Embedded within Apo's postion is a position of not nature as it functions, but ethics that it ought to function a particular way it does at the moment. — TheWillowOfDarkness
But my point refutes what you seem to be saying in regards to the idea that new ideas of morals cannot work if it is not something in the repertoire of what worked before. — schopenhauer1
So you seem to only give credit to something AFTER it has become the dominant theme, but refute it when it is just starting out, thus making it a circular argument because even current trends started out somewhere. — schopenhauer1
To contextualise it to this discussion, who exactly says human life must be part of the nature which works out. Perhaps, as the anti-natalist argues, that's the part of working nature which ought to end. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So it is not a problem if a system spawns local variety while tracking global continuity. It can do both at the same time. If the local variety proves to have value, then its own influence will grow such that it becomes itself an appropriate level of generalised constraint. — apokrisis
But what actual novelty did you have in mind here? Veganism? Antinatalism? What? — apokrisis
My argument is that it is unlikely to be a winner to the degree it tries to swim against the general tide. — apokrisis
If it is ill-designed in terms of system fundamentals, it would be given little hope of emerging as a success. So the organic view would never say something was impossible, but it can with reason say why a possibility is vanishingly unlikely. — apokrisis
I've already given that kind of argument against antinatalism. It is simple maths that even if 99 out of 100 couples decided to be childless, it only takes one couple - for whatever transmissible reasons - to start breeding and your antinatalism is toast. — apokrisis
Selection acts as a filter to find what works. And what works will replace what doesn't. — apokrisis
So I have no problem with starting out with your "tiny experiments". Organicism take growth/entropification as fundamental. Everything else then follows with natural logic. — apokrisis
It still amounts to admitting what I said has truth to it- varieties can become the dominant, even if it starts out small/unpopular. — schopenhauer1
Now, you are just asserting the opposite what you admitted to briefly above- that local variants can eventually BECOME the general trend. — schopenhauer1
So, rather it is the other way around.. even if one person does not have a kid when they could have, one instance of harm is prevented. — schopenhauer1
What works may be what remains, but what works best is not always the path taken. Contingencies may lead to outcomes which are useful, but not maximally useful. — schopenhauer1
To you, the survival of present relationships in nature "feels" right, — TheWillowOfDarkness
By definition what survives the test of time, survives. It's not a measure of who can survive. Many others could have survived, if only people had acted differently. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If it can make a difference that people acted differently, then there was something they were doing wrong.
And what I am doing is focusing on what "doing right" actually looks like. I'm asking the question of what generic principles can we identify that would be useful in redesigning our current moral codes so as to consciously achieve the future outcomes we might prefer. — apokrisis
It does sometimes. Shallow anti-natalist arguments which life ought to end because suffering exists make this mistake. Other ones, which argue life out to end because suffering of life is unethical, do not. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Of course, the further notions of hierarchical constraint and propensity are then also basic - indeed more so, in explaining why the small/unpopular must exist, even merely as a fluctuation. — apokrisis
Do you not yet understand the difference between the possible and the likely? — apokrisis
History is full of events being diverted by contingencies.. — schopenhauer1
And yet the domestication of the planet, the curve of fossil fuel exploitation, and the overall human population, ride right over all that. — apokrisis
And yet the domestication of the planet, the curve of fossil fuel exploitation, and the overall human population, ride right over all that.
You are telling me that the forest is made up of many trees. I can only nod and say yes, while reminding that you are avoiding the point. — apokrisis
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.