If it's not possible to program meaning into the simulation under any scenario, then how is meaning created in our 'real' world (assuming there is)? — Wheatley
It springs from the widespread acceptance that life is a fluke and we're products of an accident. Death of God, and all. — Wayfarer
life is a fluke — Wayfarer
Does all life consciousness seek meaning? Is the thirst for meaning an inevitable consequence of consciousness, the kind we're familiar with? An open question. — TheMadFool
we don't see beavers building the pyramids. We don't see them arranging a dam so beautiful that they hope it will be remembered forever by all the beavers to come — five G
Beavers are not pretentious. They have accepted that they are fundamentally cool and so are comfortable remaining at that level, therefore, as they have found true balance in themselves, feel no urge to seek a radically different world.
We could do worse than to aspire to the Zen state of the beaver. — Book273
Is life a fluke? — TheMadFool
That Man is the product of causes which had no prevision of the end they were achieving; that his origin, his growth, his hopes and fears, his loves and his beliefs, are but the outcome of accidental collocations of atoms; that no fire, no heroism, no intensity of thought and feeling, can preserve an individual life beyond the grave; that all the labours of the ages, all the devotion, all the inspiration, all the noonday brightness of human genius, are destined to extinction in the vast death of the solar system, and that the whole temple of Man's achievement must inevitably be buried beneath the debris of a universe in ruins--all these things, if not quite beyond dispute, are yet so nearly certain, that no philosophy which rejects them can hope to stand. — Bertrand Russell, A Free Mans Worship
Beavers are not pretentious. — Book273
Since a simulation is in fact created by purposeful beings, you wouldn't have that problem. — ChatteringMonkey
Since a simulation is in fact created by purposeful beings, you wouldn't have that problem.
— ChatteringMonkey
Let's imagine that our world is a simulation created by humans who are more technologically advanced. If they are ethically no better than us but only have more power, would that really satisfy our need for meaning?
How has the idea of God comforted people, given them a sense of meaning? It seems to me that God 'has' to be adorable in order to function. Think of a son wanting to grow up and be like his good father, who seems not only full of love but also full of power and knowledge. Anything confusing or questionable in the world can be explained in terms of the son's incomplete education.
If all we have for a god is a confused older brother, on the other hand,... — five G
The problem, in relation to believing in a god anyway, in our current age is our commitment to empirical truth and scientific advancement. So I think it has more to do with the general cultural climate, than what a particular God looks like... but being all powerful, all knowing and infinitely good probably helps, yes. — ChatteringMonkey
I think the reigning consensus has been that life is the outcome of chance as distinct from providential design or divine creation during the last century. That is one of the major grounds of the so-called 'culture wars'. — Wayfarer
I think the meaning people generally seek, is feeling part of some greater (cosmic) plan. If God created the universe, then you have such a plan because presumably he created it with a purpose. — ChatteringMonkey
It springs from the widespread acceptance that life is a fluke and we're products of an accident. — Wayfarer
My hunch, for what it's worth, is that all this talk of "life [the universe included] is an outcome of chance" by scientists and their ilk is, far from being even half an explanation, a smokescreen that conceals the truth, the truth that we have no clue as to how the universe, life, came to be. — TheMadFool
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