Patriotism may be the ‘last refuge of the scoundrel’ (as the saying goes), but having an absolutist, inflexible, and literalist stance on any religion or spiritual belief is a close second, in my very humble opinion. — 0 thru 9
Is it your experience that religious or spiritual people are open to communication, good listeners, willing to cooperate, fair, goodwilled, acting in good faith? — baker
Religious/spiritual people seem to be "free" to you? Free of what? Free to do what? — baker
Many people who embrace religions do see the world through a very limited and doctrinaire lens which is its own form of zombification. — Tom Storm
Not sure that really means very much. What is 'something'? The issue with a belief is whether is is useful or true or good. Not just any belief will do — Tom Storm
Well said — 0 thru 9
I agree. But as much as some people who embrace themselves in political doctrines and sectarianism. — javi2541997
Although existentialism has been becoming less relevant in philosophy, it has key elements to understand our relationship and cause with life since we were born. — javi2541997
it doesn't change the fact that the religious are often experts at it — Tom Storm
Luck determines most things, but you can roll with the punches, adapt and make opportunities even in adversity. — Tom Storm
But giving up is always a possibility... :wink: — Tom Storm
It is true that some religious groups use the rhetoric of the Bible - or Quran - viciously. But this is far away from making people lose vitality. — javi2541997
Do you really think that religion or spirituality deprive people from energy? — javi2541997
Where does 'luck' come from? — javi2541997
But we should move on from this since the act of bashing religion, while understandable, is dull. — Tom Storm
s a nihilist, I don't see reason to accept any transcendent meaning... — Tom Storm
You consider religion as an enemy of human development. Christianity has managed to 'zombify' the people with the aim of not allowing them to think by themselves, and this caused slow progress in some parts of the world. — javi2541997
I cannot conceive that an upright and clever person like you has no interest in life and existence — javi2541997
The fact that there is a spectrum of intensity when it comes to how much an individual is part of a particular problem or a particular solution, does not prevent each individual being assessed as falling into one of those two categories. Part of the problem or the solution, is merely a convenient way to put it, but, taking such to one of the more extreme but real examples, such categorisations of individuals should never mean that even those who just worked for an Aristo, also get their heads guillotined.But that’s how you worded it. Either / or. And that’s an invitation for purging the dissenters and foot-draggers. — 0 thru 9
Then let me try to be clear. I support all tech advances and all attempts to create a tech advance but I do not support the private ownership or distribution of such. My broad goal would be to employ any tech only when it is proven as a net benefit to all existents it can affect, or at least to the vast majority. I do realise that this is a very difficult standard to reach for every example but it does need to be the main standard set, imo.You do not speak like a skeptic of anything related to Tech or the owners of such. — 0 thru 9
I disagree and I think adequate check and balances do exist and do work. The battle to prevent them being foiled will, I agree, always have failures but hopefully these will be further reduced by better and better checks and balances.We need more than “checks and balances” to defeat the “nefarious few” (as you aptly call them).
Been there, done that: they have gamed the system until their wallets overflowed.
I’m not asking for specifics on how to defeat the 1% and pry the remote control out of their cold dead hand lol. I don’t know either. — 0 thru 9
Such an opinion does not detract from the validity and just statement starting 'We the people,' especially when it will eventually refer to the majority of the humans alive at the time.But as a very general direction saying “we the people” comes through as a platitude in a rote political speech. — 0 thru 9
No offence, but I think that is just nonsense and ignores all of the efforts people are making every day to change the future for the better. They will eventually succeed imo.We as a people are NOT the stakeholders now, if we ever were, and things are moving in the wrong direction. — 0 thru 9
You seem to be asking for a lot of faith in this system you are describing, and trust in Elon Musk and like visionaries.
Basically, it is the capitalist status quo in hip new clothes. — 0 thru 9
Then let me try to be clear. I support all tech advances and all attempts to create a tech advance but I do not support the private ownership or distribution of such. My broad goal would be to employ any tech only when it is proven as a net benefit to all existents it can affect, or at least to the vast majority. I do realise that this is a very difficult standard to reach for every example but it does nosed to be the main standard set, imo. — universeness
I am a secular humanist and a democratic socialist. Elon Musk is a net negative as an influencer and unfettered capitalism is utterly pernicious and its practice needs to be ended. Only small capitalism can be contained, so that is all that should be tolerated, imo. — universeness
leaned towards democratic socialism — 0 thru 9
Just don't confuse it with anything spiritual. — Wayfarer
The tone of some cosmism seems to be similar to your modern techno-optimism, though of course the technological focus has changed. — Jamal
"I have no idea" because what you describe, Bret, does not make any sense to me. — 180 Proof
Post-singularity ubiquitous smart nanotech seems more likely to transform planetary civilization into a Global Experience Machine^ (à la "The Matrix" or wireheading^^) than to enable hedonic beings to somehow "transcend" (or to religiously seek "transcendence from") being hedonic. — 180 Proof
If anything, I see a convergence between what you call "techno-optimistic religion" and existing religions/spiritualities. — baker
The second quote attempts to explain the first. — 180 Proof
It is already happening in the Pagan communities. — Bret Bernhoft
With that said, there will be resistance to these developments. Entire swaths of the population, including individuals in high leaderships roles, will stop at nothing to prevent this from happening. As they are motivated by rather techno-pessimistic religions and/or worldviews. — Bret Bernhoft
Historically, humans have turned, from time to time, to inanimate objects for worship -- crop circles, UFOs, the Titanic (that billionaires paid to see), the stock market. They thought they're gonna get some deep answers to the questions of life. Nothing surprising here.But I know there is a growing community of seekers who are turning almost exclusively to modern technology for answers. — Bret Bernhoft
An empty prophecy -- we've always overestimated the humans' capacity to do without intuition. And we've always failed. Technology is canned goods. We reach out for human contacts and human acknowledgment because this is what's natural for us. This is what feels good and comforting.And with it, will come a certain reverence for and optimism about modern technology's role in the destiny of humankind. Among, amidst both inner and outer spaces. — Bret Bernhoft
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