Birds gotta fly, fish gotta swim, and we gotta invent technology because its built into the very fabric of existence itself where everything revolves around what's missing from this picture. — wuliheron
Are you putting forth a radically hard-determinist perspective? — Metaphysician Undercover
do these technologies and scientific discoveries provide some sort of overarching meaning to our species? — Schopenhauer1
With all this being said, do these technologies and scientific discoveries provide some sort of overarching meaning to our species? If our species died out, arguably it would be the loss of scientific knowledge and technological innovations that would be most missed in its absence from the universe (at least from the vantage point of us imagining its non-existence as we stand here as already existing beings that are projecting a future state of affairs). — schopenhauer1
Is technology the reason why one should not be an antinatalist.. If our species can produce such things with our minds.. how can the Human Project be bad (and even more extreme discontinued) when new humans can contribute to and experience this technology? — schopenhauer1
Is the antinatalist ungrateful to the technology that has been the outgrowth of various industrial revolutions and discoveries? Should the mastery of various fields of knowledge that contribute to the maintenance and growth of discoveries and technologies be exalted? — schopenhauer1
We surely benefit from technology, no doubt about that. But at what cost? Was it all really worth it in the end? Or are we just massaging our egos? — darthbarracuda
But surely you know that we are integrated with technology so heavily, there is no way for our species to escape it as something we are working for. Think about it, almost everything you touch involves technology.. In fact, your whole mode of survival relies upon and involves the maintenance and growth of technology, whether you are conscious of what we are doing or not. There's not a day that goes by that you are not affected by technology and not only technology but technology stemming from the last two centuries. — schopenhauer1
With the utility that comes with technology, many people will point to this as a summum bonum of modern society. How can one have feelings of ennui and world-weariness when we can master our environment, create new possibilities, and be able to participate in the maintenance of these newfound ways of surviving and living, so people will say. — schopenhauer1
True. But I'd say the economic aspect of technology is what makes this so. The reason we have so much technology is because technology is profitable, and it's profitable because we want to live more comfortable lives. I can respect technology that helps us live more comfortable lives. — darthbarracuda
Who are these people that say these things specifically? — darthbarracuda
I guess my question to you is does science and technology provide a meaning in itself to humans that justifies the Human Project even if we have negative feelings towards existence..including all the contingent and circumstantial harms we experience and all the understanding of what I call our "existential boundaries" which are the feelings we have when contemplating existence as a whole.. things like absurdity, instrumentality, angst, ennui, etc. Its so pervasive in our life that any other candidate for worthwhile human activity is really touched by it..aesthetics/art/music, entertainment activities, learning, relationships, etc. All things fall into the milieu of technology.. and thus one might argue that we should have feelings of awe, gratitude, and positive evaluation of the fact that we have such novelty, innovation, and harnessing of our environment. The mod of living-through-technology itself becomes a purpose. — schopenhauer1
I guess my question to you is does science and technology provide a meaning in itself to humans that justifies the Human Project... — Schopenhauer1
The educational consultant I mentioned above says that children need to learn maths and literacy the old-fashioned way - lots of memorisation, lots of drills, lots of old-fashioned work. The idea that technology can take that requirement away is a glamorous illusion. — Wayfarer
It might be helpful to take a longer-range view of technology than the last 150 years (1870 to the present) because we are very much in the middle of this unfolding process (Revolution? Maybe.) and it is much too soon to arrive at definite conclusions. A slightly longer-range view might start with Guttenberg's printing press around 575 years ago. Marshall McLuhan's Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man (1962). — Bitter Crank
The vendors - Apple, Microsoft, Google, Facebook - are all vested interests, they have their own agenda. — Wayfarer
I want to broaden this a bit more to an existential level. Is technology a reason to use against the antinatalist? — schopenhauer1
As you know, many "elite" or those who think themselves so in the middle class, or any class for that matter, will simply point to the fact that we "do" technology.. that we can innovate and discover and create new possibilities as the reason why bringing new people into the world is good. — schopenhauer1
I am not an antinatalist, but I do not think "doing technology", "consuming information", or "Liking" every pile of horse shit on Facebook in itself provides any reason whatsoever to bring more people into the world, or to continue living if one is tired of life. Facebook is not life (some people to the contrary). — Bitter Crank
Love makes life worth living, not technology, or nothing does. (And not "love" of one's new IPhone 7, either.) Agape, Eros, Filio, and Storge are what makes life worth living, and the object of these loves is other people. — Bitter Crank
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