Perhaps this is the "mainstream" view primarily among those already inclined not to believe in God, who are in fact, not actually the mainstream?
I would agree that evolution debunks a childlike Santa's workshop vision of God, which perhaps was prevalent among uneducated peasants of yesteryear. Beyond that, to me evolution seems a point in favor of an intelligent source to reality given that evolution is a self regulating mechanism. Not proof of God, just a point scored for the theist team.
However, that said, I remain persuaded that the theist vs. atheist paradigm is probably so hopelessly flawed as to be largely useless, and that whatever the reality is it likely bears little resemblance to that debate. Generally speaking, my sense is that that debate persists because it's like a familiar card game where everyone knows the rules and thus can be comfortable and generally lazy in playing their preferred cards — Hippyhead
Funny thing is I don't consider minds to be easy to generalize, yet that occurs very often. — Mayor of Simpleton
Taking it for granted that minds are not treated as differently as they perhaps should be, be that due to age, geographical location, time in which one lives, social norms, conflicts with norms, comfort in norms... the list goes on and on... ( — Mayor of Simpleton
By the way, if the process of 'trial and error' doesn't belong to a very intelligent algorithm(s), I personally wouldn't be one of the fruits (humans), even after zillions of years of evolution on earth (if not the first living cells on earth came from somewhere in outer space).
Now 'trial and error' is used in what is known as 'Artificial Intelligence'. And I personally use it in some products I design. — KerimF
I am not sure that the fact that bodily age and mental age do not match is an argument in favour of dualism. This is because it only suggests that the brain is not always affected by bodily aging, This could equally be applied to other aspects of developmental aging. For example, while many people develop high blood pressure in later life not everyone does.
Dementia is more of an illustration against dualism because in this condition there are clear signs of brain abnormalities which can be observed on CT scans. In the case of precocious developers it may that certain areas are activated by certain neurotransmitters. Of course, there is one strange conditions, like people who can do identify what day of the week someone was born at an instant, after being told their date of birth. I even met someone who could do this. However, unusual abilities or disabilities simply point to complexities of the way in which the brain translates into consciousness.
Even if you say that the mind does not age while the body does, while a human being is alive the mind and body are still connected through the brain rather than separate. So the only way to know that they can be independent would be after all bodily functions have ceased entirely — Jack Cummins
I'm a bit less interested in the exceptions here (dementia or preciousness in children), but more so in the normal situations — Mayor of Simpleton
What is the logic applied to impermanence that answers the question of how to live well? And, btw, the question is ‘how to end suffering?’ and not ‘how to live well?’ — praxis
Why can’t we say this about any religion? — praxis
Indeed. 'tis paradoxical. So far as bad examples go, the more useless you become, the better. — Banno
Is old age a blessing or a curse for the elderly? — David Mo
I am afraid that it does exist, in my life in the least.
When I was rather young, I had to join the military service for about 2 years. Being an engineer, I do it as an officer though of the lowest rank.
In the first training session on guns, I refused holding one.
They: "You have to know how to use a gun. This helps you defend yourself in case you will be attacked by an enemy".
Me: "But I have no enemies in my life"
They: "You may not have enemies now, but your country may be attacked by enemies anytime".
Me: "Please, what do enemies mean, in your opinion?"
They: "Our enemies are those who will impose their will on us".
Me: "Don't you mean they will do as you are doing to me now?”
They laughed while going away... and I wasn't asked anymore to attend such training.
By the way, my occupation in that period of time was teaching electronics in a military academy. — KerimF
This is only a problem because you worship the idol of utility, believing that usefulness is the highest good.
I'd aim for purpose over use.
Sisyphus is use without purpose. The fact that he is used to roll a rock for eternity might distinguish him from you because you believe yourself to be entirely useless, but why would you prefer his plight to yours?
So, you can rephrase the OP to ask what is your purpose, which would place you in the existential crisis as the rest of the godless, but you'd at least be relieved of the angst caused by your concerns over your uselessness. — Hanover
I used to wonder that until I stopped wondering it and that seems to make it go away. That seems to be the solution for most “philosophical angst”. I used to get periods where I’d be super anxious about how the world could be deterministic and nothing I do matters once every 3 months on the dot. Then I’d spend one month exactly to try to resolve the issue which either ends in me reaching a new conclusion or giving up. Funnily enough, both outcomes had the same effect, until 3 months later.
It seems to me that doing philosophy is the worst way to get rid of philosophical angst. Occasionally you get a complete shift in thought which will settle your issues for a while but it’s very rare. Best thing to do is to just do something practical for a while and actually do philosophy when there is no emotional charge behind it. I find the most of the time you try to untangle philosophical angst by doing philosophy you only make it worse but when you ignore it for a while and approach the subject when you’re not emotionally attached that leads to actual shifts in thought. — khaled
1) Is science a generally reliable method of generating new knowledge? I'm guessing we'd all agree the answer is yes. — Hippyhead
2) Can human beings successfully manage any amount of new knowledge delivered at any rate? It seems essential to seek an answer to this question, because the knowledge explosion feeds back upon itself, leading to an ever accelerating development of new knowledge. — Hippyhead
What do you mean by "chaos manifests"? I reiterate again that the neural networks exhibit chaotic dynamics, this has a precise mathematical formulation which is quite different than how you are using the term chaos. Also, chaotic dynamics in neural networks doesnot mean any output is possible. The outputs have a state space over which they vary. What this means is that although our neural networks may exhibit chaotic dynamics we suddenly won't be able hear megahertz frequency sounds or see x-rays. — debd
long the rule doesn't contradict my unconditional free-will love/care towards all others; friends, strangers and enemies. — KerimF
When one cannot even express the notion that 'never' is useless, without using the term, it is a strong indication that one's thinking is off course — unenlightened
greater good defense — jorndoe
omnipotent philosopher — Benj96
Jesus didn't impose any rules — KerimF
free-will — KerimF
if love is imposed by a law it cannot be true love — KerimF
"Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground." — Daniel Ramli
The content of the hard drives is analogous to mental content — your thoughts, beliefs, feelings, etc. That stuff can and does change, which is the whole point here, accounting for origins of that change. The overall function of the brain though, like the overall function of the hard drive,remains the same; those big features are relatively fixed and not easily altered. — Pfhorrest
Someone else already gave a great illustration with regards to a hard drive earlier. The magnetization of individual bits on a hard drive can be completely different, but the whole structure of the hard drive remains that of a hard drive. The magnetization of individual bits can change drastically and unpredictably over time, like weather, but still the general overall structure of the drive remains the same, or only changes very slowly, like climate. — Pfhorrest
I think we are talking past each other. What do you mean when you say people should exhibit chaotic behavior? — debd
It is not a question of if, experiments have shown that neural networks exhibit chaotic dynamics. However, this does not mean it cannot be analyzed or predictions cannot be made. — debd
Weather and climate again. — Pfhorrest
Chaotic systems are mathematically defined systems, it does not mean people will behave chaotically. You are confusing chaotic systems with the common use of the word chaos. — debd