Let's take the example of instantaneous distant communication, the old desire since the world:
Maximum goal: telepathic communication, maybe even at the level of senses and emotions. — Eugen
Will technological evolution make us have new desires that our current brain cannot imagine? — Eugen
When you got a wireless phone for your house did you not wish for a phone that you could walk around anywhere with, when you got a cell did you not want to talk to it to instead of typing on those little keys, and then one that you could see the other person on. That is how innovation works. — Sir2u
I don't see it that way. The cell-phone was just a step ahead towards pre-existing goal: to communicate with others from distance wherever you are. Nothing new in this. — Eugen
In fact, I truly believe they are simply instinctive. — Eugen
Let's take the need of communication because you've mention it. Imagine a woman in a cave being attacked by a cheetah while her male partner is hunting far away. Of course she would wish not only to communicate instantly and ask for help, but also for his husband to be there instantly (teleportation). — Eugen
The Quottle. I can't imagine it but desire it. — Nils Loc
It is impossible to desire something without being able to imagine it. — Sir2u
Unless of course you are seeing what you desire and there is no need to imagine it. — Nils Loc
There must be some animals that still desire despite a complete lack of imagination. — Nils Loc
You even say so here yourself, the person imagines the act and then desires it.
Please name one thing that you can desire without imagining it first. — Sir2u
It is impossible to desire something without being able to imagine it. — Sir2u
My cats have lots of desires, but I seriously doubt that any of them have imagined having a remote control door to get into the house. Thus, unless I give them one they will never invent it. — Sir2u
Well... the desire of surviving the cheetah attack. I believe the survival instinct obviously comes first, so in my example the desire comes first, not the imagination. Therefore, it's exactly vice-versa the way you said. — Eugen
But even if you were right, that wouldn't change much the fact that the ideas that lie at the base of absolutely 100% of today's technologies are old as hell. — Eugen
No man, it isn't. When I was a kid I have a sexual desire for a girl in my class in the form of erection, but I had no idea what sex was and how it was supposed to be made. — Eugen
Sorry to give you this maybe inappropriate example, but it is obvious that in the case of biological creatures like humans, instincts come first and in many cases, instinct = desire. — Eugen
The desire of human being to have his door/gate opened without the effort of the owner is OLD AS HECK!!! Come on dude, really? Of course King Richard didn't imagine a remote control, but the desire of having his gate opened was there.
Desire - ...... - Invention — Eugen
Again, name me ONE technology that serves directly or indirectly to a desire that wasn't there already. — Eugen
- Screaming is a reflex and it is totally related to calling for help. I could agree it could have other functions as well, like scaring the animal or provoking mercy, I don't know, but it is definitely related to the instinct of calling for help.The instinct to survive and the idea to call someone from far away are two separate things. Instinct would say fight or run, or maybe scream. The scream is not a call for help, but a reaction to the situation, one does not think that just by screaming help would come. Then the third option is imagined, call for help. It would not be a big step to then imagine calling to someone far away. — Sir2u
- the body reactions are in fact fabricated by the brain.So as soon as this poor young lady appeared you got a hard on and you had no idea why? Of course your body has its own reactions to situations in which it finds itself, in this case a reaction to pheromones in the air. But that was your body reacting , not you. Unless of course you want to admit that you are nothing more that a zombie reacting to the environment without the capability to think. Along the same lines do you desire to sweat when you get hot? No right it just happens.
Now if you start to think about how well her blouse is filled and get a hard on, then it is the imagination that is fueling the desire. — Sir2u
- This is so ridiculous, sorry to tell you that. People imagined traveling to parallel worlds long before inventing the boat, and this is a scientific fact, not an assumption.How could you explain wanting(desiring) to visit far away places as instinct? Until less than a couple of hundred years ago few people had traveled more that a few miles from their places of birth, and those that had been motivated to travel afar were mostly considered eccentrics or worse.
The possibility of easy travel has made people imagine going to those places thus creating desire. And no, someone inventing a boat was not a desire to float on water, it was a way to get a job done easier. The desire to work less did not create boats, imaging a way to do that did. And then they imagined what else could be done with a boat, like visiting places that were over river. — Sir2u
- curiosity.How could you explain wanting(desiring) to visit far away places as instinct? — Sir2u
- No my friend, you got it wrong! That was the whole point of the debate, not desire vs imagination vs ideas vs whatever. There is a finite set of ideas/desires (call them as you wish, it is not relevant), for example flying, being immortal, being able to communicate from long distances instantly, to travel to other worlds, to have sex when you want to with whom you desire to, etc., that have determined so far absolutely any technology invented so far. Yes, the technology itself is not predictable in terms of design or properties, but it is from the perspective of purpose. Eg. imagine going back in time and show your smartphone to Ceaser and explained to him that this tool worked on electricity, with the help of the satellites and waves, he wouldn't understand. But if you explained to him that this is a tool that helps you to talk with somebody 1000km away from you instantly, he would be amazed, but he would definitely understand and resonate.As soon as you give me one that is. But we started talking about desire creating things and now we have moved to direct or indirect responsibility for creating them. — Sir2u
1. Will technological evolution make us have new desires that our current brain cannot imagine? — Eugen
Screaming is a reflex and it is totally related to calling for help. I could agree it could have other functions as well, like scaring the animal or provoking mercy, I don't know, but it is definitely related to the instinct of calling for help. — Eugen
the body reactions are in fact fabricated by the brain. — Eugen
This is so ridiculous, sorry to tell you that. People imagined traveling to parallel worlds long before inventing the boat, and this is a scientific fact, not an assumption. — Eugen
So in your case, the invention of a super space ship comes first, and then you imagine and wish to travel to different universes? It makes no sense. — Eugen
How could you explain wanting(desiring) to visit far away places as instinct? — Sir2u
Same as for the boat - they wanted to get from point A to point B, it is exactly the same principle as going from a universe to another. — Eugen
As for those who didn't travel, they did so because of other factors, not because they couldn't desire or imagine doing so. — Eugen
The boat is a tool, a space ship is a tool, they are nothing more than means to satisfy one desire and that is to travel from A to B. Simple. As for those who didn't travel, they did so because of other factors, not because they couldn't desire or imagine doing so. — Eugen
Again, name me ONE technology that serves directly or indirectly to a desire that wasn't there already. — Eugen
Tell us what part of our instinct=desire made it possible to discover electricity. — Sir2u
So the issue I have raised in the first place was that after we satisfy all possible desires/ideas on the list that I've mentioned above, what will happen? Will our brain invent others or we will simply stop there? — Eugen
-WRONG EXAMPLE - the concept of bag is old as human and it comes from the desire to carry things efficiently. DESIRE of carrying efficiently - IMAGINE a tool that would be good for it - the TOOL.A plastic bag. Which of the humans' desires led to that being invented. — Sir2u
- Having light all the time? There is ABSOLUTELY no function of electricity that does not serve directly or indirectly to an old desire and you wouldn't be able to name at least one.Tell us what part of our instinct=desire made it possible to discover electricity. — Sir2u
- So far there's nothing new under the sun in terms of new desires. Or you think we just wait for ending the first set of desires and then get to the next one? Vanity comes from evolution.I am sure that he will imagine something that will awaken new desires in human. By the way, do you think that vanity is an instinct? — Sir2u
:Some evidence of this would be nice, and something more concrete than what you think. — Sir2u
- No, wrong again! My dick got hard the moment I SAW her without imagining her.Is that not what I just said? So you imagine her and get a hard on. — Sir2u
- They imagined because they were curious to find out what's up there. Come on man, you can do better than that! The first-moment man saw the sky he asked himself what's up there, and that is curiosity. After that, he started inventing explanations using his imagination. The process is exactly vice-versa.So now you believe me, they imagined going to places. That was what made them desire to go there. Them they started imaging how they were going to get there, thus came invention.
Please provide some sort of link to this scientific fact, I am always interested in this stuff. — Sir2u
- I have already answered - CURIOSITY (instinct).How could you explain wanting(desiring) to visit far away places as instinct? — Sir2u
- Well, you should start imagining, because you love imagination and because I am actually capable of explaining to you. Going from A to B could mean get food among many others, and that is definitely embedded in our genes. Curiosity and necessity make you do that. Curiosity helps you to find new information, possibly vital one. You need me to provide you with other scientific proofs on this one or you just trust my word? Ok, I guess you don't take my word for granted so I will show you something nice.So you say that wanting to go from A to B is a desire, something instinctual? Again, I cannot imagine how you are going to explain that. — Sir2u
- I think the desire to get on the other side of the river started in man the moment he saw the other shore.So man desired to go from A to B and built a boat? Would it not be more sensible to say that he saw a log floating in the river and imagine how he could use it to get to the other side and see what was over there? Without seeing the principle of flotation at work I doubt that all of his desires would get him far. — Sir2u
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