1) Actions that counter animal's individual interest — kudos
2) Success in such as way as its interests or needs could be better satisfied — kudos
3) Individual interest that counters possibility for survival, or sexual selection — kudos
we could compare human actions with the animal who does not choose it's own death, but acts it ou — kudos
Death by shotgun... seems excessive, but maybe that's just me. — kudos
In natural predator-prey relationships if a predator is so strong a hunter it proliferates and the prey population declines, their group gets equally wiped out. Would you say in this sense that weakness is necessary for survival, and thereby there is some good in weak people just in lieu of the fact that they are weak relative to their potential? — kudos
But is it good that chance play such a role? — kudos
Does our weakness make our existence a crude reality, or is it fundamental to our animal nature that we be submissive, fail at things, imperfect in different ways; Is that a core component of who we are or our real nature? — kudos
Good or not, chance is a factor in life. It just IS. What is bad is ignoring the part that chance events play
I thought it's a rock-paper-scissors arrangement we have in the natural world
chance — kudos
probability — kudos
external to an individual — kudos
So you feel it is frustrating to you for others to strive to be as strong as possible. — kudos
Why is that, do you think it is an overall bad trait? — kudos
Just bad for some and not for others? — kudos
Would you vote for a political leader who had this type of drive? — kudos
Are you arguing that the motion of small solid bodies in the solar system -- interacting with each other, the planets, and the sun -- are not subject to chance [unpredictable interactions], even while strictly obeying the laws of physics? Or are you proposing that "chance" is the result of inadequately observed causation? — Bitter Crank
but which trajectory the bullet will follow depends on events which are not lawful (determined) — Bitter Crank
name one event in a bullet's trajectory that isn't determined. — TheMadFool
BitterCrank, wear :mask: and stay safe. :smile: — TheMadFool
Once the bullet leaves the gun, its trajectory is determined. But the moment the fool waving the gun around pulls the trigger is determined by chance. Not patternless? — Bitter Crank
I do — Bitter Crank
@kudos thinks, if I understood him, that things out of our control are chance occurrences. This, to my reckoning, isn't correct.
It sounds like you are both making a similar point if I'm not misreading it. That to a certain extent chance is a phenomena that occurs external to an individual, and separate from weakness.
DEFN(2) The occurrence and development of events in the absence of any obvious design.
As far as I'm concerned, since we're talking determinism here, chance is uncertainty in outcomes, a situation brought about by the lack of an observable pattern or if there's a pattern, it's probabilistic with a value between 0% (impossible) and 100% (certain). In other words, if things out of our control were chance, they should be patternless which isn't so.
The absolute most weak person is a bit hard to imagine having much of a role of any kind in society.
I'm a bit lost as to what you are aiming for. — Bitter Crank
Similarly, we could compare human actions with the animal who does not choose it's own death, but acts it out; in the process allowing another species to survive by balancing the population numbers. — kudos
A weed patch in front of the house, on the other hand, is proof of one's failure in society. Success = nice grass; failure = weeds. I have weeds in my lawn. I agree with Veblen: large chemically dosed lawns are bullshit and ought to be stamped out. Screw the middle class lawn mower. — Bitter Crank
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