Thanks for helping to prove me right.
— Thanatos Sand
You're welcome, Thanatos. You have no idea of how happy it makes me to be able to cast light on your greatness!
I have no beef with entomology or evolution, but I refuse to admit that they teach me much about ethics. Consider the fact that human action ranges to the extremes. People can perform extraordinary acts of altruism, including kindness toward other species — or they can utterly fail to be altruistic, even toward their own children. So whatever tendencies we may have inherited leave ample room for variation; our choices will determine which end of the spectrum we approach. This is where ethical discourse comes in — not in explaining how we’re “built,” but in deliberating on our own future acts. Should I cheat on this test? Should I give this stranger a ride? Knowing how my selfish and altruistic feelings evolved doesn’t help me decide at all. Most, though not all, moral codes advise me to cultivate altruism. But since the human race has evolved to be capable of a wide range of both selfish and altruistic behavior, there is no reason to say that altruism is superior to selfishness in any biological sense.
In fact, the very idea of an “ought” is foreign to evolutionary theory. It makes no sense for a biologist to say that some particular animal should be more cooperative, much less to claim that an entire species ought to aim for some degree of altruism. If we decide that we should neither “dissolve society” through extreme selfishness, as [E.O.] Wilson puts it, nor become “angelic robots” like ants, we are making an ethical judgment, not a biological one. Likewise, from a biological perspective it has no significance to claim that I should be more generous than I usually am, or that a tyrant ought to be deposed and tried. In short, a purely evolutionary ethics makes ethical discourse meaningless.
We ourselves, as physical organisms, are part of [the universe described by modern science], composed of the same basic elements as everything else, and recent advances in molecular biology have greatly increased our understanding of the physical and chemical basis of life. Since our mental lives evidently depend on our existence as physical organisms, especially on the functioning of our central nervous systems, it seems natural to think that the physical sciences can in principle provide the basis for an explanation of the mental aspects of reality as well — that physics can aspire finally to be a theory of everything.
However, I believe this possibility is ruled out by the conditions that have defined the physical sciences from the beginning. The physical sciences can describe organisms like ourselves as parts of the objective spatio-temporal order – our structure and behavior in space and time – but they cannot describe the subjective experiences of such organisms or how the world appears to their different particular points of view. There can be a purely physical description of the neurophysiological processes that give rise to an experience, and also of the physical behavior that is typically associated with it, but such a description, however complete, will leave out the subjective essence of the experience – how it is from the point of view of its subject — without which it would not be a conscious experience at all.
So the physical sciences, in spite of their extraordinary success in their own domain, necessarily leave an important aspect of nature unexplained.
[According to evolutionary psychologists] the astonishing moral equipment of the human being — including rights and duties, personal obligations, justice, resentment, judgment, forgiveness — is the deposit left by millenniums of conflict. Morality is like a field of flowers beneath which the corpses are piled in a thousand layers. It is an evolved mechanism whereby the human organism proceeds through life sustained on every side by bonds of mutual interest.
I am fairly confident that the picture painted by the evolutionary psychologists is true. But I am also confident that it is not the whole truth, and that it leaves out of account precisely the most important thing, which is the human subject. We human beings do not see one another as animals see one another, as fellow members of a species. We relate to one another not as objects but as subjects, as creatures who address one another “I” to “you”....
Incorrect. Just because the many other animal species on this planet can't speak human language, doesn't mean that they like it when they or their young die prematurely. ...as many of them do when we destroy their habitat, by clearcutting, pollution, global-warming, etc. — Michael Ossipoff
Compared to the other animals — Michael Ossipoff
Humans have great potential. As a species, we don't live up to that potential at all, and our effect on Earth's life is incomparably worse than that of other animals — Michael Ossipoff
You seem to be confusing our potential with our actual deeds and effect. — Michael Ossipoff
But no, regardless of what it means, its definition, whatever it may be, doesn't invalidate anything that I said. — Michael Ossipoff
Are you a Spiritualist? — Michael Ossipoff
You continue to completely miss my point. Shame, along with all emotions, only exists as a concept within consciousness.
No, emotions are also physical reactions and expressions of unconscious experience and feeling, particularly with the more irrational ones like hate, love, and anger. So, they are products of the brain/body and, as you mentioned, another product of brain/body--consciousness. — Thanatos Sand
For humans to be the "shame" of the animal kingdom requires consciousness; other animals don't consider us the shame of the animal kingdom because they don't consider anything. Whether or not animals actually feel the emotion of shame is not related to a human (conscious) argument about whether or not we as humans are "shameful" animals.
Nature knows no "shame" — Thanatos Sand
"shameful" thing we do is as much a part of our biology--very often in deficient forms like psychopaths or pedophiles--as tearing animals to shreds is to crocodiles. — Thanatos Sand
What is Nature, capital N? the poetic device here is confusing.
The physical symptoms in the brain that lead to psychopathy or pedophilia are not the same thing as a crocodile feeding to survive.
I never said they were. You need to go read what I wrote again and retract that. — Thanatos Sand
And furthermore, those physical symptoms of mental illnesses are simply the machinery by which our subjective conscious experience of those states of mind are set into motion, and we only know that through the subjective experience of conscious scientific observation.
You're reducing those mental states to biological functions (biological reductionism).
This is fallacious because you're doing this through your conscious intellect.
When we observe the physical mechanisms of our own minds, we are doing just that: observing the mechanisms.
You're basically saying: The lasagna is only a product of the oven. No one made the lasagna, and they didn't (not) make it for anyone else to eat.
I never said they were. You need to go read what I wrote again and retract that.
— Thanatos Sand
The sentence in question is pretty vague, so maybe simplify it? Then feel free to comment on the actual argument that I just made instead of nitpicking on things that I misinterpreted because your language was vague.
No, they are not; they are somatic and mental manifestations of chemical imbalances in the brain. — Thanatos Sand
No, it's not because my conscious intellect is a product of my brain and the rest of my body and nothing more. — Thanatos Sand
No, I'm not. — Thanatos Sand
They are biological functions — Thanatos Sand
We can't observe the mechanisms of our minds. Only neurologists and their equipment like EKGs can. — Thanatos Sand
What a ridiculous metaphor. — Thanatos Sand
use your English skills if you have any.. — Thanatos Sand
But since you're fine with misrepresenting me, — Thanatos Sand
we're done and I won't be reading anymore of your posts. — Thanatos Sand
There's no need to insult me; — Noble Dust
What is a spiritualist? — Noble Dust
Someone who believes in consciousness as something apart from the physical animal. — Michael Ossipoff
The body doesn't make or originate mind or consciousness. Mind and consciousness are Spiritualist fictions. The fact is that we're each an animal, with preferences, likes, dislikes, fears, etc., and that's it. — Michael Ossipoff
The fact is that we're each an animal, with preferences, likes, dislikes, fears, etc., and that's it. — Michael Ossipoff
The body doesn't make or originate mind or consciousness. Mind and consciousness are Spiritualist fictions. — Michael Ossipoff
Such a person believes in consciousness or mind as a separate metaphysical substance. — Michael Ossipoff
though humans have a special adaptability, language, and special talents that the other animals don't have, if you meant that, other than that, there's some qualitative fundamental attribute possessed only by humans, then I disagree with that. — Michael Ossipoff
"Someone who believes in consciousness as something apart from the physical animal". — Michael Ossipoff
You're thinking of dualism; a spiritualist is a person who practices spiritualism. — Noble Dust
The body doesn't make or originate mind or consciousness. Mind and consciousness are Spiritualist fictions. The fact is that we're each an animal, with preferences, likes, dislikes, fears, etc., and that's it". — Michael Ossipoff
What's your argument for this claim? I assume you mean dualist fictions, not spiritualist ones.
For instance, this:
" The fact is that we're each an animal, with preferences, likes, dislikes, fears, etc., and that's it." — Michael Ossipoff
Is not an argument for this:
The body doesn't make or originate mind or consciousness. Mind and consciousness are Spiritualist fictions. — Michael Ossipoff
"Such a person believes in consciousness or mind as a separate metaphysical substance". — Michael Ossipoff
Are you using the word "substance" here as a metaphor on purpose or no?
My argument is that the simplest description of what we are, is that we're nothing other than what we seem to be--an animal. — Michael Ossipoff
Given that animals are natural-selection-designed to accomplish certain purposes, by responding to their surroundings for that purpose, what would you expect that to "look like" and "feel like" to the animal?
Wouldn't you, in fact, expect it to be exactly what you experience? — Michael Ossipoff
My argument is that the simplest description of what we are, is that we're nothing other than what we seem to be--an animal. — Michael Ossipoff
— Noble Dust
Isn't the simplest description of us that we're conscious beings?
Your conscious experience is the ontological starting point.
The concept of "I am simply an animal" is not the ontological starting point; it's an abstract concept.
Given that animals are natural-selection-designed to accomplish certain purposes, by responding to their surroundings for that purpose, what would you expect that to "look like" and "feel like" to the animal?
Wouldn't you, in fact, expect it to be exactly what you experience? — Michael Ossipoff
Not at all because I experience consciousness.
I think a lot of people lack any kind of framework to even consider this question from any perspective other than the biological. That's what we're seeing in this discussion — Wayfarer
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