My question is....are there any stupid questions?? — Gingethinkerrr
I feel I am very much a novice — Gingethinkerrr
My question is....are there any stupid questions? — Gingethinkerrr
Hello Gary,The value of a single human life? — Gingethinkerrr
I'm not familiar with how quick to expect a response but please feel free to ridicule and mock my propositions — Gingethinkerrr
This was my first stab at a basic question — Gingethinkerrr
The value of a single human life? — Gingethinkerrr
I believe that that's a good thing to believe. Vladimir Putin doesn't. Go, figure!I believe the individual experiences and safety of every individual on the planet is equal. — Gingethinkerrr
The value of a single human life? — Gingethinkerrr
The value of a single human life?
I believe the individual experiences and safety of every individual on the planet is equal. And I strive for the safety and security of my own life and those immediately connected to me with an unwavering urge for my appreciation for life and it's right to exist.
And I believe that is universal. — Gingethinkerrr
what makes humans so special — unenlightened
My question is....are there any stupid questions?? — Gingethinkerrr
We can value anything, and everything, or nothing. — Fire Ologist
An act of valuing, is an act only a person can do. That’s not what valuing means. — Fire Ologist
Or values something - e.g. the cessation of pain - more highly than breathing.And any suicide doesn’t value breathing at all. — Fire Ologist
And any suicide doesn’t value breathing at all. — Fire Ologist
That’s not what valuing means. — Fire Ologist
they are breathing as they claim not to value breathing — unenlightened
You or they may make the claim — unenlightened
In order to make it an exclusively human affair, you would have to define it as an entirely cerebral and verbal affair, whereas it is commonly experienced as visceral — unenlightened
yeast values sugar; dung beetles value dung; birds value worms; I value a morning coffee. But a rock values nothing, it is all the same to if it crumbles or melts or falls in the sea or falls into the sun. — unenlightened
One might suggest that an individual life has infinite value to itself, as the source of all its values. So far so good, but what makes humans so special? I'll leave it there for now. — unenlightened
what makes humans so special? — unenlightened
But conclude the human is nothing special? — Fire Ologist
With the “self” creating its own values with words like “self” as in “I value coffee”, values need not relate to anything else but the self, which is like the rock which values nothing. — Fire Ologist
And any suicide doesn’t value breathing at all.
— Fire Ologist
Or values something - e.g. the cessation of pain - more highly than breathing. — Vera Mont
And any suicide doesn’t value breathing at all.
— Fire Ologist
Or values something - e.g. the cessation of pain - more highly than breathing. — Vera Mont
But neither is 'true' in the sense of representing a matter of fact. — unenlightened
Apes, orca, and ants show intelligence and social cohesion and communication, various species use tools, care for their young, and so on. — unenlightened
a hierarchy of values is in place — Vera Mont
I think we are skirting the question of “what is a ‘value’?”or “what does ‘valuing’ mean?” or “how does ‘valuing’ happen or function?” — Fire Ologist
About the yeast, what with its lack of brain cells, you're right. Breathing, for some organisms, can be optional - that is, consciously controlled - though it's rarely considered in isolation the way you introduced it: it's simply a function of being alive. So the choice is not between breathing and not breathing, but between and dying. That is a question of what the subject values in what order of priority.But I disagree that the relationship between yeast and sugar has anything to do with valuing. Same with organisms valuing breathing - that is not valuing. Those relationships are more like the rock that falls downhill. — Fire Ologist
Of course.Valuing still only happens when a mind considers separate objects and choses one over the other. It involves separate objects related in a prioritized way by choice. — Fire Ologist
You should look around more. A dog wants the bisquit, but wants his human's more, so he waits for permission to eat the bisquit. An elephant enjoys rolling in the grass, but hears another elephant call out in distress and rushes to help, because she values her friend more than her leisure. Other sentient species make conscious, deliberate choices all the time.I happen to see only people display this behavior of valuing. — Fire Ologist
I can't be impressed by a self-serving fiction.Maybe, again, you don’t value evaluation, you are not impressed by the purely human. — Fire Ologist
I can't be impressed by a self-serving fiction. — Vera Mont
I was responding to:That undercuts everything you just said about valuing. Is it self-serving or object relational? Is valuing real or not?? — Fire Ologist
I do not believe there is anything "purely" human.you are not impressed by the purely human. — Fire Ologist
But I disagree that the relationship between yeast and sugar has anything to do with valuing. Same with organisms valuing breathing - that is not valuing — Fire Ologist
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