Your peer to peer angle is talking about the blank canvas before the structure self organises, Your harking on about control hierarchies - the popular mechanical conception - is bypassing my arguments based on physical and biological principles. — apokrisis
The notion that what humans find attractive is largely biologically determined is from the dark ages? — Judaka
I am pretty convinced that Dr .Schore is not the reason you think this way, rather, you like him because you feel he is saying what you always thought. — Judaka
Dr Schore would not say "you are nurture" or "you wouldn't be able to talk to me without the proper nutrients" because he doesn't try to create this ridiculous dichotomy between nature and nurture. — Judaka
Try refuting the statements I made as opposed to characterizing them or trying to assign an argument to my position that I did not make — JerseyFlight
Reading over this thread it seems to be "much ado about nothing". — Janus
I think you're the only person on this thread who would take the position that this is not an important topic. The questions here are not so easily swept aside. The affirmative position is basically telling us that Hierarchy Theory has cracked the code of nature. I have raised valid concerns regarding tyranny. — JerseyFlight
What point are you trying to make? — Janus
Many human hierarchies are based upon the idea of, and even dictatorially imposed by, authority. The existence of self-organizing hierarchies in nature cannot provide ethical justification for any human hierarchy based on authority or brainwashing or coercion and so on. — Janus
The people at the top of the social order lay down the rules that suit their personal purposes. Then the people at the bottom find their actions completely determined by some rigid system of control. — apokrisis
I am pointing out that nature is in general organised by the rational principle of striking functional balances. — apokrisis
And if that is the order that Nature demonstrates to be rational, it would seem you would have to offer some new reason for why that wouldn’t also be optimal as the “ethical basis” of human social organisation. — apokrisis
I don't believe we can rule this out, — JerseyFlight
Here is the creation of a category immune to criticism. — JerseyFlight
You are arguing that we are not even allowed to apply thought here, that what we observe (more like, interpret) must be taken as a divine natural law. — JerseyFlight
If you can’t rule it out, then you need to provide your reasons. — apokrisis
It is a scientific claim. So it is either supported by the evidence or not. — apokrisis
. The Internet is a peer-to-peer system, — fishfry
Good reply. The curious thing is that JerseyFlight says his perspective is Hegelian. But the Hegelian view of history was that it was a journey of progress towards a well balanced social order - one that properly expressed the dialectic of individual striving and collective rational order. — apokrisis
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