Or do they use the game to focus on developing their resources, capacity and value for future interactions? There is no right answer here - suffice to say, it is not all about winning. — 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
Of course, but I think you’re now playing games.
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
You neglected to include a “secure being”. — Brett
I’m not going to argue about luck. Yes it plays a part but if you think you can live day to day based on luck then good luck to you. — Brett
An imprisoned or threatened being would be ‘insecure’ as such. — Possibility
I’m not saying that at some point I won’t make the choice to compete for survival if it comes to that, but I’m under no illusions that it’s my only choice under any circumstance. — Possibility
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
Why do you think they’re there? — Brett
Or do they use the game to focus on developing their resources, capacity and value for future interactions? There is no right answer here - suffice to say, it is not all about winning.
— Possibility
If they don’t win, for instance, they don’t go into the next round. What’s the point of developing resources, etc, if it’s not to win? — Brett
This is where, intentionally or unintentionally, I think you play games. Or maybe it’s just splitting hairs.
Anyone can have an idea. I have them all the time. But ideas must be proven in the world. The ideas that we have on families, love, sharing and collaboration evolved, developed in a healthy, secure environment. These are the ideas that have made us what we are and from that we develop further. — Brett
What happens when the individuals you are competing with are a resource themselves? Altruism. — Harry Hindu
I’m not saying that either. I’m saying that you want to survive. — Brett
I’ve watched a national level sporting team lose more than they won and fail to make more than the first game of finals for years under the same coach. Despite intense pressure from their supporters and critics, the players and the club continued to back that coach season after season, well beyond reason. It was apparent that their focus was not to win, but something else. — Possibility
s a parent, I know there would be circumstances where I would not hesitate to choose otherwise. — Possibility
You don’t think that ideas can be proven in an environment that is insecure or unhealthy? Victor Frankl, for instance? — Possibility
Perhaps I am splitting hairs, but only to challenge assumptions you seem to have about how the world is supposed to work. You can’t just dismiss anomalies and then claim to understand reality as a whole - your understanding must be able to explain those anomalies as well. — Possibility
I’m now going to throw in Schopenhauer’s World as Will.
Any comments schopenhauer1? — Brett
I presume that what you mean by this is that we don’t need to define something by one of its many properties. — Brett
However it’s also an aberration, it’s the actions of an organism that cannot cope
[...]
I’d agree [that that is not competition]. But life did not remain that way. — Brett
Just to reiterate my point; life may not be about competition but it is about survival. — Brett
So a lot of the logic in this thread implying altruistic behaviours must really be for personally selfish reasons, doesn't follow. — 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
If he kills himself then he has found his situation to be more than he can bear. Yes that is an example of an organism not competing. However it’s also an aberration, it’s the actions of an organism that cannot cope any longer with the way life has turned out. You might say that he has lost the will to live any longer. — Brett
This is a thread about what life is "all about".
You have phrased it as "life is competition" — Mijin
Me, typing this comment, does nothing to aid my survival. We could say it is a side effect of so-and-so instinct that was for survival, but that would concede the point that right now my action is neither motivated by survival nor does it aid my survival. — Mijin
When an animal takes care of an infant from another species, would you call that "altruistic?" — 8livesleft
My point here is of an organism not competing and that the action of not competing was an aberration. — Brett
I’m not trying to assert that all actions are about survival, but these actions we engage in come about because we have survived.
How could anything we do or know be passed on to us if the originators of that knowledge had not looked after our survival long enough for us to comprehend it then act on it? — Brett
In terms of (2) we can just look at the outcome and say that the action benefitted the group at a cost to the individual: it's altruistic. — Mijin
Does it help if I’m talking about time and the evolution of man, not what happened last year. — Brett
I don't see how say a cow raising a wolf can be beneficial to the herd. — 8livesleft
The question is are acts of instinct - which in the evolutionary sense are based on self or genetic preservation, altruistic? Here, the cow is acting on instinct to care for a wolf cub.
I was speaking of "the group" in the widest possible sense, because we were talking about altruism. When talking about human altruism, we normally consider the most altruistic acts as the furthest from provides any material benefit to ourselves. — Mijin
If some animal actions are vicious, or spiteful or greedy, then absolutely there are actions that fulfill the requirements for being altruistic or selfless. — Mijin
With that definition, wouldn't instinctive acts be excluded? Caring for young is genetically self-interested, therefore, behaviors that stem from that instinct shouldn't be considered as altruistic. — 8livesleft
So, relating that to humans, we tend to think that there's some sort of higher purpose or order — 8livesleft
I’ve watched a national level sporting team lose more than they won and fail to make more than the first game of finals for years under the same coach. Despite intense pressure from their supporters and critics, the players and the club continued to back that coach season after season, well beyond reason. It was apparent that their focus was not to win, but something else.
— Possibility
Does the exception prove the rule? — Brett
But I’m not trying to assert that all actions are about survival, but these actions we engage in come about because we have survived.
How could anything we do or know be passed on to us if the originators of that knowledge had not looked after our survival long enough for us to comprehend it then act on it? — Brett
This could also be understood as life being about passing on knowledge, with survival a strategy. — Possibility
Is it what life is about here or what brings about "these actions"? I believe it the latter. Knowledge would be a strategy for survival. You can make an argument that anything is what life is about. Maybe it's about making plastic. — schopenhauer1
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