it is rather incomplete since there does not appear to be any evidence anywhere to support such a conclusion, unless one proposes that invisible forces of nature, quanta, light, and dark matter, time, emotions, ideas, qualia, etc. are material — Rich
From there, it is then said that the 'burden of proof' is on any of those who challenge this supposedly scientific consensus, and that the only acceptable kinds of proof for such claims, are those which meet the standards of proof found in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. — Wayfarer
I think that the very notion that all of human abilities, tendencies, talents and skills are encoded physically, seems quite under threat by emerging models such as epi-genetic inheritance. My belief is that there must be something very like Sheldrake's morphological fields - there might be 'biological fields' which transmit memories or the imprints left by experience to future generations. That may turn out to be something that can be naturalised in the long run, but I don't see how it could be explained in materialist terms. — Wayfarer
I like to blame some of my poorer choices on aliens, at any rate. — Marchesk
Life is ultimately inexplicable, therefore ultimately meaningless, as long as it is assumed that appearances (rather than life) are real. Appearances are deceiving, life is true.
Since life has inherent meaning, it is unchangeable. Therefore, it is not up to you to give your life meaning, but rather to discover the (unchanging) meaning of life. — Nerevar
"The meaning of life is to fuck as much as possible then die" is not a very elevated meaning. Some severe cases sound like that is what they think the meaning of life is. Maybe for sewer rats, it is. I think they could aim higher for people. The Chinese adage that "Getting rich is glorious" as a meaning for life isn't very elevated either. — Bitter Crank
I don't know much about "transcendent" meaning. Religion is in itself an overlay that is quite rooted in this world and doesn't transcend anything. — Bitter Crank
Yes, one's "meaning of life" could be anything. None of them are more or less "valid." Validity is a category error for this. — Terrapin Station
Apples don't ask themselves why they exist, for what purpose, or in what meaningful sense. The same can be said for bricks. They don't ask. They exist. — Bitter Crank
"Helping people" might be a good meaning for life. "I am here to help people." You could do worse. Or, "Finding pleasurable experiences gives the meaning of life." Or "Learning about the natural world makes life meaningful," Or "Becoming an expert in Anthropology makes life meaningful." Or "Fixing up old cars is the meaning of my life." Or "Growing oats for horses and oatmeal is the thing that makes my life meaningful." — Bitter Crank
So what you get is a picture of reality that looks something like this:
Experiencer #1 -------- phenomenal world #1
Experiencer #2 -------- phenomenal world #2
Experiencer #3 -------- phenomenal world #3 — lambda
Although experiencer #1 is confined to perceiving phenomenal world 1, he is nonetheless capable of causally influencing phenomenal worlds #2, 3, … — lambda
Why do you begin with the assumption that something must have a spatial location in order to "be"? — Noble Dust
Empirical claims are not provable. Period. So nothing to worry about there. Whatever it is, if it's an empirical claim, it's not provable. There's no reason to even concern ourselves with this issue, because we know that empirical claims are not provable. — Terrapin Station
We do, however, exist and we need meaning. Therefore, if there is to be meaning, we create it. We give life meaning. — Bitter Crank
Atheism, as others have noted, is only a lack of belief in gods, or a belief that no gods exist. There's not actually an "atheistic view of death." — Terrapin Station
It is possible that we are all evolving, very subtlety, via this form of memory. Of course, as with any memory (and any hologram), it takes lots of reinforcement. The memory is not equally strong in all areas. — Rich
Re the view of death that you're referring to--your systems simply stop functioning, so that you lose consciousness cease to exist as a sentient creature, etc., nothing is false about that. It's rather true. — Terrapin Station
Cultural atheism, while rejecting theism still clings to most of the same transcendental superstitions and prejudices as judeo-Christianity, superstitions that Immanuel Kant ought to have put to rest via a grammatical banishment of all talk concerning things in themselves. — sime
Atheism is simply the lack of belief in a God. It says nothing about what happens after death. — Maw
it first needs to be established whether there is a meaningful phenomenological or behavioural notion of absolute unconsciousness. Otherwise "there is nothing" cannot be part of a meaningful observation sentence , behavioural sentence or abstract sentence referring to experience, qualia or phenomena. — sime
Well, sound and valid are moot points, because I wouldn't say it's an argument. It's not as if there are premises and a conclusion there with an implication that the conclusion follows from the premises. So question-begging is irrelevant, too.
You're probably reading it too literally, rather than understanding the spirit it was meant in. — Terrapin Station
Not at all, you have the panpsychist scenario:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/is-consciousness-universal/ — Babbeus
Do we? — Thorongil
Why is this the "atheist perspective?" The denial that God or the gods exist is not to deny that there is "nothing after death," whatever that means. You also misspelled "atheist," which additionally needs an apostrophe to show possession in your sentence. — Thorongil
I think there's a lot of counterevidence to the ‘nothing happens when you die’-understanding of death.
Consider dreams. I frequently die in my dreams, and yet, here I am still existing.
I’ve dreamed of falling to my death from a great height. I’ve dreamed of being shot to death. I’ve dreamed of drowning to death. I’ve dreamed of being eaten alive by wolves. And yet despite all that, I still exist. I am clearly indestructible.
Since the waking world is a dream, I fully expect to survive my waking death in pretty much the same way I survive my dream deaths. — lambda
It's not false - nor is it true. It just unnecessarily eliminates possibilities. But is it correct to say that all atheists have the same view of the life/death cycle? Maybe there are differences? — Rich
Is nature the language of maths or are maths a language of nature.
Science can’t answer this one. Neither can mathematics. But I like your question. Either answer, though, can result in quantity holding limitations upon what can be.
Myself, I’m of the opinion that maths are one of the many languages of nature. Nature’s Logos as some used to call it. — javra
Somehow we're made to serve the community while still trying to achieve our self-interest. — TheMadFool
The only way I can make sense of this is that human beings are in a transition phase between being solitary predators and group hunters/farmers.
It seems the only reason why we're social animals is that there's safety in numbers. — TheMadFool
I completely forgot about domination winning mating rights. A big ego does confer survival advantage.
I guess the paradox here is the reverse i.e. why is a big ego a turn-off? — TheMadFool
Maybe this forum needs a "building collapses on annoying person" button. — Bitter Crank
Yes, I agree. For me this really a central issue. Hegel had this phrase that I always come back to: "tarry with the negative." We evolve through collisions with others. At the same time, we have to maintain a certain level of self-esteem so that we don't crash and burn. This is why, in my view, we have to shut out radical threats to our world-view completely. (Spinoza was demonized, for instance, despite his "saintly" life.) It would be too much, too soon. This establishes the necessity of time for growth. But life is short. So it's plausible that some world-views or realizations are closed off for an individual by that individual's starting position in the game. (Digression: I think there's more than one good way to think and live, which is a position that developed in time and not the one I started with. From this perspective, lots of thinkers are chained by the almost unconscious assumption that there's just one path and that it's our job to find and then advertise this single worthy path.) — R-13
It's all about context. A general rule like this is just a theoretical exercise that can't hold in real life.
Say you're in a political race and your opponent tells lies to win votes. You're convinced your plans are better for everyone but no matter how often you tell the truth, people believe the lies because they want the lies to be true. Should you not lie and stick to the principle of truth, or lie and clear it up later or lie and leave it at that and get on with the job? I don't think that's a clear cut case.
Or you're a doctor and you discover an epidemic of a dangerous disease in a large city. You haven't been able to pinpoint ground zero and how its vectoring. When asked by a reporter "is there an epidemic?", should you lie to avoid panic causing many people to leave the city (and thereby cause a spread outside the city) or do people deserve the truth? I'm not sure what to do there either. — Benkei
I wonder what evolutionary advantage a big ego has? It's a turn-off (unsure) and yet is widely prevalent in the gene pool. — TheMadFool
What do you mean, why? What sort of answer are you looking for? Do you want an explanation from the angle of developmental psychology about how most people end up that way, or possible evolutionary benefits those traits might provide which could explain their prevalence, or just a description of exactly what in their brain or thought processes causes it?
Of course, if it's any of the above then I can't help since sadly I'm not a scientist in any of those fields. — zookeeper
Such a system would only be fair if mistakes were penalized, and authenticity, and justness rewarded... so, you know, if anyone besides me gets liked, then something is wrong with the world. — Wosret
Isn't this the age old problem known commonly as ''bias''? — TheMadFool