So that's why my Body is so uptight. That's OK, as long as my Mind doesn't feel the fear. :joke:Your body feels their fear is what I meant. Their fear generates hormones and other chemicals which you then consume. I'm not referring to empathy, but chemistry. Not making a moral point, just a biological one. — Hippyhead
We were, at one time, apes and it would've been the heights of idealism to expect an ape to write the Bible and yet have. — TheMadFool
Interesting to see how Darwinism filters through to popular culture..... — Wayfarer
Well, suppose evolution is false. — TheMadFool
I myself have never doubted for a second the veracity of evolution by natural selection, but what it means is a wholly different question. — Wayfarer
Ideals are great as hypothetical goals to aim for, but they are by definition, not Real, or realistic, in the sense of practical. The Garden of Eden was an idealistic myth, where Lions apparently age veggies, despite having teeth unsuited for that kind of food. But the myth-makers were not concerned with such mundane practical matters. Likewise, the Jains did not take into account that human digestive systems are best suited for an omnivorous diet. Or that, according to anthropologists, the large human brain was a result of pre-humans who flourished on a diet that included meat protein. Ideals are like Infinity, we may approach it, but never reach it.Well, something inside me tells me I should agree with regarding some ideas like Ahimsa being too idealistic but then how does one make sense of the difference between humans and other animals? I mean how come, considering the fact humans are basically animals, we've made so much progress in the moral department? if you ask me, expecting good, moral behavior from animals is, by your standards, just too idealistic and yet here we are - Jesus, Buddha, J. S. Mill, Kant, etc. We were, at one time, apes and it would've been the heights of idealism to expect an ape to write the Bible and yet we have. — TheMadFool
Ideals are great as hypothetical goals to aim for, but they are by definition, not Real, or realistic, in the sense of practical. The Garden of Eden was an idealistic myth, where Lions apparently age veggies, despite having teeth unsuited for that kind of food. But the myth-makers were not concerned with such mundane practical matters. Likewise, the Jains did not take into account that human digestive systems are best suited for an omnivorous diet. Or that, according to anthropologists, the large human brain was a result of pre-humans who flourished on a diet that included meat protein. Ideals are like Infinity, we may approach it, but never reach it. — Gnomon
The fact is that humans are not mere animals. They are animals-plus. That "plus" allows humans to make moral choices --- such as to eat meat or not --- that animals cannot. I doubt that most animals can even conceive of Ideals. Yet humans can imagine such heavenly standards of perfection for narrowly-defined cases. In the real world though, such high goals require trade-offs. For example, if Lions were originally vegetarians, they must have fallen short of Edenic perfection, and somehow evolved digestive systems adapted to meat eating. But in that case, they would lose the ability to eat grass, which requires multi-chambered stomachs. Moreover, even perfectionist humans --- like Peter Singer --- have lost the ability to eat grass, and are forced to eat a limited range of foods that their puny teeth and single-chambered stomachs can handle. How does he know that carrots don't have feelings, and silently scream when roughly plucked from the bosom of Mother Earth? If he was really an Idealist, he might become a Breatharian, and live upon a diet of feelingless air for nourishment. — Gnomon
By my standards, Idealism is a state much to be desired, but only Jesus (reportedly) ever achieved that level of moral perfection. And it was not reported that he abstained from the flesh of animals. So, was that paragon actually immoral, or merely human? Your use of "apes" to describe the Bible-writers is disingenuous. They may have been anthropoids, but they certainly were not apes. Instead they were apes-plus, who aspired to ideals beyond their reach. I too, can imagine impossible Ideal standards, but I don't deceive myself that they are within my grasp. :joke: — Gnomon
Breatharian : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inedia
Jesus -- imperfection? : Another perspective characterizes Christ's perfection as purely spiritual and moral, while his humanistic traits are subject to flaw, potential, and improvement as part of the current human condition.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfection_of_Christ
Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp, Or what's a heaven for? ___Robert Browning — Gnomon
What "ideas" are you referring to? I don't suppose that you think cave-men were making utopian plans for turning their caves into high-rise cities. Anthropologists, who study the few remaining "primitive" peoples, have found that they tend to live very pragmatically, one day at a time, with "little thought for the 'morrow". Incremental technological improvements, such as better arrow-heads, resulted from the practical work of hands-on craftsmen, not arm-chair theorists. And incremental moral changes were often inspired by hundreds of "enlightened" Religious Founders. But the implementation of their perfectionist Ideals (Heaven on Earth; Nirvana -- the peace of nothingness) into a Utopian society is still, after thousands of years, an impossible dream.After all, the ideas that drove this change from hunter-gatherer to civilized man would've surely been impractical and too idealistic back in 30,000 BC. — TheMadFool
The explanation for how impractical ideals resulted in practical results is summed-up in the Edison & Ash quotes. :smile:Again, you need to offer a good explanation of the tangible change that has occured over human history. The too-idealistic, too impractical philosophy of yours fails to explain facts as they stand. — TheMadFool
Again, I'm not proposing a fatalistic philosophy. Back to the context of this thread, I'm merely noting that expecting humans to live like Jains --- sweeping their path to avoid stepping on ants, and wearing a mask to avoid inhaling a gnat --- is not a practical path to a non-violent society. Instead, we will have to continue the incremental moral progress that has been going on for thousands of years. :nerd:Again, your too-idealistic, too-impractical philosophy — TheMadFool
I don't suppose that you think cave-men were making utopian plans for turning their caves into high-rise cities. — Gnomon
but merely noting that without incremental Pragmatism, those "sky castles" never get built. :joke: — Gnomon
The explanation for how impractical ideals resulted in practical results is summed-up in the Edison & Ash quotes. — Gnomon
Again, I'm not proposing a fatalistic philosophy. Back to the context of this thread, I'm merely noting that expecting humans to live like Jains --- sweeping their path to avoid stepping on ants, and wearing a mask to avoid inhaling a gnat --- is not a practical path to a non-violent society. Instead, we will have to continue the incremental moral progress that has been going on for thousands of years. :nerd: — Gnomon
I never said that "there are things too idealistic to implement". What I did say was "It's an idealistic idea, but hard to implement in the real world.". You were generalizing my specific skeptical response to the notion of modern people in the West adopting the extreme "idealistic" values of ancient Jains : "an obsession with purity". Thoreau, Gandhi, and M. L. King were all inspired by non-violent ideals. But they all found that implementing those "impossible dreams" takes time . . . lots of it. The Golden Rule is an ancient ideal, and modern people are still inspired by its implications for an ideal society. But innately selfish human nature (the Selfish Gene) is resistant to top-down control. Maybe, in a Utopian future, when humans are replaced by vegetarian robots, violence will become extinct. :joke:Your idea of "incremental moral progress" is a good explanation for why there's change in the world but it refutes your belief that there are things too idealistic to implement. — TheMadFool
The bottom line is, I was not objecting to Idealism, but to Extremism — Gnomon
I can quibble with the notion that "every new idea" is extremist. Many are quite moderate, but are rejected due to the polarized & uncompromising attitudes of the times. Yes, some seemingly extreme or unorthodox ideas have become "the new normal". My own Enformationism worldview may seem to be extreme --- in its blend of Eastern & Western philosophies, along with Quantum paradoxes --- relative to both rational Materialism and emotional Spiritualism. But I like to imagine that its moderate & consilient attitude toward the world will eventually become the new Standard Model for future Science and Philosophy.Good distinction my friend but you're ignoring it. Every idea is at one point in its history is/was/will be extremist but some, not all, have managed to become, how shall I put it, the new normal — TheMadFool
“Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in pursuit of justice is no virtue”? — Gnomon
But Aristotle's Golden Mean finds beauty, truth, harmony, symmetry & proportion in the middle way between extremes — Gnomon
Apparently, you don't know who Barry Goldwater was. As presidential candidate in 1964, he was the Donald Trump of his day, and had been characterized as "a right-wing extremist who would plunge America into a war and do away with Social Security and other essential social programs . . ." Of course, that was a political "spin" by his opponents. But for progressives and liberals his espousal of extremism was reminiscent of Hitler : "Martin Luther King, Jr., saw “dangerous signs of Hitlerism” in Goldwater’s programs." And of course, Liberals can also be extremists.But this speaks in my favor??!! You describe Jainism as an extreme point of view and you quote someone who sees extremism as a positive force for change, good change. — TheMadFool
Yes, the Golden Mean is relative to the mode and range of the values under consideration. I this case, I am relating the Jain morality to my own personal context in 2020 America, not to penguins in their frozen wasteland. Compared to all the other meat-eaters in my cohort, I'm pretty average. I killed a few animals in my youth -- mostly fish and squirrels. but very few since then -- mostly roaches & flies; no humans. My personal meat consumption is moderate, so my carbon debt is fairly low.You're in favor of the Arisotetelian golden mean but isn't the idea of extremes something relative. — TheMadFool
What say you? — TheMadFool
Yes, the Golden Mean is relative to the mode and range of the values under consideration. I this case, I am relating the Jain morality to my own personal context in 2020 America, not to penguins in their frozen wasteland. Compared to all the other meat-eaters in my cohort, I'm pretty average. I killed a few animals in my youth -- mostly fish and squirrels. but very few since then -- mostly roaches & flies; no humans. My personal meat consumption is moderate, so my carbon debt is fairly low. — Gnomon
Also, since I don't consider animals raised for fur & meat & milk equal in moral value to humans, I don't believe that "fur is murder". But, like most of my fellows, I draw the line at animals raised for pets. They may not be morally equal to humans, but they have value to humans that I must respect. Moreover, relative to non-Jain Indians, about 31% are vegetarian and 9% ovo-vegetarian. So, in their own context their values are pretty far off the mean. :cool: — Gnomon
PS__I don't have any animus toward Jains. I'm just not inclined to go quite so far in search of absolute moral purity. Above average purity is OK for me. Does that laxity make me evil? :joke: — Gnomon
It isn't surprising that throughout history, jainists are only diminishing in number through conversion to Islam, Christianity, Sikhism, and even Buddhism. A religion that doesn't defend its own people or territory is fated to fail. — Gus Lamarch
Take a closer look at the trend: we were killing each other in countless wars in the past, we've more or lesss stopped doing that; we used to keep slaves, we've put an end to that; we keep and kill animals in cruel ways, now there's animal rights groups... Do you see where this is going? The rest of the world is just playing catch up with the Jains. — TheMadFool
The trend is peace, prosperity, plentyness, bloom. Humanity at is originial and most beastly state is war, fear, famine, etc... Just take a look at history, we are not natural loving people, we are raiders, warriors, not sedentary fools that we are liking to pretend we are for the last couple of thousand years.
I surelly would love a world where everyone could say they are "humans" without differences, but that dream is a long way ahead, and until there we still are mere, humans... — Gus Lamarch
Yes. If you have a need for absolute moral purity, then go for it. But most people are not so angelic. I do my best, but it's never good enough to qualify me for heaven. :smile:Your whole idea that Jain morality is too idealistic unravels at this point; after all, it's only that for you and others who think like you. No? — TheMadFool
Like Steven Pinker, and Michael Shermer, I see historical evidence that cooperative human morality is gradually progressing, despite the inherent US vs THEM attitudes built into us by the evolutionary algorithm of competitive "survival of the fittest". However, I don't look backward for traditional religions to pave the way for a more peaceful future. They played their part in the past, but modern societies are much more diverse, with more moral pitfalls, for their simplistic idealistic doctrines to have much impact. Buddhism is a good model for non-violence, but it focuses on the individual, and idealizes a self-centered monastic lifestyle. Not a recipe for world-wide revolution in morality.Do you see where this is going? The rest of the world is just playing catch up with the Jains. — TheMadFool
However, I don't look backward for traditional religions to pave the way for a more peaceful future. They played their part in the past, but modern societies are much more diverse, with more moral pitfalls, for their simplistic idealistic doctrines to have much impact. — Gnomon
"Hyper-pragmatism" is not pragmatic, it's idealistic. That's one problem with "hyper-idealists", they tend to view pragmatic moderates through a reverse telescope that makes them look farther away than they actually are. :smile:Well, in my humble opinion, the refutation of your position lies in the past; looking backward serves the critical function of revealing, showing you, the evidence against your hyper-pragmatism. Perhaps I'm guilty of the straw man fallacy but convince me that you're not committing an argumentum ad antiquitatem. — TheMadFool
"Hyper-pragmatism" is not pragmatic, it's idealistic. That's one problem with "hyper-idealists", they tend to view pragmatic moderates through a reverse telescope that makes them look farther away than they actually are. — Gnomon
Secular Humanism is one attempt to provide the benefits of traditional religions without the negatives that result from blind faith and magical thinking. — Gnomon
I didn't call Jains "hyper-idealistic", I called them "idealistic". It was not intended as a put-down, but as a description of their uncompromising Dharma. The "hyper" part was added by you, to indicate your extremist (black vs white) perspective from the lofty moral mountain-top. :joke:In other words, me calling you a hyper-pragmatist and you labeling the Jains as hyper-idealists is part and parcel of this moral revolution. — TheMadFool
I didn't call Jains "hyper-idealistic", I called them "idealistic". — Gnomon
Since weapons are sacred to them, they are often employed as armed guards. With so many paths to purity, how can I keep-up in this "moral revolution"? :smile: — Gnomon
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