The is of thermodynamics will be unable to tell us what we ought do. — Banno
Suppose we do the calculations, and they show that we will indeed vote for Trump. Now that we have this analysis, what is it that rules out our going against it? Can't we take that into consideration, and then vote for against Trump — Banno
Life and mind arose as systems with purpose. — apokrisis
The wise long run behaviour would be to price in the cost of the environmental sink needed to dispose of the resulting waste. Plus the issue of what replaces the coal and oil as the supply peaks. — apokrisis
Remember the supposition is that the calculation will tell us what we will indeed do, regardless of what we ought do. — Banno
All of this to say, it is not at all clear that we could replace ethical considerations with thermodynamic calculations. — Banno
I think my main issue with this line of reasoning is that "purpose" is a construct of rational minds, — Voyeur
So we would have the three steps of {teleomaty {teleonomy {teleology}}} to cover the physical, the biological, and themindful. Or in more everyday language, {propensity {function {purpose}}}. — apokrisis
ELSIE: Hey! What were you going to say?
BRIAN: Nothing.
ARTHUR and FRANK: Yes, you were.
ELSIE: Yes. You were going to say something.
BRIAN: No, I wasn't. I'd finished.
ELSIE: Oh, no you weren't.
ARTHUR: Oh, come on. Tell us before you go.
BRIAN: I wasn't going to say anything. I'd finished.
ELSIE: No, you hadn't.
BLIND MAN: What won't he tell?
EDDIE: He won't say.
BLIND MAN: Is it a secret?
BRIAN: No.
BLIND MAN: Is it?
EDDIE: Must be. Otherwise, he'd tell us.
ARTHUR: Oh, tell us the secret.
BRIAN: Leave me alone.
YOUTH: What is this secret?
GIRL: Is it the secret of eternal life?
EDDIE: He won't say!
ARTHUR: Well, of course not. If I knew the secret of eternal life, I wouldn't say.
YOUTH: No.
BRIAN: Leave me alone.
GIRL: Just tell me, please.
You are making shit up because you don't even seem to have even a schoolboy grounding in molecular chemistry.
The first thing they teach you is why atoms form molecular arrangements that minimise their collective entropy budget. It literally explains everything. — apokrisis
Suppose there was a thermodynamic analysis that was able to tell us what we will in fact do. Suppose we do the calculations, and they show that we will indeed vote for Trump.
Now that we have this analysis, what is it that rules out our going against it? Can't we take that into consideration, and then vote for against Trump anyway? — Banno
That's right. Some people, when you tell them what they will do, will automatically do the opposite just to spite you. So if it happens to be the case that you come to know what a person will do, then you had better not tell that person, or they might go and do the opposite. What kind of predictive capacity is that, when you happen to know what will happen, but you cannot say it out loud because that might, or might not, cause the opposite to occur? To speak your knowledge out loud would negate its status as knowledge. — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose there was a thermodynamic analysis that was able to tell us what we will in fact do. Suppose we do the calculations, and they show that we will indeed vote for Trump.
Now that we have this analysis, what is it that rules out our going against it? Can't we take that into consideration, and then vote for against Trump anyway? — Banno
Our behaviour only has to be on average aligned with the entropic flow — apokrisis
Just to be sure - shold this be understood as "Our behaviour will be on average aligned with the entropic flow" or "Our behaviour ought be on average aligned with the entropic flow? — Banno
Just read and digest what I wrote. Stop trying to dumb it back down to fit your tired rhetorical template.
If you can point out a flaw in my constraints-based argument, get back to me. :yawn: — apokrisis
What is the topic here? 'cause I'm lost. — Banno
The thought seems to be that we can rid ourselves of ethical considerations, since these will reduce to thermodynamics. — Banno
...and hence while it might not tell us what we ought do, it will tell us what we in fact will do, and hence that ethics is rendered irrelevant. — Banno
Even if every action is fully deterministic, that doesn't mean ethics no longer has meaning — Voyeur
Even if every action is fully deterministic, that doesn't mean ethics no longer has meaning
— Voyeur — Voyeur
Are you now agreeing with me that thermodynamics does not tell us what we ought do? — Banno
The thought seems to be that we can rid ourselves of ethical considerations, since these will reduce to thermodynamics. — Banno
From what has been said, a reply that is open to apokrisis is to agree that this is so, but to repeat that
'Ethics only comes into it as a backfill of decisions taken for other reasons - unfortunately perhaps.'
— apokrisis
...and hence while it might not tell us what we ought do, it will tell us what we in fact will do, and hence that ethics is rendered irrelevant. — Banno
All of this to say, it is not at all clear that we could replace ethical considerations with thermodynamic calculations. — Banno
Indeed, even if it were determined that we will indeed so act, there remains the open question as to if we should so act. — Banno
What we ought do seems less informed by science than ever in living memory; and just at a time when it is most needed. — Banno
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