So anything that affects physical stuff is itself physical? — TheMadFool
Isn't that begging the question? — TheMadFool
whether the nonphysical can/can't affect the physical as of yet an open question? — TheMadFool
Take the idea of God, a nonphysical entity that allegedly can act on the physical. — TheMadFool
Why not? You're begging the question again. — TheMadFool
What's common between a lump of clay (physical) and a field (you claim it too is physical). — TheMadFool
Too, electric fields, to my reckoning, are mathematical objects - mental constructs. — TheMadFool
In what sense is sound physical? — TheMadFool
Since color and feeling angry are not properties in the explanation — Marchesk
Right, but the problem for physicalism is that experience is not part of the explanation. — Marchesk
Just curious, an electric field has no mass? — Marchesk
For starters, thoughts don't seem to be physical e.g how much does the thought of Descartes weigh — TheMadFool
then thoughts don't seem to be energy per se but patterns in energy and patterns, last I checked, aren't physical, are they? — TheMadFool
The red experience is not part of the explanation. It's only a correlation. — Marchesk
The physical processes, in terms of physical explanation, do not include the experience as part of the explanation. Ergo, the physical processes qua physical explanation, are not identical to the experience. — Marchesk
The reason I said that was that anyone can justify anything in the name of X. Crass utilitarianism isn't a good reason. — schopenhauer1
Right, you cannot use someone unnecessarily (see my definition). — schopenhauer1
Again, please define to me what is utopia. — schopenhauer1
You can never know if someone will find something worthwhile, or change their minds down the line, or simply have on balance not a great life. You just don't know. — schopenhauer1
Rather, it is unjust to impose anything unnecessarily that involves forms of unwanted, effort, annoyance, suffering, and things that you would not do otherwise if you were to create your own universe. — schopenhauer1
But that's just the thing, you pick analogies which aren't life or in this case work. — schopenhauer1
If someone gave me a gift that lasted a large chunk of life or a whole lifetime, I couldn't get out of it, and it causes severe dislike, annoyance, and negative experience in general.. I wouldn't call that much of a gift — schopenhauer1
So the brain is creating an experience that is not part of any scientific description of the world — Marchesk
I do not see how this helps physicalism. — Marchesk
How would you fit color experience into physicalism? — Marchesk
She already knew about those changes. — frank
I think the thought experiment is supposed to have implications for physicalism, along the lines of: there are aspects of the mental that aren't physical. — frank
A new discovery in the science of evolution has shown that a logic developed through evolution will never seek to understand the truth, it just learns to maipulate it's environment without a deeper understanding of what it is manipulating: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYp5XuGYqqY&t=997s
This is a real warning: when manipulating the universe around you - even if you do it successfully - you have not the slightest clue what you are really interacting with. (I strongly reccomend watching the video in the link to understand this better) — FalseIdentity
So my first complaint is that logic pretends to be something that it is not (a universal key to truth - this it is clearly not). — FalseIdentity
My second complaint relates to the discovery that logic is developed mainly for hunting and is hence predatory in nature — FalseIdentity
2. Understand things that are not relevant to survival such as what is "the good". — FalseIdentity
1. Understand truths that can not be chased and exploited in a physical sense (which come to mind?) — FalseIdentity
Are there any thought shools that attack logic? Is Nirvana for example a state beyond logic? — FalseIdentity
Unnecessary is not ameliorating greater harms with lesser harms, but simply causing harm to someone for no reason other than you want to see an outcome take place. — schopenhauer1
If I punch you now, and you get enlightenment from it later — schopenhauer1
Prior to birth you can prevent harm, period. Once birth happens, you have to immediately start ameliorating greater harms with lesser harms — schopenhauer1
Unjust = not based on or behaving according to what is morally right and fair. — schopenhauer1
In this case, making someone else play a game they had no hand in creating, cannot escape from without dire consequences, etc. — schopenhauer1
All I have to show is THIS world is sufficiently unfair to make others play.. — schopenhauer1
Let's first make this criteria.. What to you makes a utopia.. Then we can move from there. If you don't answer that question, I am not going to move forward. — schopenhauer1
In this case, making someone else play a game they had no hand in creating, cannot escape from without dire consequences, etc.
-You
So doing this is not morally right and fair? But this also applies to having children in a utopia, which you said you're fine with. So which is it? — khaled
In your scenario, everything hinges on where you place the beginning of life/personhood. — baker
Point is, if the genetic modification was done before life starts, is it then ok? After all, there is no one to suffer an injustice right? — khaled
Secondly, your scenario is partly analogous to putting poison in a well and claiming that as long as nobody drinks from the well, there is no injustice. — baker
When there is noone to whom the injustice could happen, there is no injustice. — baker
We must follow the rules. Can you make your own rules? Can you have designed it from the first place nd then played it, tweak it, reverse it? Of course not. Then it's not just.. — schopenhauer1
1) Can't create your own rule for the game..
2) We can judge the game (unlike say an animal that kind of just lives out the game).. Our layer of rationalization/language etc. allows judgement etc. — schopenhauer1
Every other kind of harm is always justified when the person is born, so it's after the fact (schooling, vaccines, punishment for violating something, etc.). Not so in this case. — schopenhauer1
in no other case would people's moral sentiment simply say, "Cause unnecessary suffering for someone else" — schopenhauer1
Every other kind of harm is always justified when the person is born, so it's after the fact (schooling, vaccines, punishment for violating something, etc.). Not so in this case. — schopenhauer1
Right, but I am talking more about the idea that anything is justified if somehow your feelings about it lead to a positive experience (whether you know it or not). — schopenhauer1
So, what's your definition of an unjust position, without reference to what the person in the position thinks of their position? Is it unjust above a certain number of work hours a week? A certain difficulty of work? What's your standard? — khaled
Still goes back to the happy slave in an unjust situation. — schopenhauer1
It would seem in no other case would people's moral sentiment simply say, "Cause unnecessary suffering for someone else" — schopenhauer1
If I punch you now, and you get enlightenment from it later, that would be crass utilitarian thinking.. Another way to think about it, is I shouldn't punch people, whatever their later feeling on it is. It is wrong to cause suffering, period — schopenhauer1
When do you believe that life/personhood starts? At conception, birth, 18 years of age ...? — baker
False. That was not how I was defining the game.. This thread is about "work" in particular. that part of the game of life to do with working in an economic system of some kind to keep alive. — schopenhauer1
Ok I’m getting that what you mean by “game of life” is really just “work”. — khaled
Right I get your one trick pony... Like a kid who learned a joke and uses it over and over cause someone laughed the first time. What's black and white, and "red/read" all over?? — schopenhauer1
If snapping fingers is a set of challenges, then it would be wrong. — schopenhauer1
Can we agree that the world we live in now at the least, is a set of challenges? — schopenhauer1
I am not sure about your utopian world, but this one certainly is. — schopenhauer1
Right, is that a set of challenges to overcome? — schopenhauer1
Are there dire consequences? — schopenhauer1
If you refuse to snap your fingers all that will happen to you — khaled
Are the challenges so minimal as to the consequences being de facto, not dire (due to their easy obtainability)? I think that makes sense. — schopenhauer1
Yes, I would agree hence "Set of challenges" was my more detailed definition as given to 180.. — schopenhauer1
It is an unavoidable set of challenges (some known, some unknown based on factors of cause/effect/contingency). Someone must overcome these challenges or have a very hard time of things (including death). Call it a set of challenges rather than game then. — schopenhauer1
Are the challenges so minimal as to.... — schopenhauer1
You're not giving me the Socratic "aha" moments you probably think you're doing bud. — schopenhauer1
You're just "sweeping the leg" and I'll just give you the "crane kick" every time :). — schopenhauer1
I am not an anti-natalist, but if I were, then I would uphold all of the implications of my beliefs. — ToothyMaw
No to mention the harmful consequences of giving a crappy gift or sending a kid to school are significantly less than the wide range of horrible illnesses/conditions/disorders than can be inherited or developed throughout one's life — ToothyMaw
Not to mention, if we were all anti-natalists, there would be no children to send to school. — ToothyMaw
So what I said remains valid: typical anti-natalist reasoning doesn't have ridiculous side effects like "charity is wrong". — ToothyMaw
Just because there are multiple ways to reach a conclusion, and one of the ways is ridiculous, that doesn't reflect upon reasonable ways of reaching that same conclusion or the conclusion itself — ToothyMaw
However, in your utopia, you can snap your fingers and don't have to play the game of life to stay alive. — schopenhauer1
set of challenges to overcome to survive.. what one must do in an economic system whether hunting-gathering or "laboring" in a mixed market capitalist society or communism or any other economic system — schopenhauer1
But really, there is no escape in this world of playing the game of life (producing/consuming/surviving via an economic system of labor/exchange etc.). — schopenhauer1
In the real world, one cannot escape from the survival game. — schopenhauer1
You don't have to play. You snap your fingers and you have what you want. — schopenhauer1
The utopia has a way to escape without dire consequences. — schopenhauer1
Too difficult is if you don't play the forced game, dire consequences ensue (which apparently doesn't happen in your utopia). You die, starve, hack it in the wilderness (and then probably die), or some other crappy fate. — schopenhauer1
And it's tiring repeating over and over how I HAVE emphasized from the beginning that the game is inescapable because of DIRE CONSEQUENCES of not playing it — schopenhauer1
Does that conclusion follow from the premises offered by the anti-natalist? — Srap Tasmaner
Not interested. There's plenty of opportunity to have related discussions on their terms — Srap Tasmaner
It is precisely those dire consequences that make the game inescapable. — schopenhauer1
the injustice of an inescapable game. — schopenhauer1
So again, your issue is not with how difficult it is to escape the game, but how difficult it is to escape suffering within the game.
Si tell me when life is that utopia — schopenhauer1
I want to address this because this is mischaracterizing the argument to make your point — schopenhauer1
That is literally saying that there is no forced game at all. — schopenhauer1
So again, your issue is not with how difficult it is to escape the game, but how difficult it is to escape suffering within the game.
— khaled
Si let me know when life is that utopia — schopenhauer1
I interpret Albero's idea about pessimism in that why don't I discuss pessimism in more exposition rather than making these tit-for-tat microarguments — schopenhauer1
The idea of lacking in the human animal is shown over and over in daily life too much and is too true a truism to just dismiss — schopenhauer1
life sucks because the pendulum swings from striving for goals because of boredom, and feeling boredom after you've strived for it. He thought (and I'm guessing Schop1 does too judging from these posts) that life was just dealing with dissatisfaction, annoyance, toil, and seeking comfort and entertainment to avoid boredom that's always hanging over our heads. — Albero
That isn't necessarily the claim. Rather, it is the dissatisfaction at the heart of being an animal in the world with needs and wants. The very fact of pursuing this or that.. — schopenhauer1
People are often not as happy as they need to present themselves to others — schopenhauer1
Again, the root of the problem is the need for X at all and that it is constant except for very few moments — schopenhauer1
hasn't shop1 shown tons of reasons in other posts why life is too difficult a game to be played? — Albero
"What if every Jack had his Jill.. everyone had what they wanted".. People would kill each other (read as make more strife for themselves) because our wants and needs are never really satisfied. There seems to be a "lack" at the heart of everything.
life sucks because the pendulum swings from striving for goals because of boredom, and feeling boredom after you've strived for it. He thought (and I'm guessing Schop1 does too judging from these posts) that life was just dealing with dissatisfaction — Albero
because of group-think and the need for social pressures to keep "things going" in its own self-perpetuating fashion via culture.. People try to pretend like this is something to embrace and a "good" when, in fact, it is simply existential/metaphysical turmoil within our self-aware animal nature. — Albero
I don't think that a majority of people thinking something at a particular time makes it right. — schopenhauer1
forcing people into a game where it’s too difficult not to suffer is bad. — khaled
You are automatically thinking escape means suicide. — schopenhauer1
Now it's more like: Any forced, inescapable game, where it's too difficult not to suffer, is a target for scrutiny and criticism. If so: Life as is right now, in many places, offers easy enough ways of escaping suffering within the game.Any forced, inescapable game is a legitimate target for moral scrutiny and criticism. — schopenhauer1
That world is precisely the world I am saying this is not. — schopenhauer1
That's the nub, the heart, of the issue. :chin: — TheMadFool
I'm afraid that won't do. — TheMadFool
Food for thought: assuming our imagination bears the mark of experience in the real world, ever wonder why our conception of hell has exquisite detail compared to our idea of heaven? — TheMadFool
But in this case life remains inescapable. So clearly your problem isn't so much with the inescapability from "the game" itself, but rather the inescapability of suffering within the game. If it is sufficiently easy not to suffer in the game, then it's ok to impose the game. Agreed? — khaled
they can sufficiently "escape", so barring other information, this seems permissible. — schopenhauer1
If people can snap their fingers and leave the Utopia without any problems (internal strife).. — schopenhauer1
If life is so pretty, why the heck is there religion, promising escape (nirvana) or a better deal (heaven)?
— TheMadFool
Because it's not perfect. And those are ways to a better life supposedly. — khaled
Bikes just don't cut it when you mean business - a comfortable, smooth and pleasant trip. — TheMadFool
Are you taking back what you said about children and Utopia? — TheMadFool
And the answer is: Obviously.
— khaled
How? Details or at least a sketch of your strategy? — TheMadFool
So is it Utopia or not? Are there dire consequences of not doing X? — schopenhauer1