Presumably I'm not explaining myself clearly enough. Despite two attempts to explain otherwise, you still seem to be working on the idea that I'm saying all activities related to having children are directly the result of instinct without any other input. — Pseudonym
I've said twice now that behaviour is the result of a reaction between instinct and the environment (culture/nature). No matter how much cultural /environmental involvement you posit, desire has to ultimately be innate otherwise we would never do anything. How do you think a culture creates a desire? — Pseudonym
Maybe it will clarify if you can explain why your apparent view that Aristotelian teleology is "real" rather than "as if."
— praxis
That sentence doesn't make sense as it stands. I'll presume you're asking me to explain why I think Aristotelian teleology (if true) would be a form of real teleology rather than an "as if" teleology?
The reason would be that Aristotelian teleology understands final cause, purpose, function, as intrinsic to nature, whereas when teleological concepts are used in biology, for example, it's just a manner of speaking (that's what I mean by "as if"). — gurugeorge
Right, the metaphysical form of naturalism is synonymous with scientific materialism.
— praxis
No, scientific materialism is one form of metaphysical naturalism, it's not "synonymous" with it, it's a subset or sub-type of it, one form of it. — gurugeorge
I meant that a fully satisfactory story about the Universe has to be complete, and ultimately grounded in self-evidence. — gurugeorge
Why is an overarching narrative necessary to ground our values?
— praxis
Because values partly pertain to the world around you that's not-you, yet values you merely create for yourself have no necessary connection to the world that's not-you. — gurugeorge
Basically your position boils down to the fact that the scientific explanation for why things are as they are is insufficient because it cannot (does not even attempt to) demonstrate that they necessarily are that way, just that that is they way they seem to be. I'm with you so far, that's a perfectly sound definition of science. — Pseudonym
But then you go on to say that various metaphysical positions do give reasons why things are the way they are necessarily because of some metaphysical mumbo-jumbo, which you can't quite remember but nonetheless believe profoundly is the case. — Pseudonym
In the field of biology, an example of an intrinsic teleological claim might be that the purpose of a birds wings is for flying. This is "real" or valid teleology. — praxis
An example of invalid or nonsensical teleology — praxis
Religious narratives are far from offering a complete account for everything in the universe.They don't need to. They just need to be meaningful. — praxis
You're not explaining why an overarching narrative is necessary to retain values. You're only saying that an individual's values may not jive well with the world around them. That is obvious and unenlightening. — praxis
I apologise if my tone had offended you, it was not my intention. — Pseudonym
I just don't think you can suggest with any authority that the desire to raise children is not a natural instinct. Any creature which did not have the desire to both have, and successfully raise, young hard-wired into their DNA would simply have become extinct long ago. It is absolutely without doubt that if anything at all is a natural instinct then raising children is. — Pseudonym
Then what's been your problem all through our conversation? You've professed to be baffled by the difference between the two positions, you've furrowed your brow in puzzlement, you don't understand, etc., etc. So now you're telling me you do understand after all? Huh. So what was all that rigmarole about then? — gurugeorge
All that needs to take place for procreation is any functional process that creates more humans. — schopenhauer1
The avenue can be instinctual (I.e. innate like other animals) or it can be cultural (like humans). — schopenhauer1
The thing is “raising a child” and “birth” are conceptual. That is these are linguistically-based. That is, they are derived socially through more complex learning. They are not innate. — schopenhauer1
I never professed to be baffled by the suggestion that there was any difference at all. — Pseudonym
Youve jumped from some epistemological difference (namely that aristolelian 'natures' are necessarily the case whereas scientific descriptions only 'appear' to be the case, to talk about 'meaning' and I've yet to understand how you got from one to the other.
How exactly does a thing 'necessarily' being the way it is rather than merely 'appearing' to be the way it is have a negative impact on the meaning we assign it, and what evidence do you have that this is happening? — Pseudonym
No, because we are in competition with other humans and animals, that's the nature of evolution. If all we did was produce children, but another tribe produced them, taught and kept them healthy and generally well cared for, the latter tribe would soon out-breed the former. — Pseudonym
The avenue can be instinctual (I.e. innate like other animals) or it can be cultural (like humans).
— schopenhauer1
Yes, but it's a vastly more likely and a simpler explanation to say that humans have the same instinct to successfully raise young adults any other animal, why would we invent a new reason for our own apparent desire? — Pseudonym
I just don't understand how you can say this in the face of the overwhelming evidence from evolution that this is not the case. Am I missing something? It sounds like you're trying to make an argument that despite the urge to successfully raise young being evident in literally every living thing that has ever been, and it being an absolute necessity for a species to survive, the human version of it is entirely cultural, that we're the only animal to have ever lived that doesn't have an instinctive desire to raise children but luckily (for our survival thus far) we just happen to have replaced our missing instinctive desire with a culturally imposed one. You realise that sounds crazy. — Pseudonym
In the field of biology, an example of an intrinsic teleological claim might be that the purpose of a birds wings is for flying. This is "real" or valid teleology.
— praxis
Not for science it isn't, there is no real or valid teleology for science at all. I've just explained to you, teleological talk in science as it stands today is just a convenience, a manner of speaking, a compressed explanation, etc. Since I've been through this several times already with you, and more recently with Pseudonym, I'm not going to repeat myself. — gurugeorge
Invalid or nonsensical is not the opposite of real in this context. — gurugeorge
... people generally want the same values to be an integral part of reality AND an integral part of themselves, so that they are bound to, at home in, the world around them. — gurugeorge
What evidence have you that "I desire to raise a child" is anything but a linguistic notion where first you have to have a notion of self, world, other, caring for, reproduction, etc. etc. — schopenhauer1
That literally all other animals raise young - some in quite complex and long-term ways. How on earth do you think they do this without a desire to do it motivating them. Are you suggesting that Elephants spend 16 years nurturing, feeding and protecting their young entirely by accident? — Pseudonym
Yes, it is an instinct for the elephant parent. For the human it is cultural to raise a child. — schopenhauer1
Why? For what sound logical reason are you proposing (insisting, in fact) that humans, despite having evolved in exactly the same way as all other animals, mysteriously lack an instinct present in all other animals, even though the evidence for it is so clearly present that you've had to come up with some other explanation for it. — Pseudonym
Well, evolution comes in the picture in that humans evolved language/conceptual abilities (along with other cognitive tools that bolstered this). This separated behavior that is purely motivated by innate instinct with cultural transmission to a very high degree. Then, survival becomes a "virtual world" of cultural integration mediated through the primary language of the community. Thus, biological evolution does play a role in this in shaping our cognitive faculties to have a conceptually-wired brain. This same brain being the one that helps produce cultural practices that maintain the tribe, etc. A more interesting question perhaps is why is it that reproduction/procreation became so important for the tribe. Clearly, children were a utility and perhaps a source of pride, but again, that all circles back tot he fact that it is still conceptual and based on the communities values in the first place. What we can say is it is a strong preference for human communities that gets enculturated as the values of the individuals of the community and then gets passed down the generations. — schopenhauer1
You keep insisting that the desire to raise children is cultural in humans but instinctive in all other animals without providing any reason at all why that should be the case. — Pseudonym
I understand the distinction you're making I don't understand why. It doesn't matter how many times you keep repeating it it doesn't magically make it true. — Pseudonym
Again, how do concepts like "child" or "taking care of" occur before pre-linguistically? What does a desire for any X thing look like prior to language? I cannot conceive of such complex ideas being "desired" prior to language in humans. Basic things like hunger, thirst, warmth, pleasure, fear, etc. I can see being pre-linguistic, but how is something as complex as "I desire to raise a child" anything but linguistically-based? How does that kind of complex statement work prior to language? You need a conception of self, other, the idea of raising something, etc. These are all linguistically derived. I don't see how it is otherwise. — schopenhauer1
I'm not sure why you think it's untrue. I am trying to understand where you think that humans have an "innate" desire to raise children by asking — schopenhauer1
What you still haven't explained is why you've chosen your new possibility, when the existing one already explains everything. — Pseudonym
What does a desire for any X thing look like prior to language? — schopenhauer1
have never seen a human have a pre-linguistic thought as such. How are we to tell? — schopenhauer1
Also, what empirical evidence is there that "I want to raise a child" is hard-wired? — schopenhauer1
It looks like someone acting in such a way as to bring the object of that desire about. If someone acts in such a way as to eat cake, we can can presume they desire to eat cake, if someone books a holiday in the Algarve, we can presume they desire a holiday in the Algarve. We might need to do some work to get at what the underlying desires might be, but that's not scientifically unusual. Evolutionary biologists make completely unremarkable educated guesses as to what a particular limb or organ is 'for' in evolutionary terms. It's really no big deal to do the same with apparent desires. — Pseudonym
You realise this is self-immunising don't you? If you can't tell whether someone is having a pre-linguistic thought, then how do you know they're not? — Pseudonym
I've already given you the evidence (out of respect for your preferred tone I'm not going to tell you how many times). It is that every single other animal on earth has such a desire hard-wired. How much more evidence do you need than it being the case for literally every other example in existence?
If you have some religious conviction that humans are special, that's fine, but it makes it easier to discuss if you make that clear from the outset. — Pseudonym
You say teleology in science is a "compressed" explanation. Yet another one of your idiosyncratic terms that makes it difficult to communicate with you. Are you doing this on purpose? Anyway, technically all explanations are compressed as no explanation can account for everything, so it's only a matter of how compressed. — praxis
What distinguishes a teleological explanation is that it explains phenomena by the purpose it serves rather than by assumed causes. — praxis
Some of what you say here reminds me of the following recent speech by W.L. Craig I saw, which might be relevant to the thread — Thorongil
The preference for a holiday, let alone a "holiday at Algrave" is not something that just wells inside of us like some primal desire. — schopenhauer1
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