But if that’s the case, then where did this focus on maximising individual wealth, influence and recognition come from? It’s a reductionist consolidation of natural selection from a limited self-conscious perspective, giving primacy to the individual.
— Possibility
“Evolutionary biologists define exaptations as features of organisms that evolved because they served some function but are later co-opted to serve an additional or different function, which was not originally the target of natural selection. The new function may replace the older function or coexist together with it.” https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK210003/
I think this is interesting in regard to your post about evolution. That an exaptation can serve an additional or different function does not mean it is necessarily beneficial in the long term. — Brett
“ Competition is just a matter of quantitative perspective - it’s an arbitrary choice that we continually make ... to compete... “
— Possibility — Brett
therefore all resources, capacity and value we perceive beyond our own potential for awareness, connection and collaboration, we are motivated to either absorb/possess/consume or ignore/isolate/exclude. — Possibility
Though it’s my feeling that features of organisms don’t evolve because they served some particular function. That would be intentionality. It’s complete chance that the evolving feature benefits the organism in the future. — Brett
therefore all resources, capacity and value we perceive beyond our own potential for awareness, connection and collaboration, we are motivated to either absorb/possess/consume or ignore/isolate/exclude.
— Possibility
Right, that’s competition in whatever language you want to put it. — Brett
My point being that competition is only an arbitrary perspective of interaction, not ‘what life is all about’. — Possibility
If we observe life in its many forms is there anything consistent in them? The guy on the space hopper, his actions tell us very little about him. But what if someone came and took the hopper off him by force? — Brett
What happens when the individuals you are competing with are a resource themselves? Altruism.1. Cooperation: individuals sharing a resource
2. Competition: individuals fighting over a resource — TheMadFool
Is there anything more then competition in disguise in the world? — Benj96
What does it mean to refuse to compete with everyone else? Is it even truly possible while still living or is it only the act of death in which one stops the race? — Benj96
To convince you to play the game? The carrot on the stick. But my question then is how long has this been going on? And competition obviously exists before it’s used as a tool to manipulate the population, as in a consumer world, — Brett
However, in general when we have a set of things that share some property, we don't feel the need to expand the definition to include that property. — Mijin
And in the case of life competing, it's not merely the case that we have no reason to include it in our definition, — Mijin
what if he just kills himself, or spends the rest of his life trying to get his space hopper back? That would be an example of an organism not competing, no? — Mijin
They did not have any desire or ability to compete as such, but the environment favored certain mutations.
Now, if we count even that as competition, then we can apply this notion of competition to everything... — Mijin
g. we can say that stars compete, since the environment favors certain stars to live longer and be more numerous than others. — Mijin
When did we decide that it was a "Be the most numerous type of star" competition? Why not "Be the biggest" or "Be the brightest" or "Most metal rich" or "Most active" whatever?
It takes a subjective judgement to decide that, say, red dwarfs will one day have the highest population, therefore they're the bestest. — Mijin
Why is it that psychopaths disproportionately hold high level CEO positions. — Benj96
We are born into a world where we are expected to strive for success : which to most is to have the best of everything; the best wealth, the best recognition, the best popularity and influence. — Benj96
Competition only occurs in times of scarcity, — 8livesleft
We cooperate with each other because it is mutually beneficial to do so. — 8livesleft
That’s true. It’s how we have evolved as social creatures creating communities. My position is that life is not about competition but about survival. Presumably that’s why we carry out collaborative efforts, because we’ve learned that survival depends on collaboration, awareness and connection. Because we are reasoning creatures we can create better futures.
Life might have some greater purpose, but that’s an end, and as you said a perpetual revolution, so there is no end. So then life is about being, but that’s synonymous with survival, you can’t have one without the other.
Edit: but competition is how we survived, it’s the nature of life at ground level. That doesn’t mean it’s necessarily violent, but it’s about holding onto something or gaining something that another has the same desire for. That seems to be the history of life whether we like it or not. You and I are here because those that carried our genes survived the competition. — Brett
You’re basing your reasoning upon an assumption that life is all about survival. — Possibility
Sport is competition. Even a mountain climber on his own competes with the mountain. My point was that I don’t think competition only occurs in times of scarcity. It may be part of our nature to compete. — Brett
Isn’t it possible that the mutual benefit is to survive? Isn’t it possible being part of a collective contributes to security, quality and quantity of good, successful child birth rates, general health and well being, which is about survival. — Brett
If you want to attribute survival as the ultimate quality of life, — Possibility
Sport is competition. Even a mountain climber on his own competes with the mountain. My point was that I don’t think competition only occurs in times of scarcity. It may be part of our nature to compete. — Brett
It is within the capacity of any football player or team to focus more on building communication or collaborative capacity and value than on competition. — Possibility
Not necessarily. It’s because we have learned to survive so well that we have managed to survive the brutality of evolution. So in time that allowed other aspects of our nature to develop and our intellectual faculties to play with ideas. Only a healthy, secure being can indulge in this. Of course there are other things of value in life, otherwise we would not be chatting. But we have to be here to act. — Brett
The criteria by which you define ‘survival’ is limited to the transmission of genetic code. — Possibility
I dispute that only a healthy, secure being can develop intellectual faculties to play with ideas. There are countless examples through history of chronically ill, crippled, disabled, imprisoned and threatened human beings who have written or dictated evidence of highly developed intellectual faculties and ideas. — Possibility
So in time that allowed other aspects of our nature to develop and our intellectual faculties to play with ideas. Only a healthy, secure being can indulge in this. — Brett
It is within the capacity of any football player or team to focus more on building communication or collaborative capacity and value than on competition.
— Possibility
That’s just silly. True, players on a team may communicate and collaborate with each other, but in an effort to win. — Brett
But, suppose a small collective live together in a small village. Circumstance destroy their usual supply of food. What do they do? Do nothing and die and with it the potential of their genes and all the knowledge they have, or do something. — Brett
That’s just silly. True, players on a team may communicate and collaborate with each other, but in an effort to win.
— Brett
Are you certain of this? — Possibility
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