This is why I refer to it as an (optimal) effect of a (beneficial) Technological Singularity which, for me, is the sufficient condition for 'world governance'. Primates like us are mostly wired for – territoriality and forming dominance hierarchies – tribal eusociality, and so monopolistic social arrangements, as you've pointed out, are inexorably subject to moral hazards because of our atavisms. 'Human-level A.I.' (or more advanced) will not be constrained by primate glands and reproductive drives; provided we can engineer 'philanthropic A.I.'; it can govern us and all other planetary systems as an integrated whole. :nerd:Yeah I think you are right, though I would say that a post-scarcity economy is necessary for a single world order but not sufficient — PhilosophyRunner
:clap: :100: Yep, can't shake my attachment to CDs & DVDs (the way I shook off vinyl and tape over thirty years ago).(I still live in the stone age and use CDs/CD players almost exclusively). — busycuttingcrap
Answering this question depends on a specific evaluative context.So, what is good? — Shawn
This might not be true of bad. For instance: I think we know what is bad for our species (i.e. harmful, deprivative, abject, traumatic) to intentionally do to ourselves or one another either by action or inaction (e.g. Confucius, Hillel the Elder, Epicurus ... Philippa Foot).G.E. Moore, in his Principia Ethica has claimed that good is a simple and indefinable.
:up:The emphasis on chance comes about when one tries explaining that evolution is not teleological. That gets twisted to the idea that evolution is nothing but chance. — Banno
:up:And of course its fun to speculate and imagine, beyond what can currently be established, just so long as we're clear that's what we're doing — busycuttingcrap
Exactly. :up:The other notable thing, which I believe is what 180 is highlighting, is this development of breaking away from understanding the world primarily in religious terms, and even in some instances of providing explicit critique of existing religious traditions or ideas, providing an alternative way of looking at the world that would eventually develop into what we now recognize as science, naturalism, atheism, and so forth. — busycuttingcrap
Read "the Presocratics", Plato's early-middle Socratic Dialogues, Aristotle, Epicurus, Sextus Empiricus, Lucretius, Epictetus ...In hindsight, at least in the Western tradition, philosophy concerns – began with – critiques of religion (i.e. magical thinking)
— 180 Proof
Why do you say this? I see little evidence for it. — Mikie
... or "happiness before truth", which is not necessarily to the exclusion of "truth".For me, it's understanding (then² happiness, then³ knowledge); — 180 Proof
My rule of thumb: rational is inferential (algorithmic) and reasonable contextual (adaptive), they are complementary but do not entail one another.Do you make a distinction between reasonable and rational? — TheMadMan
It's difficult, mi amigo, only to the degree one lacks scientific and historical literacies, applied numeracy, intellectual integrity (i.e. humility to admit "I/we don't know") and, last but not least (as per Einstein), imagination. :fire:I like 180 Proof's stance on the issue - stick to the facts, reject all claims inconsistent with the facts, speculate at your own risk! Construct a weltanschauung as free of woo-woo as possible. Alas, easier said than done! — Agent Smith
So, by this concept, nature – the universe / multiverse – is merely the physical aspect of a greater, non-physical entity (deity, creator, process) aka "Enformer" ... and yet, Gnomon, there is not any evidence for or sound argument demonstrating that in order for nature to be intelligible, and explicable, nature requires a non-physical entity ("Enformer") of which to be a part. I do not discern any substantive differences between (neo-Aristotlean) "Enformationism" and (neo'-Thomistic) "Intelligent Design", but I remain open to being persuaded to reconsider this unfavorable comparison.My position [Enformationism, BothAnd, Meta-Physics] is a kind of Deism, specifically PanEnDeism. — Gnomon
A creator is merely a personification of "a fluke", no? And Occan's Razor reminds us that we can do without the added personification (à la Laplace).if you ask "how did the universe came to be?", atheists reply "it's just a fluke". — Agent Smith
And what if "the one" is an illusion, merely a simplifying abstraction from "the many", just an indexical of "this one" or "not that one"? :chin:Duality is the fragmentation of the One into the many. — TheMadMan
:pray: Fuck yes!@Andrew4Handel Maybe stop starting threads about issues you can't wrap your tiny brain around. — Benkei
Understood. I disbelieve in "God" because it's nothing but "a beautiful idea" (like utopia ... paradise ... heaven ...) :death: :flower:I believe in God because it is a beautiful idea. — Gregory
Contrary to the pseudo-"philosophical perspective" above: as the universe develops from minimum disorder to maximum disorder on a (non-constant) gradient, any 'order' is a temporary, dissipative phase-state of disorder. The asymmetric direction of cosmological development does not indicate a "purpose" any more than an avalanche down a mountainside indicates its "purpose". To quote a Nobel laureate theoretical physicist:From a philosophical perspective though, my interest is universal & cosmic. And modern Cosmology has confirmed the intuition of the ancients, that the Cosmos is distinguished from Chaos in that it is precisely enformed : apparently structured to serve some overall purpose. I don't know what that ultimate goal might be, but the physics of the universe seems to be finely tuned to distinguish organization (Enformy) from dis-organization (Entropy). — Gnomon
Another esteemed, particle physicist and philosopher Victor J Stenger dismisses teleological pseudo-science like "Enformationism"...The more the universe seems comprehensible, the more it also seems pointless. — Steven Weinberg
The universe is not fine-tuned to us; we are fine-tuned to our particular universe. — The Fallacy of Fine-Tuning (2011)
We have yet to encounter an observable astronomical phenomenon that requires a supernatural element to be added to a model in order to describe the event...Observations in cosmology look just as they can be expected to look if there is no God. — God: The Failed Hypothesis (2007)
:100:It's a rare person who can escape the need for metanarratives as a bulwark against fears of anonymity and meaninglessness. Perhaps the belief in the progress of science is a secular variant, but at least it pays off now and again. :wink: — Tom Storm
"A reason" for what? I don't see a connection to what I wrote in reponse to the OP.That is to say there's a reason. — Agent Smith
