So I guess there is an element of both, but I feel over the long term, it is the fittest species that survives - teamwork triumphs over individual efforts. — Devans99
We are living in a knowledge-based economy. The intelligent should have access to greater financial resources - which are required to facilitate reproduction - so the reproduction of the strongest members of society should still be happening. — Devans99
I think you are correct however that we are losing something in evolutionary terms through not embracing a mechanism such as eugenics. Here we are handicapped obviously by the dreadful legacy of WW2. — Devans99
I feel the human race is likely to embrace genetic engineering with a resultant great acceleration in our rate of evolutionary progress. — Devans99
This is what I mean about us being the most successful species - we are evolving not only in the original manner of random genetic mutations - our society and technology is evolving too. — Devans99
I think evolution is about survival of the fittest species rather than the fittest individual. — Devans99
So we have socially evolved such that we are superior to other species — Devans99
we recognise that each individual in society is a contributor and we must therefore take care of the weaker members of society. — Devans99
we recognise that each individual in society is a contributor and we must therefore take care of the weaker members of society. — Devans99
I am a believer in progressive taxation but it has to be imposed globally else it just leads to economic refugees. That would require some form of world government... which we are quite a way from achieving. — Devans99
You did say “for example” but 60% is WAY too high. Only 25% of individuals make more than the mean individual income of about $50k/yr, while about 50% make less than half of that, under $25k/yr. Just keeping a roof over your head is a constant struggle for most people, and the vast majority have no financial safety net at all. I’m just barely in that top 25% myself and I live in the shittiest trailer park in town, still renting the land it’s parked on. — Pfhorrest
In such matters I just refer to personal choice. How hot does Goldilocks want her porridge? — ovdtogt
It is to be hoped that it will come up with a better model than capitalism in due cause. — Devans99
Behave as selfish as you can get without unnecessarily offending others has always been my motto and this has always served me well. — ovdtogt
Being too selfish is harmful.
Being too altruistic is harmful.
Goldilocks knows best. — ovdtogt
Capitalism, a product of social evolution, is an expression of this hybrid model - individuals behave in a selfish manner yet still end up contributing to the greater good. — Devans99
Society is already being harmed by the acknowledgment that there are no objective 'oughts'. The objective 'oughts' is what makes 'members of society' from individuals. — ovdtogt
By ultimately discovering that there are? 'Hell is truth, realised too late' ~ Anonymous. — Wayfarer
We will destroy civilization as we know it but the few survivors will build a nightmarish utopia filled with nihilism. — ovdtogt
For me, personally, my beliefs are of a greater good, although I would, again, like to see what you think :smile: — shaq
You speak of SC taking different forms based on context but the fact is we use SC with the same meaning in all and any context otherwise there would be a different word for each context. If you agree it's this universally applicable meaning of SC that I'm trying to zero in on. — TheMadFool
I've inadvertently quantified SC by using the the number of constituents and interactions at play in an object to get a sense of how simple or complex it is. I accept that this is probably just half the story or even that this is utter nonsense. — TheMadFool
If you think I'm wrong or partially correct, kindly be explicit of what needs modification or, if you think my theory is moonshine, give me reasons why. — TheMadFool
1 Understand the meaning of simplicity and complexity — TheMadFool
2. Understand whether the accepted wisdom that complexity proceeds from simplicity makes sense or not — TheMadFool
Is there any form of consciousness that you would be prepared to accept as less complex than a human’s? — Brett
From what I've seen of your posts you tend to lean towards relativism. Would that be fair? — Brett
Why is this so? In what way is society more complex than humans? — Brett
Much like 5 cm is longer than 3 cm, or 39 years is longer than 21 days, or speed of light is faster than 4 Km/h, you have to have a measure of complexity if you want to say with any certainty, "a human is more complex than a hydroelectric, damn."
Do you have such a measurement device and unit of complexity by which to establish the degree of complexity?
If yes, what is it?
If not, then you can't possibly argue scientifically that one thing is more complex than the other. — god must be atheist
I think I'll give this topic a rest for now. Thanks for the interesting conversation. G'day. :smile: — TheMadFool
Unfortunately, although I'd love to believe it, social entities, despite appearing distinct from the individual, is still structured around the basic body plan of an animal, the head being the most visible of all body-parts in social entities e.g. president, prime minister, king, emperor, etc. If social entities were more complex than humans then we'd see something like consciousness in it - a true complexity. — TheMadFool
I am of the opinion, if people didn't have something to struggle for we would lose the will to live. — ovdtogt
I think one of the greatest challenges facing mankind would be boredom and loneliness and general nihilism. — ovdtogt
Well, I think the fact of the matter is that our intuition on morality is black, white and grey in between. We have no problem in declaring genocide to be bad or that saving a million live is good. These are clearly extreme enough to not cause confusion. The problem is the region of grey between extremes, a region most of us occupy and is therefore all the more important. — TheMadFool
This particular take on morality presents a problem where heaven-hell is concerned because the latter is binary in nature and so can't handle the moral grey zone. — TheMadFool
Sider uses this model and I think it's incomplete, ergo erroneous, and causes the confusion here. — TheMadFool
Sorry I couldn't find a word to the opposite effect of a moral flaw negating goodness. Perhaps you can educate me on that. — TheMadFool
We now have people populating the integer number line as per their moral standing. Bad would be negative and good would be positive with zero being amoral or morally indifferent. In this number line model of morality Sider can make the case that -1 is very close in moral standing to +1 and yet one ends up in hell and the other in paradise. The problem is that Sider is thinking in terms of difference between two moral standings; -1 and +1 are just two moral points apart which is negligible. But what about the sign (-/+) on the numbers being considered? Good and bad are opposites and so the sign (-/+) is as essential as the numerical value of a moral standing and can't be ignored. So, yes -1 and +1 are close enough to each other for the difference between them (here 2) to be negligible but a negative is clearly different to a positive and the destination hell/heaven is as much dependent on the sign as the size of the moral standing. — TheMadFool
there is a moral calculus involved that can decide the net moral standing of a person. The way moral issues are handled on earth is that opposite moral actions cancel out and there's a net moral standing, good/bad, that each person has. Decisions can be based on that can't it? — TheMadFool
The rule of thumb seems to be that people have zero tolerance for a moral stain on a person who is considered good. Even the slightest moral fault is sufficient to reduce even a saint to the same status as a depraved criminal fit for the slammer. — TheMadFool
On the other hand, good if found in bad people is considered a redeeming quality worthy of note but yet not to an extent that his crimes are forgiven. — TheMadFool
There seems to be a slight imbalance in the equation in that bad carries more force than good and one tiny black spot is capable of negating even the whitest of the white while the converse isn't true — TheMadFool
So you see there does exist a calculus with which we can reckon the net moral character of a person and why suppose such is not true of divine judgment? — TheMadFool
I agree that my definition is incomplete but it does reflect a general view or even intuition on the subject of simplicity and complexity. — TheMadFool
You listed some lexical definitions and all of them have a common denominator in being expressible/transmissible as information in fewer numbers than things that are considered complex. — TheMadFool
Let's take everyday examples to see what people's intuitions are about simplicity and complexity. When we read a novel we see differences in characters that can be expressed in terms of simplicity and complexity. A simple character in a novel is what people call one-dimensional -
having a small inventory of emotions, views, whatnot. These characters are easy to understand.
On the other hand, a complex character will be one with a large repertoire of emotions, views, relationships, etc. Such characters are difficult to understand. — TheMadFool
If this idea that simplicity evolves into complexity is true then what explains the quite obvious fact that humans when engaged in creative acts can never produce something more complex than humans themselves? All our inventions no matter how advanced are but cheap imitations of nature. — TheMadFool
Plato proposed that knowledge involves having a justified true belief. — Bartricks
1 Knowledge should work all of the time, not some of the time.
2 Knowledge is useful.
3 Knowledge answers questions
4 Knowledge solves problems.
5 Knowledge is made of facts.
6 Facts are true
7 Facts are true because they are useful, answer questions, solve problems. — ovdtogt
What do you mean by:
1. Simplicity
2. Complexity
All that I offer are my own personal thoughts on the matter and they inform me that 1 and 2 have to do with the number of interactions under consideration which I vaguely remember has something to do with triangular numbers. — TheMadFool
Hell is for evil people and heaven is for good people. This is quite obvious but, if Sider is right, then, as some of you have suggested, morality should be on some kind of continuum and there has to be a cut-off point between those destined for hell and those destined for heaven. This would be problematic just as Sider says: there will be people without noticeable differences in moral standing and yet have futures that are polar opposites.
However, look at how we view sin and virtue. Let's take murder and altruism as two of the best and clearest examples of sin and virtue respectively. It's simply impossible that these two can appear close enough in whatever scale of morality we're using to cause a situation like Sider expects. One is obviously bad and the other obviously good and there are no grey areas to confound us. — TheMadFool
To be fair, I would have guessed that Sider made his argument at least 100 years ago. Many modern christians seem to believe that awful people go to hell, while everyone else goes to heaven (all religions or philosophies that help people to behave "good" are part of god's plan). In that case, there is no need to worry about "the line" because it is WIDE and STARK. — ZhouBoTong
We can't commit half a murder and torture, although scalable, isn't ever good enough to cause confusions in judgment. Similarly a good samaritan can never be confused for a murderer or torturer. — TheMadFool
going to lead to two very similar people who have committed similar acts of faith, goodness, repentance, etc. to receive eternal damnation or eternal salvation.
— Bridget Eagles
This claim is not substantiated in the argument unless Theodore Sider is privy to information we're not aware of. — TheMadFool
We have a bowl with 1.000 numbered balls. I pick #22. — Pippen
So my pick was extremely lucky because it should have been something else than #22. — Pippen
Simplified spoken: if very improbable things happen over and over again the probability of these things caused by randomness tends to zero, which could be some statistical proof for us to exist not random, i.e. "created". — Pippen
I think you're equivocating between "black hole" and "black hole interactions". — TheMadFool
A black hole is simple relative to the interactions it can be part of. However, it is more complex than, say, a planet or a sun. — TheMadFool
However, it is more complex than, say, a planet or a sun. — TheMadFool
What I'm saying boils down to the fact that intelligent design is better than blind evolution. — TheMadFool
If you look at how scientists argue against intelligent design you'll see one common motif - that our biology has countless structural and functional flaws. — TheMadFool
Implicit in that claim is an intelligent designer would've done a better job than probability-based evolution. — TheMadFool
Maybe TMF is talking about Cultural Evolution in general, rather than Eugenics or Transhumanism in particular. — Gnomon
Fortunately, if we learn from history, we can try to avoid making the same short-sighted choices over & over. — Gnomon
You don’t need to make many choices to pass on your genetic material, but your choices might determine the nature of its future. See my comments to TheMadFool about climate change. — Brett
So, directed evolution needs to be framed in the context of rational faculties AND ethical sense. To immediately think of eugenics and genetic engineering would be incorrect. Nevertheless, I think it's important to point out the dangers. — TheMadFool
Yes. I use metaphors as a short-cut for extremely complex "mechanisms" — Gnomon
But, once programmed, the subconscious system operates the body automatically, until some problem requires an executive decision. — Gnomon
For example, the emotions quickly prime the body for "fight or flight". But the exec has to decide which. That's why we tend to freeze, when startled, long enough to assess the situation. — Gnomon
We need to look at the time-frame if you want to see the difference between blind evolution and human-directed evolution. — TheMadFool
Human-directed evolution would arguably achieve optimum efficiency in a shorter period. — TheMadFool
Which situation would have a higher hit rate? You firing your gun randomly or a trained sniper? — TheMadFool
The irony is that choosing the most efficient process is actually having no choice ("being compelled") other than that particular process because if an organism opts for another less efficient process its survival prospects are reduced. It's like telling someone to choose but giving only ONE option (the most efficient process). — TheMadFool
Our "selfish genes" program the subconscious to calculate what's "best" for survival and reproduction. But our mental Selves may have other priorities, such as morality. — Gnomon
I usually regard your posts as quite reasonable. — Brett
Throwing so many questions at me in one post didn’t seem like an attempt to address my post. — Brett
I mean, did you expect me to address each question? — Brett
It seemed more like a dismissal of the query. — Brett
Anyway, I think the subject has been done to death, — Brett
only humans produce art. — Brett
In order to achieve its ultimate goal of survival, life (is this personifying?) needs itself to be able to choose the most efficient means of survival. — TheMadFool
1. Can think and know what these most efficient pathways are
2. Can choose to go down those life-sustaining and life-promoting paths — TheMadFool
Excuse me while I wipe away the hubris. — Brett
If, as they video claims, NE is an overarching principle of nature, then the intelligence to identify the most efficient method of any and all processes must be coupled with free will to enable an organism to choose the most efficient method so identified. — TheMadFool
But the quote suggests that government favours business over people, that it betrays people in the interests of big business, that it serves big business. — Brett
Business is quite a savage arena. Most of us get by without having to enter the ring. All we have to do is wait for the benefits to come our way without any risk at all. — Brett