Confucius only emphasized that we have made ourselves different from our autochthonous humanity. Talk of our ‘good nature’ or ‘bad nature’ is a digression and a shallow interpretation of Confucius’ analysis of human nature, and I think leads to dogmatic social and civil policies. — isomorph
So, the human condition is how we are in the earth and particularly our world, i.e., the artifacts around us that have been created and that we create. Our world , more than anything else, is the lens through which we judge all else (ethnocentricity). It also blinds us to some things as do cataracts to our vision. — isomorph
Western industrialized culture has produced analytical humanity and that is the cultural cloud covering autochthonous humanity. However, humanity remains as it has in the past. — isomorph
I maintain that humans originate a mistake covered by the cloud of civilization, and that mistake is that we are something other than autochthonous humans. — isomorph
I don't think you've clearly stated exactly what it is you're trying to say in simple words. The quotations you've provided seem to cloud your meaning instead of making it clearer. — T Clark
I have a strong belief in the existence and importance of human nature. I tend to growl when I think someone might be questioning that belief — T Clark
By nature men are alike. Through practice they have become far apart. — Confucius
How is what you call our "autochthonous humanity" different from human nature? — T Clark
Are you saying that what you call our human condition keeps us from seeing our autochthonous humanity, our human nature? — T Clark
don't think you've clearly stated exactly what it is you're trying to say in simple words. The quotations you've provided seem to cloud your meaning instead of making it clearer. — T Clark
Not sure what is expected from a sprawling OP like this. Are you inviting comment or questions? I'm not sure what it is you are saying. — Tom Storm
Humans who are virtuous, ren, have realized or perfected their nature. — Fooloso4
What some consider to be human nature seems to me to be a product of social and linguistic constructs rather than a set of inherent traits. — Tom Storm
It's not different. I am saying that humans have confused what their human nature is. Some philosophers have talked about 'authentic personhood', etc., which seems to be an ideal, while autochthonous humanity is what humans are along the whole continuum of human capabilities, i.e., both good and bad, altruism, prejudice, and so on. — isomorph
Are you saying that what you call our human condition keeps us from seeing our autochthonous humanity, our human nature?
— T Clark
No. The human condition is simply our circumstance on this earth. I do say that humans are under a cloud, ethnocentricity, anthropocentricity, technocentricity, etc., that covers our nature which made humans successful for several hundred thousand years before civilization came about, — isomorph
'm not sure I see the difference between what you call the human condition and what you call the cloud. Aren't ethnocentricity, anthropocentricity, technocentricity, etc. part of the human condition? — T Clark
No. The human condition is what we deal with on this earth. You may say that all of those centrisms are part of the human condition, but that is not the point that I am going for. Arendt, in her book, discusses the different phases of man's progress and industry and artifice as part of the human condition, but I want to discover the human condition of successful autochthonous humans on this earth. We have tech that is able to solve more problems than we are. Why aren't we? I think the failure is due to (in the past ethnocentricity has hurt people and benefited a few) technocentricity. If we discover the method of success for the several hundred thousand years before civilization, we may be able to deal with climate change, tectonic plate shift, vulcanism, etc. — isomorph
The ethical issue: Does it scale? — apokrisis
To oversimplify, we humans are creatures of instinct as much, more, than we are of learning and socialization. We are born with the capacity and drive for language. Our minds are structured by evolution to perceive, learn, and act in the world in a way that keeps us alive. — T Clark
The human condition is what we deal with on this earth. — isomorph
I don't know if I believe in something called human nature... — Tom Storm
(Though I recognize that using the term might have the unfortunate effect of supporting essentialism in the minds of some.) — wonderer1
Not sure any of that amounts to an essential nature. — Tom Storm
( for instance running is an essence of being human, some people can't run so they are less human) — isomorph
In Plato's time slavery was an institution, their own brand of misogyny, which meant that these people did not qualify as essential human beings. — isomorph
How is 'human condition;' a useful frame?
— Tom Storm
we are humans on this earth. — isomorph
I didn't think this OP was sprawling. I'll have to take another look. — isomorph
I find this curious. Does this mean a person in a wheelchair is by definition less than fully human? A blind person? — Tom Storm
Misogyny is hatred of women — Tom Storm
Not sure this helps much. So the human condition is simply the case that human beings live on this planet? — Tom Storm
Misogyny is not simply hatred of women. When an Ancient Greek man said I'm glad to be born a Greek, a man and not a woman, that is a brand of misogyny. — isomorph
I find this curious. Does this mean a person in a wheelchair is by definition less than fully human? A blind person?
— Tom Storm
That's exactly what I'm not saying, and what I said can't be construed in that way. — isomorph
There are a collection of traits that may be expressed differently in individuals, so to define an essence ( for instance running is an essence of being human, some people can't run so they are less human) is to create second class citizens. — isomorph
But we are all looking at and for something that would unify all of us, any of us, it we found it. I don’t think East or West are better. Both hold wisdom and both hold mistakes. But I also think each could benefit from each other to build something more illuminating than either alone. — Fire Ologist
We have tech that is able to solve more problems than we are. Why aren't we? I think the failure is due to (in the past ethnocentricity has hurt people and benefited a few) technocentricity. If we discover the method of success for the several hundred thousand years before civilization, we may be able to deal with climate change, tectonic plate shift, vulcanism, etc. — isomorph
Thus human nature is a radical incompleteness that has to be completed by a cultural adaptation to a particular environment, which becomes the essence of humanity such that for us "existence precedes essence", because our essence is now learned. — unenlightened
Do you think we will be able to adapt to climate change, tectonic plate shift, areas of famine and poverty in the current geopolitical situation? — isomorph
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