Such questions! Here I am, one of 8,000,000,000 people on earth. What on earth could be special about me? Would it make any difference if I did not exist? — George Fisher
What is life? Why is life? Where did it come from. Are we special?
Is there a God? What is God? Why is God? — George Fisher
This.I’m confused. What is life? — George Fisher
Chance.Why is life?
The universe.Where did [life] come from?
"Life" (i.e. local order) is just entropy's rarified way of increasing entropy (i.e. global disorder).Life seems to go against the basic law of entropy.
Compared to what? And what difference does "special" or "not special" make?Are we special?
The best evidence compellingly suggests that 'there is a god' only in our just-so stories.Is there a God?
An empty name.What is God?
It's h. sapiens' oldest placebo and still works on far too many of us.Why is God?
Like the rest of us, George, you are a grain of sand that isn't exactly identical to any other grain of sand on the beach. And you can know this. That's not much but it ain't nothing.Here I am, one of 8,000,000,000 people on earth. What on earth could be special about me?
You also can't count all the stars in the observable universe and visualize all of their relations relative to one another and hold that image in your mind either. So what. It's absurd (A. Camus, P.W. Zapffe) to desire such an omni-grasp of things. Now what does one do in such a vast, encompassing "maelstrom"? You might take ' sage counsel for a start ...There is a maelstrom of stuff out there. How could I ever hope to grasp the meaning of it all.
I think you do to the degree you strive to make your choices and relationships "meaningful" each and every day.Do I have any meaning or ...
Like everyone else, George, you are responsible for the reasonably foreseeable consequences of your actions and inaction.... responsibility within this milieu?
To you, it might. From the universe's perspective, well, you don't even "exist", none of us ephemerae "exist". (Read Epicurus, then read Spinoza)Would it make any difference if I did not exist?
:fire:A more interesting question might be: Why do you need to look for a meaning? — Vera Mont
Maybe that is something that has evolved in man as part of his survival strategy. — George Fisher
A more interesting question might be: Why do you need to look for a meaning? — Vera Mont
That is an interesting question. There is no real need to have meaning. — George Fisher
Brilliantly succinct – Wille zur Macht – oh yeah! You 'mansplain' that much much better than I ever could, lady! :clap: :cool::flower:Humans (predominantly, I think, human males) seem in every age preoccupied with their own significance and dashed when they are compelled to admit how very small it is in the scheme of things. This is part of the reason for inventing gods: in a way, gods are magnified sock-puppets for men who want/need to feel in control of the world; who therefore provide themselves the purpose of imposing meaning and order - at least on their fellow humans. It is also the reason for the entire body of Metaphysics: If only we could reduce life, the universe and everything to basic principles, we could wrestle into submission. — Vera Mont
Humans (predominantly, I think, human males) seem in every age preoccupied with their own significance and dashed when they are compelled to admit how very small it is in the scheme of things. — Vera Mont
But there are men of great wisdom, like Horace of course (and me I would say, but am shy) who accept this and soldier on. — Ciceronianus
I didn't say it worked, only that control is the aim. — Vera Mont
Note: I also didn't say 'exclusively' - but if you can prove that organized religions and metaphysics are not predominantly masculine in origin, I'll eat a crow. (But you'll have to kill it.) — Vera Mont
There are no answers to these questions as they're intended. Just get on with life as best you can. — Ciceronianus
Why is life?
Chance.
Where did [life] come from?
The universe.
Life seems to go against the basic law of entropy.
"Life" (i.e. local order) is just entropy's way of increasing entropy (i.e. global disorder).
Are we special?
Compare to what? And what difference does "special" or "not special" make?
Is there a God?
The best evidence compellingly suggests that 'there is a god' only in our just-so stories.
What is God?
An empty name.
Why is God?
It's h. sapiens' oldest placebo and still works for far too many of us. — 180 Proof
But this won't define the motives of all humans. — javra
And those qualities also don't inspire wrathful gods, vengeful systems of justice or wars of ideology.Compassion, wonder, eudemonia, to list a few commonly found attributes of many a human, male and female, are not driven by the aim of gaining control over other — javra
I'm not sure I could classify the findings of metaphysics as "knowledge of what is", but OK. By what is the quest for this kind of knowledge primarily motivated?(The same, btw, can be said of any form of knowledge, including that which is scientific.) — javra
A few pagans in Europe; Lots of unorganized Native Americans - not the Great Civilizations which conquered them.Hard to "prove" what was well over two millennia past, but a good deal of evidence points to societies being far more egalitarian in terms of sexes and their interests when addressing at least western culture prior to Abrahamic religion/metaphysics. — javra
Not a super-convincing example, if you'll look at the depiction. And, of course, being allowed to participate in the rituals is not the same as having invented the gods.Everything from women pharaohs supported and admired by the people (we often forget that ancient Egypt is so far the most long-surviving civilization in history by far), — javra
Which was my contention. Cultural indoctrination is a direct result of the prevailing philosophy.Outnumbered by males, true, but maybe this in large part has to do with cultural indoctrination and resulting education — javra
Done! My half-facetious summary is not a major tenet of my faith, and I don't eat meat anyway.But hey, in the unlikely case this might eventually come to convince you that religions and metaphysics are not under the primary jurisdiction of males in principle, please let that poor crow be! — javra
es, indeed! And I endorse them wholeheartedly - except for that unfortunate bit about soldiery. — Vera Mont
I'm not sure I could classify the findings of metaphysics as "knowledge of what is", but OK. — Vera Mont
By what is the quest for this kind of knowledge primarily motivated? — Vera Mont
A few pagans in Europe; Lots of unorganized Native Americans - not the Great Civilizations which conquered them. — Vera Mont
So, what does this mean? — George Fisher
But Philosophers, and modernists in general, tend to be temperamentally individualistic, and hold-out for a more personal kind of meaning. In the 19th century, that yearning for a significant role in the world was often expressed poetically & romantically, in terms of intense relationships to God & man. However, the requirement for a unique meaning & purpose of each person's life, seems to be mostly a modern concern, as expressed most famously by the 20th century existentialists, in terms of "self-actualization". — Gnomon
I know. Geez!Soldier on" means "to continue to do something or to try to achieve something even though it is difficult" — Ciceronianus
Because, traditionally, a soldier asks not why; his is just to do or die. Carry on regardless.I'm not sure why, but that's how it was intended. — Ciceronianus
On neither of which does metaphysics deliver. The quest is the thing: the prize is forever tantalizingly out of reach.Some want to subjugate. Others want to understand. Here, alone, are two different motivations. — javra
It's worth mentioning that these "Great Civilizations which conquered" were all slave-owning. — javra
Which was my contention. Cultural indoctrination is a direct result of the prevailing philosophy. — Vera Mont
Well, of-bloody-course!! Their gods are bullies who approve of subjugation and submission. That's what makes empires great. — Vera Mont
I might have misinterpreted you before. Sounds like underneath all the superficial bickering, you just might be into this "control over the subjugated other" thing yourself. — javra
I would classify that as political philosophy, rather than metaphysics.This can in part be expressed via that whole, "give me liberty, or give me death" motif - a bit of philosophizing in and of itself. — javra
I never said the objective was "control over the subjugated other". I said the objective was control of the world by inventing a more powerful projection of themselves and putting Him in charge, on the understanding that if we do his bidding, He will do ours. — Vera Mont
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