We come to be blind followers instead of critically active members in our communities.
Today we might say we are brainwashed by culture in the form of advertising and popular media, whereas in the past, in theocratic and aristocratic societies, and today in autocratic societies, critical thinking is not only implicitly discouraged, but explicitly banned under penalty of punishment. — Janus
Tom Storm         
         I’m not usually a hell in a handbasket type, but I guess I’m not sure we have the wherewithal to do this. In a sense I guess we need the kind of gumption that comes with commitment to a coherent cultural vision which may no longer be available to us. I think we’re perfectly capable of driving this bus off the cliff. — T Clark
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.