Basically, fossil fuels are commodities, and commodities are assets. Assets can be mortgaged - and in this way, fossil fuels can be monetized without being extracted. The money raised by mortgaging fossil fuels would first go to applying sustainable energy technology. — karl stone
So, your alternative is what? That we have less? How is that achieved? — karl stone
Less is not an answer. — karl stone
There's no going back. There's no standing still. — karl stone
My beef with you is - this is my thread, and thus far you haven't discussed my ideas at all. — karl stone
No-one has disputed that human beings are limited; nor has anyone argued for unlimited use of technology. — karl stone
In fact, if you are arguing against the "more is better" assumption underlying human behavior, it's you proposing the "radical transformation of the human condition, without offering any explanation..." — karl stone
I'm still trying to put across the principle of acting responsibly in relation to a scientific understanding of reality - as opposed to applying technology as directed by religious, political and economic ideological misconceptions of reality. — karl stone
People are mental and can't be trusted, so padded cells for everyone! But now what? — karl stone
But we are not talking about children. We're talking about scientists, governments and industries primarily. Some extremely smart and serious people. — karl stone
increasingly valid and coherent understanding of reality — karl stone
So how are you going to take those factors - already in play, out of the game? You can't. — karl stone
Well it isn't going anywhere Jake - more is inevitable. People need water, food, clothing, housing, heat, light, employment, entertainment - and all you're offering them is less. — karl stone
You do not seem to have got to grips with the core concept - that is, science as a tool was pursued as a means to progress, whereas, science as an understanding of reality was suppressed relative to religious dogma, and thereby political and economic ideology. — karl stone
Similarly, we don't need superhuman powers of prescience to manage technology. All we need, is to know what's true, and do what's right in relation to what's true. — karl stone
Sure, but it doesn't really get us anywhere, does it? It's of absolutely no help whatsoever to man nor beast. — karl stone
The idea of "unlimited science and technology" is purely hypothetical and somewhat unlikely. Your argument appeals to the unknown absolute to conjure fear. — karl stone
But I haven't proposed unlimited science and technology - as your absurd example of selling a ten year old boy a heat seeking missile demonstrates - your arguments are those of a straw-man tilting at windmills. — karl stone
Insofar as the gifted make use of those talents - and benefit from doing so, it is good for society (and the poor) that they should. — karl stone
...if the history of all hitherto existing societies is the history of class struggle, how could class consciousness be absent from the working class? — karl stone
The top 20 percent of households actually own a whopping 90 percent of the stuff in America. — Washington Post
Their problem is that they lack class-consciousness, and heaven and earth have been moved to make sure they don't develop class consciousness. — Bitter Crank
The wealthiest 1 percent of American households own 40 percent of the country's wealth,
Today, the top 1 percent of households own more wealth than the bottom 90 percent combined.
The top 20 percent of households actually own a whopping 90 percent of the stuff in America
If there is any prospect at all of successfully managing the potential dangers of science and technology, I'd suggest it follows from adopting responsibility to the meaningful implications of the reality science describes. — karl stone
For, make no mistake - my technophobic friend, there is no retreat to the rural idyll for the majority. — karl stone
I genuinely believe there is a way forward - that follows from the piece on evolution on the previous page, that being (intellectually) correct to reality, as all surviving life has done through attrition until human intellect, is a path that leads somewhere we must go. — karl stone
Be correct to reality or be rendered extinct. — karl stone
Granting science the highest authority is debatable because science doesn't produce truth about everything. It has the capacity to give us a truthful report on the physical, natural world. That's no small thing. It is gradually revealing how our brains work--that is most excellent. I trust science. What science is not equipped to do is tell us what we should do. — Bitter Crank
Had the Church recognized the significance of science from 1630, and pursued it as effectively the word of God the Creator - science would own authority, and be pursued much more rapidly and systematically than it was. — karl stone
but I can explain why science is the right answer - and how accepting that a scientific understanding of reality has the authority of truth, provides a political rationale for the application of technology on merit. — karl stone
Your position, that technology itself is inherently problematic, is a position I've encountered, but haven't argued against before. — karl stone
You've misunderstood. I've said magically becoming rational was the natural course of human affairs, but a course we didn't take. It may seem strange to you to envisage, but then you are not who you might have been. Humankind struggled from animal ignorance into human knowledge over countless generations, and then balked at the prospect of actually knowing what's true. Had man in a worshipful manner - made it his vocation and duty to know what's true, and do what's right in terms of what's true - it would be as if a red carpet unfurled at his feet. — karl stone
Whats the solution? — frank
How should we proceed, given that - what I'm trying to say is that your conclusions are subsumed within my paradigm? — karl stone
That certainly could be said about the nature of science - and how it is employed in society, but much more might also be said about the nature of science, and I would argue - how therefore, science should be employed in society. — karl stone
Fundamentally, I am not asking man to manage the powers science makes available. I suggest they should be managed in relation to a modern day scientific understanding of reality; that is to say, the truth that provides the power should be taken on board in deciding how it is employed. — karl stone
You have identified the phenomenon, certainly - but the cause is buried deep in the history of the ideological development of civilizations; — karl stone
and thereby claim the full, scientifically advised functionality of technology — karl stone
That's the mismanagement you identify, but attribute - incorrectly, to the nature of science and technology itself. — karl stone
So, how bad was it where you live? What was it like? — Bitter Crank
I really do understand your argument. You believe any technology we invent to solve one problem, necessarily causes other problems, and perhaps, bigger problems. Is that not it? — karl stone
I do not accept that argument because, I believe, you assume that the application of technology we have is a rational and natural course of events, for a world blind to that problem.
What I'm saying is that the application of technology is perverse - and that the problem you describe is inherent to this perversion of science and technology. But science and technology is not correctly applied.
This perversion stems from the suppression of science as truth from the 1630's, and the subsequent use of science as a tool for the pursuit of ideological power and profit. — karl stone
The technology exists - the need to apply it is clear. So why is it not applied? — karl stone
I don't know what you don't get about mortgaging an asset. — karl stone
The point is that you’re apparently confusing thought or information processing with dualism or something that ‘operates by a process of division’. We’re not continuously self-conscious, nor is self-consciousness necessary for information processing.Dualism is only an issue because of our self concept, or rather, our attachment to the concept. — praxis
I would suggest that solar panels floating on the surface of the ocean, could produce electricity - used to power desalination and electrolysis, producing fresh water and hydrogen fuel at sea, collected by ship, or pumped through pipelines to shore. The geographical area available at sea is incredibly vast, and effectively shading the ocean, with thousands of square kilometers of solar panels would also help combat global warming. — karl stone
...the solution I devised is very simple, and entirely consistent with the principles of our economic system. Basically, fossil fuels are commodities, and commodities are assets. Assets can be mortgaged - and in this way, fossil fuels can be monetized without being extracted. The money raised by mortgaging fossil fuels would first go to applying sustainable energy technology. — karl stone
I just needed to prove that sustainability was technologically possible - and it is. — karl stone
I know. I read your other thread. Interesting thesis. I'm sorry I haven't replied on your thread yet, but I'm hitting this hard - here and elsewhere right now. I get it. — karl stone
What is it that makes an electro-chemical information medium dualistic? Is, for example, a mechanical recycling device that separates bottles from cans dualistic? — praxis
Fort Agnostic, featuring high walls, a lovely moat, and a tall tower upon which to look down on the ignorant masses. — praxis
Yes, that can be argued, but that doesn't seem to address my point. — S
By a meaningful difference, I simply meant that the two positions should be mutually exclusive. — S
That is, I shouldn't be able to be both an atheist and a theist in the same sense. — S
So what does exploring that realm mean? — schopenhauer1
I just had a dream the other night about moving out and going to college, and a celebration party made by my mom. — Posty McPostface
But what are your assumptions here about facing the void and the like? — schopenhauer1
If we are to truly look at what we are doing, we are constantly thinking of ways to make sure we have something to work towards. — schopenhauer1
However, with any prolonged reflection, these goals are just placeholders for a void. — schopenhauer1
Other animals, let's say a bird, has no need for self-deception. It doesn't fill voids of meaning. It eats its seeds, it makes its nest, it chirps in the morning, it finds mates, and repeats. The human is one that must self-deceive at all moments that there is something to do, somewhere to go, and something to be. — schopenhauer1
The human is one that must self-deceive at all moments