questions should be asked about why traditional culture failed — Bitter Crank
Evolution should not lead us to think of ourselves as soulless creatures of deterministic processes. — Bitter Crank
It was also in many cases the philosophers who contributed the mathematical descriptions that became the centerpiece of science. — Joshs
Obviously yes. — charleton
I don't follow exactly what you mean here. — Agustino
No, but many believed that the deliverances of mystical experiences were affective insights or intuitions that could be conveyed to others through means other than faith (like meditation, prayer, asceticism, etc.) — Agustino
Ah okay, I see what you mean. The term "familiarity" threw me off a bit initially, couldn't quite grasp what you meant. I've written on this in the past but this sort of familiarity can often be cashed out in the form of practical knowledge. And many times we gain practical knowledge about something by doing, and only later translate it into discourse. And in fact, discourse alone can never be sufficient to completely reveal the practical knowledge from which it emerged. Rather discourse offers signposts, but it's up to the listener to creatively appropriate the signposts as he is trying to practically do - he still needs to relate these signposts, the words, to elements from within his own experience.The kinds of knowledge (In the Biblical sense of familiarity captured in the Biblical expression for sexual intercourse: "a man knows his wife") I was referring to just are "affective insights or intutions". — Janus
Do affective insights and intuition require faith to happen in the first place, or does faith arise as a result of them? I'd think it's a bit of both. You certainly need some faith - or at least openness to the experience - otherwise, it's impossible to have it if you harden your heart against it. But then meditation, prayer, asceticism etc. are preparatory for such affective insights and intuitions - they do not generate them, but they make the participant open to them - they come by grace as it were.But I don't think those operate independently of faith. (i.e. meditation, prayer, ascetism, etc will not work absent affective insight and intuition and the faith they give rise to). — Janus
Do affective insights and intuition require faith to happen in the first place, or does faith arise as a result of them? I'd think it's a bit of both. — Agustino
And many times we gain practical knowledge about something by doing, and only later translate it into discourse. — Agustino
And this is an essential property of consciousness - consciousness has access to this direct intuition in matters that computers can only calculate step by step. — Agustino
Evolution should not lead us to think of ourselves as soulless creatures of deterministic processes.
— Bitter Crank
Well, that’s my only beef with it. Insofar as it doesn’t do that, I don’t have any issue with it. — Wayfarer
They may employ evolution, but Darwin isn't their source book. — Bitter Crank
Yeah but it is actually. Western culture seized on evolutionary theory as a way to bring human beings within scope for science. That is why the 'new atheists' - Dennett, Dawkins, and others - are all 'Darwinian fundamentalists'. There is only one possible 'creation myth' and that is the one that (surprise!) happens to provide an exact analogy for capitalist free-market economic — Wayfarer
But what makes us different to animals, is not only a matter of a biological difference. — Wayfarer
... humans are able to reflect on the nature of existence in a way that animals simply cannot. — Wayfarer
But the influence of evolutionary biology on philosophy, ethics, psychology, and culture in general is often regrettable, in my view. It’s something I have only begun to notice because of the culture wars over evolution. — Wayfarer
When man lived securely under the canopy of the Judeo-Christian world picture he was part of a great whole; to put it in our terms, his cosmic heroism was completely mapped out, it was unmistakable. He came from the invisible world into the visible one by the act of God, did his duty to God by living out his life with dignity and faith… offering his whole life—as Christ had—to the Father. In turn he was justified by the Father and rewarded with eternal life in the invisible dimension. Little did it matter that earth was a vale of tears, of horrid sufferings of incommensurateness, of torturous and humiliating daily pettiness, of sickness and death, a place where man felt he did not belong, “the wrong place,” as Chesterton said…. In a word, man’s cosmic heroism was assured, even if he was as nothing. This was the most remarkable achievement of the Christian world picture: that it could take slaves, cripples, imbeciles, the simple and the mighty, and make them all secure heroes, simply by taking a step back from the world into another dimension of things, the dimension called heaven. Or we might better say that Christianity took creature consciousness—the thing man most wanted to deny—and made it the very condition for his cosmic heroism.
In a universe of blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won't find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference. DNA neither knows nor cares. DNA just is. And we dance to its music.
What you're not seeing is the broader cultural issue. — Wayfarer
Ernest Becker, The Denial of Death (New York, Free Press, 1973), xvii
Richard Dawkins, River out of Eden.
So, given the average reading age and intelligence, and the inability to devote time to pondering such questions, which do you think might be the more likely to give rise to 'nihilism and anti-natalism'? — Wayfarer
Your OP is basically 'ain't life grand? — Wayfarer
I'm not all that worried about antinatalists. There are more children being born than the world can reasonably support, so antinatalism makes sense from that angle. I know people who have opted to not have children for philosophical reasons, who aren't quite antinatalists. It's an entirely supportable position, at least from some angles. Being a gay guy, I never intended to have children. Not fathering a brood hasn't felt like a loss to me. — Bitter Crank
I haven't checked that thread out (yet), but language functions differently than consciousness. A computer is basically a language processor. All language processing takes time, and it's a cumulative, step-by-step process. There are no "insights". If you give a computer a 100x100 matrix full of 0s with the exception of one non-zero number, the only way it can establish that that matrix has 9,999 zeros is by going through each element one by one and recording how many zeros it finds. That means it essentially must do 10,000 calculations. The computer can also be aware of context, provided it stores it into memory. So if it stores the number of 0s in the matrix in a variable, or it notes the row and column position of the non-zero number as well as its value + the total number of rows and columns, then it could be aware of the context. Then, if it has to multiply that 100x100 matrix by another one it could simplify the process, now being aware of the internal and external structure of the matrix.Yes the difference between computers and humans (as well as animals) is the ability to grasp context. An interesting point I noticed in the 'Lions and Grammar' thread is that the grammatical structures of symbolic language allow context to be separated from the world and imported into language itself. However this is still dependent on the original animal ability to grasp context in the 'umwelt' sense; that is common to both humans and animals. — Janus
And many times we gain practical knowledge about something by doing, and only later translate it into discourse. — Agustino
We're talking past one another at this point, so I'll leave it for another time. — Noble Dust
Merry Christmas! Well, I meant the same thing as when I say you are objectively aware of something - ie you can judge it and react appropriately to it. So in this case, the computer would be able to multiply the 100x100 matrix once it has stored its properties in memory by another matrix without doing all the calculations one by one - ie it would be able to do exactly the same thing as you would be able to do from a pragmatic point of view.What you call the computer's "being aware of context" would seem to be merely an algorithm though, not a true awareness, and much less a self-conscious awareness. — Janus
You mentioned our relation with other animals in a previous post. Other animals do not self-reflect. ... Other animals do their business without a secondary level thinking on top of it. ... We have anchoring mechanisms, distracting mechanisms, isolating mechanisms, and sublimation mechanisms. ... — schopenhauer1
Of course, being the self-reflective creature we are, we can then ask the why. Breeding all of a sudden is broken asunder — schopenhauer1
What is it that it is not enough for just the already-living to endure/experience, why must it be expanded. If you say it is because of some experiment, that these new people will bring something novel, it would be using them for the hope of some novel outcome. If you just want new people to "experience" life, then you must ask what it is about enduring life, overcoming challenges, and experiencing harm, that is an imperative to be experienced by yet another person. It is not so easy as other animals, you see. — schopenhauer1
"Hmmm, I'm going to run out milk tomorrow--better get some more." Or "You know what, I should fix the roof before it starts raining again."
But, "Gee whiz, I'm already 30 years old, and retirement is only 45 years away. I'd better start saving for retirement!" Non monsieur.
"Oh dear, we're already past peak oil! Better replace the petroleum based economy!" No way, y'all. Gotta keep pumping."
"God help us, CO2 will ruin the climate, not to mention methane and CFCs." Don't worry, dear, some future generation will jump off that bridge when they get to it.
There may not be a purpose for us to fulfill, there may be no unifying pattern which makes all life meaningful — Bitter Crank
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