The underlying principle is "entropic heat death", and we are just staving it off on various short or shorter timescales. — schopenhauer1
However, is this not descriptive and not prescriptive? — schopenhauer1
Not what is happening, but what ought to happen. — schopenhauer1
Yes. We have the capacity to make things other than they are. So we must ask how things ought be. That question is not answered by physics.I guess, this might be the question here. Not what is happening, but what ought to happen. — schopenhauer1
Doing a bit of green tinkering and a lot of hand wringing. Ineffectually looking at those anglers with slightly imploring, yet also insisting eyes. As there’s more of them than you. But maybe if you waved your gun… — apokrisis
That question is not answered by physics. — Banno
Yes. We have the capacity to make things other than they are. So we must ask how things ought be. That question is not answered by physics. — Banno
That is to say, the morality is equivalent to the terrain. The physics surrounding it, the map. You are stuck in mapland. — schopenhauer1
So physics is our map of reality at its broadest possible level. It is a map of the most cosmic scale constraints that frame our minute to minute existence. One might want to fly off the top of the building, but that free choice is a little constrained if we haven't yet evolved wings. Or at least have a jet pack attached to our backs and it is fully fuelled up for our little adventure. — apokrisis
Yes, there is a difference between a physical account and an intentional one. I'd explain this in terms of direction of fit - a physical account is produced by making our words fit the world, while an intentional account supposes that we can change the world to fit our "fears, wants, desires, and values". — Banno
One does not have to look far to find ethical stances quite divergent from those suggested in the OP. Indigenous ethics for example might involve circular time, self-control, self-reliance, courage, kinship and friendship, empathy, a holistic sense of oneness and interdependence, reverence for land and Country and a responsibility for others. The actions implicit in such a view are very different to those in either of options A or B in the OP. Yet such an approach might be quite conducive towards long-term stability....what would be an ethical stance and what would be its justification towards resource management? What should we do? — schopenhauer1
I guess what I'm getting at then is, what would be a justification for an ethical decision? If we said something like, "We are entropic beings with global constraints and local degrees of freedom", that would be some sort of category error, no?
So, looping back to the OP, what would be an ethical stance and what would be its justification towards resource management? What should we do? — schopenhauer1
If the bridge is public, then the fishermen blocking your way is inconsistent with the purpose of the bridge, and they ought let you cross. — Banno
If the bridge is public, then the fishermen blocking your way is inconsistent with the purpose of the bridge, and they ought let you cross. — Banno
One does not have to look far to find ethical stances quite divergent from those suggested in the OP. Indigenous ethics for example might involve circular time, self-control, self-reliance, courage, kinship and friendship, empathy, a holistic sense of oneness and interdependence, reverence for land and Country and a responsibility for others. The actions implicit in such a view are very different to those in either of options A or B in the OP. Yet such an approach might be quite conducive towards long-term stability.
Which might serve to show how ethical stances are embedded in what is loosely called a "form of life". — Banno
Perhaps, but I wouldn't have thought so - his Mad Max Model B involves "bug-out survivalist with guns", and no home garden will feed a family. Indigenous ethics appear to depend on a level of cooperation absent from Model B. But the point I would contend is not just that the only options are Model A or Model B, but that a better response to your question of "what would be an ethical stance" is not various ethical theories so much as whole ways of living. This by way of bringing us back to ethics as about what we should do, not what is the case.Isn't this sort of apokrisis Model B steady state notion? — schopenhauer1
Biosemiosis helps us get our global metaphysics right. — apokrisis
The future is open. The question becomes how we can expect the predictable state of the world to reshape our social values at a fundamental level. — apokrisis
Perhaps, but I wouldn't have thought so - his Mad Max Model B involves "bug-out survivalist with guns", and no home garden will feed a family. Indigenous ethics appear to depend on a level of cooperation absent from Model B. But the point I would contend is not just that the only options are Model A or Model B, but that a better response to your question of "what would be an ethical stance" is not various ethical theories so much as whole ways of living. This by way of bringing us back to ethics as about what we should do, not what is the case. — Banno
One does not have to look far to find ethical stances quite divergent from those suggested in the OP. — Banno
The actions implicit in such a view are very different to those in either of options A or B in the OP. Yet such an approach might be quite conducive towards long-term stability. — Banno
That... is highly doubtful. Definitely not a map I would follow. — Metaphysician Undercover
I could be way off, so apokrisis can correct me on his own notions, but it seems like apokrisis mentioned this kind of "indigenous" model as once in play, but that it would not longer matter as it's too late to put the genie back in the bottle as far as the runaway entropy we've unleashed since the Industrial Revolution. — schopenhauer1
Good to know. :up: — apokrisis
We are what we eat and we now eat fossil fuel. Coal saw world population explode from 0.5 to 2 billion. Fertilizer and oil resulted in a population increase to almost 8 billion by 2020. For a while, until middleclass antinatalism started to kick in, we were going not just exponential but super-exponential. — apokrisis
We "is" constrained by our genetics... — apokrisis
For a while, until middleclass antinatalism started to kick in, we were going not just exponential but super-exponential. — apokrisis
But on a technical note, "antinatalism" as you are using it is not quite how it is used in the philosophical literature in the last 20 years or so. — schopenhauer1
a physical account is produced by making our words fit the world, while an intentional account supposes that we can change the world to fit our [words]. — Banno
Prospective parents are turning off that tap as the future can look pretty dire. Another reason to give folk a political roadmap they can believe in. Not simply tell them your kids are screwed and so are you, so just die now please. No point hanging on for the bitter end. — apokrisis
I love the short phrases that say a lot. — Fire Ologist
In the meantime, celebrate a world where you get to make your personal choice on procreation. At least until - in the US – the Supreme Court gets around to dealing with anomalies like you. — apokrisis
So what does that change? My systems story says there are global constraints and local degrees of freedom. Choice exists for the individual on all things. All that changes is the degree of constraint. — apokrisis
Having children isn’t compulsory. Your parents and friends may have views. Financial circumstances may impinge. As may fears for the future. As a decision it is complex because it does add real meaning to most lives but is also your biggest single life commitment.
This would be a reason why antinatalism seems wrong in trying to impose some global ought on the basis of a very false premise about the universality of human suffering. — apokrisis
Making a personal decision based on clear information about the collective future is quite a different thing. — apokrisis
Even if people (aren't enlightened yet) to be full-fledged ANs, they are at least seeing the material conditions of the present and future to be such that it wouldn't be worth bringing more people into it. It's AN-adjacent, even if not full-AN. — schopenhauer1
So you proposed a bit of a strawman here. Antinatalism is not a political policy but an ethical one — schopenhauer1
l. That is to say, the fishermen blocking you to get to your car is an example of a positive project (fishing) getting in the way of your negative right. — schopenhauer1
So a cult? But passive-aggressive? — apokrisis
How could it be a strawman when my OP is about ethical precepts that can scale as political organisation? — apokrisis
Another way of talking about the competition-cooperation dynamic. Except you prefer to see constraints as imposed burdens in this cruel life we are forced to live, etc. — apokrisis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.