That sounds very much as if adobe villages showed no 'progress' since a crow's nest and collapsible tipis were no improvement on the first octopus carrying a coconut shell to hide under, while a concrete high-rise were vastly superior to all of them. — Vera Mont
And anyway, ↪universeness doesn't consider the lifestyle of humans before European colonization worthy of notice, except with scorn. — Vera Mont
Sure, so you agree then that we need to do all of the above, yes?Why? If you don't survive, you sure can't thrive, evolve or progress. — Vera Mont
So, you and I both advocate for 'changes for the better,' we are simply debating the form and focus that those changes need to take. So far so good!Progress means to move in a designated direction. Choose the wrong direction and progress leads to a horrific demise. I think our forebears choose the wrong direction. — Vera Mont
No god has contacted me, protesting the idea, how about you?What god made it for your exclusive use? — Vera Mont
For such as this:Their own. Yours. What for? — Vera Mont
I have no choice but to interpret your meaning if I find it unclear or ambiguous. I am sure you will continue to clarify your position, If you think I am misinterpreting you. I will do the same.I feel it is unnecessary for you to keep 'interpreting' my statements for me , as I usually know what I mean when I type them. * — Vera Mont
I didn't say we should be more like them. I said: — Vera Mont
If you suggest that your personal level of enlightenment has no more value than that demonstrated by an octopus or a crow, then yes, I do find that to be a very low bar. I see an enormous range of enlightenment;ightenment between different humans. I see no such range from crow to crow or octopus to octopus. I am not an expert in observing the individual 'enlightenment' demonstrations between individual crows etc, and I am willing to be corrected by experts in that particular field, if you have any source of such. I have 59 years of experience of observing the differences in demonstrated enlightenment levels between human and imo, they have far more value than that demonstrated by the crows and octopi I have personally watched or observed via TV docs. If you disagree then that's ok. I assume you remain open to discussing your position?I don't think my personal enlightenment is different in value from that of an octopus or crow, — Vera Mont
And all other construction, including the ones that keep falling on heads when the wind blows, when our lovely fellow hominids lob bombs or whole airplanes at them, when the earth shakes, when a river floods, when fracking creates a sinkhole under them, evolved from those early, safe and durable structures - because some of us keep wanting bigger, instead of more sensible. — Vera Mont
I did not use the term junk, but you are welcome to offer your opinion on what, say Mercury or Mars is for? Do you think humans could give such objects more 'purpose' and/or meaning than they seem to have at present or do you think that some presence or current existent in the universe has a prior claim or a cunning plan for such that we are just not currently aware of?Meaningless objects? Dinosaurs and the solar system just a bunch of insignificant junk? — 0 thru 9
No, just offering my own rationale. I am a fan of skepticism but not surrender monkey pessimism.You may be engaging in a polemic and are taking an extreme position for argument sake maybe, but I need some more evidence.
Please don’t equate skepticism with hopelessness. — 0 thru 9
But the powerful human minds, brilliant science, astounding technology are currently under the heel of authoritarian power that will not let anything exist which threatens its hegemony.
This is daunting and depressing, but it is the status quo that I’m generally observing. — 0 thru 9
no progress at all in the theism of indigenous American tribes
— universeness
This is another sweeping statement. — 0 thru 9
If you want cities and civilization, how about the Mayans? The Hohokam built an irrigation system that they abandoned, but was later used by settlers.
As a general rule, members of the tribes had a knowledge of flora, fauna, and environment that modern scientists would rightly envy.
Scientists today are working with tribes in the Amazon trying to catalog (and perhaps preserve) the immense number of plant species there before they are wiped out. — 0 thru 9
Like most tools you probably find very useful to employ, every day of your life. But your year in a cave, could give you new opportunity to experience, first hand, the way of the Luddite.designed, built and programmed by techies. — Vera Mont
I thought I already told you! To do more from gen to gen than just exist and survive.Why would it need to? — Vera Mont
I think you already know this one quite well and need no examples to support my position. No, no progress at all in the theism of indigenous American tribes or modern religions. This 'no progress' status quo is another reason why theism is so pernicious and why we should never restrict ourselves to disparate, cultural, shallow existences. I am all for respecting and allowing folks to practice and live within what they covet as traditional and cultural imperatives, as long as their freedom to do so, does not compromise the freedom of anyone else and does not impact anyone's human rights to food, water, shelter, bodily autonomy, economic parity, etc, etc. For me, your status as an Earthling will always be far more important than your status as an American, a Scot, a Russian, a Ukrainian, a Palestinian or an Israeli.So, no progress, then? — Vera Mont
I'm not persuaded (but maybe your panglossalalia is right). — 180 Proof
No. I don't think my personal enlightenment is different in value from that of an octopus or crow. I know things they don't and they know things I don't. I have learned what I need to live my life. That's a happenstance, not a virtue. — Vera Mont
You live in a cave, teepee or mud hut for a year and I will live in a nice apartment in Miami.How is that different from an apartment in Miami? — Vera Mont
Both seem quite bad to me!Compare the religiosity of primitive Native Americans to advanced European - then, or now. — Vera Mont
I would advocate now the same arrangement I advocated all along: discreet, peacefully coexisting tribal units, with a global police force that they all support. We can't co-operate without being aware that we're the same species, but I would quite emphatically prefer we were less anthropocentric in our world-view.
But I won't be around to advocate anything, as it can't happen until long after the collapse of this civilization. — Vera Mont
No, as it would not be independent, you would have autocratic control over such.Or we could try my own sock-puppet as an arbiter. Too bad I don't have one. — Vera Mont
But it really makes no impression on me that you have like-minded allies: I'll just have to disagree with them, too, even the robots. — Vera Mont
So I typed species instead of genus :scream: :roll: :You mixed up genus and species. — Vera Mont
The species 'homo' is actually closer to 3 million years old and we are directly descended from that line. — universeness
no, I don't agree that any of the hominids 'achieved' anything more remarkable than species that reached environmental equilibrium and thus assured themselves of a long, stable existence. — Vera Mont
I specified H. sapiens. If it's any consolation, some estimates of its presence stretch to 300,000 years. — Vera Mont
while disagreeing with the basic tenet that technology is the only valid measure of a species' success. — Vera Mont
Did you gloss over the bit where
They existed (flourished profusely) for "between 165 and 177 million years"! That's quite an achievement
— 180 Proof
They throve and sustained their ecosystem, then were killed by an unpreventable cosmic event. This overachieving H. sapiens, in a mere 200,000 years has trashed its environment, destroyed much of its fauna and flora and put itself in an existential crisis? — Vera Mont
The species 'homo' is actually closer to 3 million years old and we are directly descended from that line.The Earth has existed for over 4 billion years, the universe, for almost 14 billion, do you consider these facts to be achievements in themselves as well? Mere existence and survival is not enough imo. — universeness
What??? Is that some attempt at humour that I am missing?Well, why did the dinosaurs not make use of those technologies? — Vera Mont
What??? Is that some attempt at humour that I am missing?They deserved to die! — Vera Mont
It already exists, it's called human sanity, reason and enlightenment. Many of us employ it every day. You do to ..... well, mostly. Now, that's humour!Now, you just need to invent a deflector shield for human insanity. — Vera Mont
The Earth has existed for over 4 billion years, the universe, for almost 14 billion, do you consider these facts to be achievements in themselves as well? Mere existence and survival is not enough imo.They existed (flourished profusely) for "between 165 and 177 million years"! That's quite an achievement — 180 Proof
Against a meteor strike, I very much doubt even the cleverest humans have an adequate defence, however the movies like to mess around with the idea of long-range nuclear missiles. — Vera Mont
If Shoemaker-Levy 9 had hit Earth in '94 instead of Jupiter, no doubt, like the dinos, we would be here – wherever we are – having this discussion. We wouldn't have been able to stop it then even if we saw it coming; today, I still don't think we have that capability despite what scifi / Hollywood tells us. — 180 Proof
I'm trying to imagine energy (the ability to do work) in the complete absence of matter, which I'm not sure makes much sense. This would imply a completely non-material world where whatever constitutes a form of energy is sufficient in-itself for a kind of existence. Though if matter is really just a form of energy, it's all energy dude (and this is not profound). Our ability to understand energy requires everything that informs the understanding (energy as properties of organized matter). — Nils Loc
Okay, if you want to call every form of conflict "war". My definition of war is less comprehensive. — Vera Mont
Chimpanzees are the only animals I know that fight their own species for resources. — Vera Mont
Predatory ants attacking a termite colony does not constitute a war: they're hunting for food, not fighting over contested territory. — Vera Mont
Humans are the only animal who wants the whole world.
— 0 thru 9
I wholly agree with this. — Vera Mont
The question is prejudicial, implying that information is only "processed data". — Gnomon
In essence, information is the result of processing data to extract meaning or insights. — universeness
As far as I can tell, war and conquest are human inventions. — 0 thru 9
Really you’re asking a more general question unrelated to the book: if I’m more disturbed by the idea of being a perpetrator of (fictional or otherwise) violence, or the victim. I suppose I’d have to say the perpetrator. Being the victim is just something horrific you’d want to avoid, but being the perpetrator makes you wonder if there are circumstances that could make me do it, which is more unsettling. — Jamal
I am sure you agree, real life events are often worse, than the horrors depicted in fiction. I think, sadly, fictional horror, often informs the sick human mind or the nefarious human mind on new ways to inflict terror/impose complete control over others.I should point out that what is depicted in the book does not happen in real life. — Jamal
Yeah, well, imo, you are definitely not missing out on anything by making that choice.No, I would not watch something like that. — Jamal
Depravity under jungle rules is nothing compared to the depravity of American slavery and the Nazi death camps, so no to that. On the other hand, there is a special—and also fascinating and stimulating—horror for me in folk horror films like the Wicker Man, and religious horror like the Exorcist. When I first watched the Wicker Man I didn’t know anything about it, and I sympathised with the pagan islanders whose behaviour was so shocking to Edward Woodward’s austere Wee Free Christian fundamentalist—until their barbarity became apparent. So there’s something to be said for your idea: what is disturbing in these films is, maybe, the idea of ancient unalloyed evil that hasn’t gone away. — Jamal
That seems to come with our cultural heritage and was made worse with religion and entering wars believing that is God's will. — Athena
That's how I've been calling it, too, when I say civilization was where the human race went drastically wrong. But, in fact, the previous, low-density cultures were not quite so haphazard as you depict them here. Many were settled in one place, or migrated back and forth between winter and summer residences, had a mixed economy of hunting, fishing and farming, had complex language and folklore, advanced handicrafts, knowledge of their environment and resources and extensive networks of commerce and social interaction, alliances and treaties, as well as border disputes, with other tribes. — Vera Mont
I don't think he cared how anybody chose to live. What he set out to conquer were actually more sophisticated civilizations than the Macedonian backwater. I think he just wanted, first to outdo his old man and smash the ascendancy of Greece, then dominion and tribute. Lots of lovely loot during the conquest itself and lots more from vassal states thereafter. Plus his name all over everything - like other megalomaniacs we've known. — Vera Mont
the religious beliefs and family relations of vassal states were not regulated by the conqueror. Even the Roman policy was tolerant of other cultures until Constantine's conversion. — Vera Mont
I think this goal existed long before we invented gods to justify such. This is straight from our experiences of the rules of surviving in the wilds. Be the best predator in existence and destroy all competitors. The competitive capitalist is it's direct inheritor. That's our greatest shame, imo, that so many of us, have so far, been unable to stop acting like we are still in the wilds, living under raw Darwinian rules.I think, though I haven't researched it so can't be sure, that one-god, one church, everything else must be destroyed BS is the Christian influence. — Vera Mont
The previous paragraph had a general depiction of other cultures previous to the one particular culture which about roughly 10,000 years ago began its transformation into our present day Worldwide Civilization — 0 thru 9
No culture seemed to have a definite purpose or goal …Until the emergence of our particular Civilization about 10,000 years ago. Our Civilization has the beginning, the middle, and the ending all mapped out for our convenience. It has the teachings, the means of production and implementation, and the goal. — 0 thru 9
A civilization closer to the one of our dreams is possible for all of us…
and exactly because of the efforts of all of us. — 0 thru 9
Is this a reference to all humans alive today?…Until our particular civilization, that is. — 0 thru 9
Well, here’s an idea… make a law that a candidate may delegate their votes to another party, if they themselves don’t win. They would have to be clear and upfront about it, of course. — 0 thru 9
I was pulling for Bernie Sanders, but I don’t think the country was ready for him, unfortunately. — 0 thru 9
Absolutely not possible that a computer program can be more important to a child's learning than the teacher. — Athena
I think that is the main concern for now, yes, the abuse of AI by nasty humans, rather than a justified fear of AI becoming totally self-aware and conscious, any time soon.I am not worried about AI being anti-human. I am worried about us being anti-human — Athena
universeness favors socialism and perhaps the two of you can agree on what it is and share that with me. — Athena
You still have 'us'!!!I am connected, Dog help me!, — Vera Mont
There are many aspect of our current global civilisation that I hope are absolutely doomed! So, we both think our species will survive all of the threats it currently faces. That's quite optimistic of you, all past posts considered. :party:And I still hold out hope for the species. It's the civilization that is doomed. — Vera Mont
A great paragraph that I hope many theists read.Damn real! I liked Jesus - at least in the pictures where his heart wasn't exposed (*shudder!*) until I read the NT. So there he is, this hero with super powers, and how does he use them? He smites a fig tree because it's not the season of fruit, and then throws a herd of innocent pigs off a cliff. At 12, I had very strong sense of justice. I've tempered it with some forbearance since then - a feat the Judeo-Christian-Muslim god couldn't manage.
No, that's not fair! He was actually doing a little better in the ecumenical 1960's, except he did nothing about the child molesting - too busy scoring football goals in Brazil? Then got hijacked by white southern Baptist preachers in pursuit of fast bucks and political clout. "So it goes.... " — Vera Mont
Thanks, I do understand. I am taking off for the beach today. It is not a great day for the beach but the recreation center bus goes today and I have a great raincoat. This is a rare event because I have clients 5 days a week and don't usually take time off for me. — Athena
And this chatting is what got us in the lounge. At least here we are free to be full humans and I think that is very important to everything else. Human relationships strongly impact everything. How we understand each other, strongly impacts what we think of someone and what we think that person thinks of us. — Athena
. Such as teachers should work miracles despite the lack of support and parents should help their children despite not having the preparation that teachers have. All these demands without concern for the bottom line- how do we feel. — Athena
:100: I am a democratic socialist and a secular humanist.We absolutely must end autocratic order that leaves those on the frontline powerless and failure unavoidable. — Athena
Your favoring of AI terrifies me because it can make the problem worse. Can you see the possibility of our reliance on AI becoming a total nightmare? We must empower the people, not take another step towards destroying their power. — Athena
I think I am doing all I can do with my present commitments and that I don't have the energy to do anymore. — Athena
who is going to put in the effort to make that happen and how can such a dreamer activate the community? — Athena
Like breathing or a beating heart, defiance – striving – is involuntary. Conatus, will to power / amor fati, revolt. — 180 Proof
Of course I do — 180 Proof
It wasn't a comment on your proposal; it was on your view of achieved and achievable progress. — Vera Mont
Yep, sounds familiar, but I think a grievance procedure could be established that allowed better balance to exist between the authority of line managers and the wishes/wants/needs/concerns of workers.But my SO was a software architect who would talk back to managers with their own career agendas about their counterproductive decisions, and was labelled "not a team player" — Vera Mont
Well, I would certainly prefer it if people could contribute to society by doing what they love doing most, and I think that should always be the goal but we should all share in the crappy jobs as well, until they can be fully automated.Nobody should have a job. Jobs destroy integrity, self-respect, family, community and democracy. As long as humankind is divided into employers and employed, masters and minions, democracy cannot flourish. — Vera Mont
I think the answer lies somewhere between more help for those on the front line, from AI based expert systems and the establishment of more robust grievance procedures when you don't agree with the actions or decisions of your line managers. I think this would apply to all service based employment.What can we build into our culture that might prevent that? — Athena
We might surprise you yet, ya auldWhat's that? "Doomster speak!" No, just one latter-day primate all-too-soberly gesticulating this old blues to another — 180 Proof