man is part of nature
Man is not supernatural or outside of nature
Man is a natural being — szardosszemagad
Technology appears to be a grotesque manipulation of the natural world, like a cancer that should not exist.
But this also seems to rest on the dichotomy between the world <------------> and us. "The natural world" is not an artifact but a plenum without agents, whereas "us" is filled with agency, purpose, reason. But we are part of the world, we are not separate from it, at least not in any scientific sense (but perhaps in an existential/metaphysical sense). Could there be a science of technology? Could it be that technology is actually one of the many ways the universe ends up organizing itself? Could what we see as artificial, technological, actually be simply a natural expression of the logic of the world?
In a way, the question comes down to: what differentiates the natural from the artificial? — darthbarracuda
Of course we are not replaceable. "You are all replaceable" is management talk for restless workers who might be thinking about organizing a union. We are all individually unique in not just one or two ways, but many ways.
Someone else can perform the boring tasks I do at work. That doesn't make me replaceable. Or you, either. — Bitter Crank
I have problems with calling beaver dams and birds nests 'technology'. Neither birds nor beavers wield their behavior deliberately or consciously. Beavers, for instance, bring branches and mud to locations where there is the sound of running water. That's how they keep their dams ingot repair. Put a speaker on a perfectly fine beaver dam, play the sound of running water, and the speaker will get patched.
A bird that uses grass to make it's nest can not switch to mud, and visa versa. Bees must make 6 sided cells in their honey combs -- it can't be 3 or 4.
I don't want to diminish in any way animal lives. Beavers, birds, bees, and beetles all perform wonderfully at their live-maintaining tasks. Neither do I want to diminish our animal lives. Most animals are part of natural systems. Wetland biology depends on beavers, and pollination depends on insects like bees. Humans don't seem to belong to natural systems. That's one of the problems we grapple with. (We can certainly fit harmoniously in natural systems, but it generally means living a much different kind of life than we normally aspire to.) — Bitter Crank
Nonetheless, I can't help feel that while I am replaceable, the world will go on, my thinking is just enough left of centre to make a contribution somewhere, somehow. I think most people in this forum and maybe everywhere probably feel a bit that way too. — MikeL
After families, friends, colleagues it closes out pretty fast. At the higher global levels of society we are really just numbers unless we do something to distinguish ourselves, but even then we are still very much just a commodity. — MikeL
For the system to work — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I for one do not want to live in a wood shack reading by candlelight and dying at 30. — fishfry
Is it the wood shack, reading by candlelight (you could read in the daytime, ya know), or dying at 30 that you find unsatisfactory? — Bitter Crank
There doesn't seem to be a strict cut-off being what is natural and what is artificial. — darthbarracuda
The simple difference would be that the artificial doesn't have the means to make itself.
Nature makes itself whether that be at the level of rivers carving out their channels or bodies turning food into flesh. The artificial only happens as the result of someone having the idea and the desire to manufacture the material form. — apokrisis
The simple difference would be that the artificial doesn't have the means to make itself.
Nature makes itself whether that be at the level of rivers carving out their channels or bodies turning food into flesh. The artificial only happens as the result of someone having the idea and the desire to manufacture the material form. — apokrisis
Also you personify Nature i — MikeL
What do you mean by "means" in the above statement "it doesn't have the means to make itself"? A robot assembly factory is able to slap together pieces to make another robot. Do you mean resources? — MikeL
Could AI also be a generator of ideas or desires? — MikeL
As to the Matrix, it's a film. Does simulated rain make you really wet? Would a simulated factory make real robots? — apokrisis
It creates dissipative pathways to cool the universe faster. — apokrisis
I read the other day in the New York Times that Neanderthals had learned how to extract a pitch-glue from birch bark. They used it to fasten points to shafts. — Bitter Crank
In a way, the question comes down to: what differentiates the natural from the artificial? — darthbarracuda
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