So when you ask if "we" will survive, if you mean the current Western consumer society, then the answer is no — unenlightened
War, famine, and disease will solve the problem. In the meantime — unenlightened
Not sure any of that amounts to an essential nature. The fact that we interact with our environment and try to survive (like most creatures) is true. I'm not sure human nature is a useful frame. — Tom Storm
The simple answer is that the system of sense organs and nerves that enables living things to survive and orientate themselves in the outer world has evolved phylogenetically through confrontation with an adaptation to that form of reality which we experience as phenomenal space. This system thus exists a priori to the extent that it is present before the individual experiences anything, and must be present if experience is to be possible. But its function is also historically evolved and in this respect not a priori. — Konrad Lorenz - Behind the Mirror
If the human condition is anything, it is a blank canvas.
We become what we choose to be. Especially in today's world. Because of technology.
If we choose to be shaped (almost) exclusively by our exterior circumstances and environments, that is still a choice. Made mindfully or otherwise.
The world, reality is a collection of choices. — Bret Bernhoft
(a) h. sapiens species-specific functional defects¹ — 180 Proof
And so I think of the human condition in sum as the struggle to preserve human nature while simultaneously striving to surpass (all of) human nature's inherent limits (e.g. immorbity ... immortality ... immateriality ...) — 180 Proof
They are just text or links with [#] on the end that corresponds to a (keyboard function) superscript¹ appended to a term or phrase. All the same text format. Idk how others do it but that works for me.First, how do you get footnotes installed? — isomorph
There's nothing "ideal" aboutyour use of 'functional defects' gives the sense of an ideal sapiens species
because every member of our species has these vulnerabilities; thus, they constitute our "nature", no?defects (e.g.) thirst-hunger, bereavement, insecurity, shame, mortality, confusion, illness, exposure, etc — 180 Proof
Why do you think so? H. sapiens have adapted themselves for tens of millennia to almost every ecosystem on Earth and have for over a half century in limited fashion lived in space off of the planet, no doubt as a prelude to future permanent extraterrestrial settlements. No doubt (in my mind, based on the anthropological record), humans are uniquely primates-which-are-also-more-than-primates. :monkey:... it is illusory [to] think humans are other than autochthonous. — isomorph
defects (e.g.) thirst-hunger, bereavement, insecurity, shame, mortality, confusion, illness, exposure, etc — 180 Proof
but for tens of millennia so far these human illusions – sciences, histories, philosophies, arts ... fauna-flora domestication, exploration, trade, migrations – have worked spectacularly well (though, of course, not without significant costs as well). — 180 Proof
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