Sure, but the choice of purpose is totally arbitrary, and it's hard to get excited about something superfluous. — yupamiralda
Cockroaches and viruses are non human. Are they sacred?Sacred entails non human. Fully valorizing what isn't human, and fear of autonomous history or time without subjecting it to abolition and recreation. In a way, prehistory or the Golden Age could be considered sacred. It doesn't make sense to attach special importance to recorded, additive time, lineal historicity, or to treat modernity as more advanced. It isn't more advanced for all we know. — Anthony
I also said that it is an anthropomorphic projection of a human mind onto the universe. I gave the definition per Wikipedia in that same post, where it is believed that everything has a spiritual essence. What is the difference between the spiritual and the mental, or the spirit and the mind?Animism is more the opposite of what you say here. — Anthony
You're forgetting how modern science has taken humans off of their pedestal and placed them squarely within the natural domain, as a product of natural processes, and moved human's home - Earth, from the center of the universe to a remote place in the universe. Science is what has shown us that we aren't as important as we think, and it is science that the religious fear because it removes humans special place in reality. Science humbles. Religion inflates one's own self-importance. Just look at the haughty claims made by the religious and spiritualists. They make claims of truth and don't question it. Science constantly questions its own claims.The Enlightenment has led to transhumanism, the most human-centered orientation ever; to be sure the post human thinks he is the focus of creation. It's already an anthropocentric view to think in terms of a creation, we don't know if the universe had a beginning. — Anthony
Exactly. How can a human reproduce without participating in culture?For a biological organism, success is reproduction. With mammals this includes child-rearing. With humans one could argue it includes "culture". — yupamiralda
For one, I never said there were errors in your claims. I said that they were incoherent, hence the follow-up questions that you avoided.By pointing out the error in the claim, of course. — praxis
How is something that is successful, bleak? — Harry Hindu
Well, legend has it that Sisyphus successfully rolled a rock up a hill. :party: — praxis
This isn't an error that I pointed out and you ignored?I dont see the bleakness in the above quote. — Harry Hindu
:roll: I never said you "claimed" to be avoiding my questions. You don't need to claim avoid a question, you actually do it. Actions (or inaction in this case) speak louder than words.I haven’t claimed to be avoiding your questions. — praxis
Why would you assume that I didn't care if I was participating in the discussion? Again actions speak louder than words. My actions speak for themselves, so how you assumed that I didn't care, I have no idea. When someone abandons the discussion, then that is when they show that they no longer care.I didn’t assume that you cared. I simply pointed out an absurdist when you inquired about the meaning of the absurd. — praxis
You made a claim about why people think life is absurd. I pointed out that is equivalent to a God of the Gaps argument. Some people aren't comfortable with not knowing something, so they create their own answers, or meanings for their existence. That is fine, as it is what I said in the my first post in this thread. One can create has meaning in their actions. It is when they project that same meaning onto others - as if they have the same meaning - is when we run into debates like this.Why do some think it is? Because they’re not comfortable with not knowing, I suppose.
What do you think?
— praxis
I think that you have just described the God of the Gaps.
— Harry Hindu
Nonsense, I’ve made no metaphysical description or claim whatever.
What do you think? — praxis
What exactly does this mean - that philosophy doesn't provide answers or even knowledge to such questions, so we should keep in the philosophical domain to never be answered?Anyway, if that were known it wouldn’t be a philosophical matter. — praxis
By pointing out the error in the claim, of course.
— praxis
For one, I never said there were errors in your claims. I said that they were incoherent, hence the follow-up questions that you avoided.
How is something that is successful, bleak? — Harry Hindu
Well, legend has it that Sisyphus successfully rolled a rock up a hill. :party:
— praxis
I dont see the bleakness in the above quote.
— Harry Hindu
This isn't an error that I pointed out and you ignored? — Harry Hindu
I didn’t assume that you cared. I simply pointed out an absurdist when you inquired about the meaning of the absurd.
— praxis
Why would you assume that I didn't care if I was participating in the discussion? — Harry Hindu
You made a claim about why people think life is absurd. I pointed out that is equivalent to a God of the Gaps argument. Some people aren't comfortable with not knowing something, so they create their own answers, or meanings for their existence. That is fine, as it is what I said in the my first post in this thread. One can create has meaning in their actions. It is when they project that same meaning onto others - as if they have the same meaning - is when we run into debates like this. — Harry Hindu
Anyway, if that were known it wouldn’t be a philosophical matter.
— praxis
What exactly does this mean - that philosophy doesn't provide answers or even knowledge to such questions, so we should keep in the philosophical domain to never be answered? — Harry Hindu
I knew that you knew what I meant with the Sisyphus reference. You even readily acknowledged your feigned ignorance. Then you fault me for ignoring the question, and go on to suggest that pretending to be ignorant is a good method in philosophizing. — praxis
I didnt get what you meant. — Harry Hindu
Because it is logically inconsistent.
Your arguments are pathetic.
I basically believe that nothing has any meaning. — yupamiralda
Meaning is the relationship between cause and effect. — Harry Hindu
Meaning is everywhere, possibly the fabric of reality itself. — Harry Hindu
If nothing had meaning then there would be no way for us to communicate, as communication requires shared meaning. Your scribbles on the screen mean something that I try to get at when I look at them. They mean the ideas in your head and your intent to share them with others as that is what caused the scribbles to appear on the screen. — Harry Hindu
Humans are very versatile (thanks to their large brains an opposable thumbs) and the variety of ways in which we choose to be successful organisms can make it seem like we have transcended our biology, but that is an illusion. — Harry Hindu
Sounds like you find meaning in being a good parent. Why would you think this is absurd or deserving of criticism or insults? — Harry Hindu
You want to live, so live your life how you want to live it. Then you will see meaning in a lot of things. These things won't have absolute meaning, but you won't care, because they will have meaning to you. — leo
It is the old Taoist paradox: finding meaning in the meaningless. — Merkwurdichliebe
It's not so much of a paradox if we realize that we're creating meaning "in the meaningless." — Terrapin Station
It is analogous to the notion of "something out of nothing"; which also isn't much of a paradox if we realize that nothing is creating something. — Merkwurdichliebe
You just need to have a non-Aspie understanding of "create." — Terrapin Station
To be a successful biological organism all you need to do is stay alive. All the other things you mention are optional to your declared purpose.
we're just machines for the transmission of our selfish genes — yupamiralda
All human values are equally meaningless, hence the selection of them is more or less arbitrary (they have nothing objectively to recommend them over other values). — yupamiralda
Wouldn't we be any and everything that we do?
Out of curiosity, would you call mathematics biological - as they're clearly social?I'm trying to transcend social cues. The social is clearly derivative from the biological. — yupamiralda
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