I gave ten plastic cups to each of a group of five year olds, and asked what they could build. After half an hour of trying this and that, they cooperated to build pyramids taller than themselves. — Banno
So there is a fact 'the state of nature'- cooperation can do more (is better?) than competition. Which is why cats make poor architects. — unenlightened
Hell, let's take something as simple as sleep. — schopenhauer1
It is nice and dandy to list a bunch of values, but if in actuality they cannot be actualized, then what does it matter? — schopenhauer1
I'm not sure how one might compete over sleep. Trying to Imagine 'America's got Shuteye' or 'The Great British Sleepover'. I suppose we could cooperate a little - I could read you a bedtime story and kiss you goodnight and tuck you in. But in the end, sleep is a solitary affair to the extent that neither competition nor cooperation can be a feature beyond not waking someone up.
Architects, though, never get anything much done without cooperating with builders, town-planners and financiers.
I think I'm missing your point. Or you mine. — unenlightened
Matter? why would it matter? What's the value of a value? You keep asking, and asking again of every answer. It's a silly play of words. Let's bite the bullet - nothing matters at all. Nothing has any value at all in actual actualisation of actuality. Not suffering not joy. Your problem is you give value to the negative. so here is a valueless argument that will not convince you that your arguments are valueless and unconvincing. Enjoy. — unenlightened
Not sure what you are trying to argue here. I am arguing that if this specific morality of opportunities of capacities is never actually achieved by a certain percentage, then what does that say of that moral system? — schopenhauer1
Also, a capacity that is invariably actualised is not a capacity. Whales do not have the capacity to be big, they just are big. A pint glass has a capacity of one pint whether it is full or empty. — unenlightened
The world is not kind or fair, therefore kindness and fairness have no value. — unenlightened
A pint glass has a capacity to be used for various amounts of time, but some will be dropped right away and break. — schopenhauer1
No, that is not what I said. Rather, what is a response in a world where there are losers and winners when it comes to actualizing capacities? — schopenhauer1
What is what? I'm really struggling to make any sense of this at all. There are winners and losers when there is competition and comparison, and otherwise not. Is that much agreed, or do you can something else? — unenlightened
Winners and losers here are not necessarily against other people, but against the fulfilling their own capacities. — schopenhauer1
So I am a loser if I am not as big as a whale, or cannot fly faster than a speeding bullet? Where is the line between capacities that I don't have the opportunity to fulfil, and capacities I just don't have? There seems to be a difference between complaining that I have been born without wings, and complaining that I have been born without arms, but the difference seems to depend on comparing myself with other humans and not other birds. Expound a little, and put me right. — unenlightened
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