"When you're dying
When your di-i-i-ing
The whole world dies with you."

Moderator: Fist and Faith
peter wrote: I struggle to see how the survival of the fitest [and by extension natural selection] model for the process whereby evolution of species occurs accounts for the human conscience, which can only ever be a hinderence in terms of survival chances.
Clearly, not all humans are in the moral sphere yet.
"You can't just say, 'This is the way it is, therefore it ought to be that way.' You've got to have good reasons," says Michael Shermer, referencing the common "is-ought fallacy" most famously explained by David Hume. "Well, I claim that we do have good reasons: Democracies are better than autocracies. Free markets are better than tyrannical, top-down economic systems. There are certain things we know work. You can measure it!"
Shermer is the longtime editor of Skeptic magazine, a visiting professor at Chapman University, and author of the new book The Moral Arc: How Science and Reason Lead Humanity Towards Truth, Justice, and Freedom, in which he argues that humanity has become measurably more moral over time and that this is a direct outgrowth of the rise of Enlightenment ideals of reason, empricism, and the rejection of blind faith and tradition.
I did say I disagree with him...and this is one of the areas.peter wrote: The author cites the concurrent increase of morality and freedon with the increase in scientific knowledge and free-market economics since the enlightenment onwards but how and why these are tied together even if you accept that such is the case is only scantily [and not convinceingly] touched upon.
It is everywhere. Put all the horrors you mentioned together, and everything is STILL better than it ever was. Death by violence, from the evidence we can find, is literally at least 100 TIMES lower, and may be 1000 times lower or even more.Fist and Faith wrote: Where is this increase in morality?
Vraith wrote:It is everywhere. Put all the horrors you mentioned together, and everything is STILL better than it ever was. Death by violence, from the evidence we can find, is literally at least 100 TIMES lower, and may be 1000 times lower or even more.Fist and Faith wrote: Where is this increase in morality?
People, in general, treat other people better. A lot better.
Once again, I strongly encourage everyone here (at least in this discussion) to read NONZERO by Robert Wright. The above topics are discussed with numerous examples from our history to illustrate how the principles shaped our social evolution. And it's a damn good read. Wright is a great writer.Vraith wrote:I did say I disagree with him...and this is one of the areas.peter wrote: The author cites the concurrent increase of morality and freedon with the increase in scientific knowledge and free-market economics since the enlightenment onwards but how and why these are tied together even if you accept that such is the case is only scantily [and not convinceingly] touched upon.
And you have to remember, this isn't the WHOLE of his argument...I assume he goes into it more extensively in the book.
But when he talks about empathy/morality/conscience having a physical, biological, evolutionary component---and outside/supernatural explanations are unnecessary, I can only agree.
Also, what he is saying [parts of it] has a reasonable amount of support, and is the kind of thing one has to grapple with, especially to disagree. [Even on this board---how often have you seen Z argue that freedom and capitalist economy are directly connected? That, in fact, the rise of capitalism is a causal factor in the increase in freedom?]
and Gevin Gorbran (science writer);The positive energy within matter can be counterbalanced by the negative sink of the all-pervading gravitational field such that the total energy of the Universe is potentially nothing; when combined with quantum uncertainty this allows the possibility that everything is.....some quantum fluctuation living on borrowed time. Everything may thus be a quantum fluctuation of nothing.
Potter carries on in his own words;Zero exists now; it has always existed. It is the native state of existance. It is what physicist David Bohm called Implicate order. It is the timeless quantum superposition of all universes and all life in an infinite universe. As the most brilliant physicists have long held, a perfect zero is the most ordered state of all, it just isn't found in the past where time begins. It exists in the future where time ends
I will try to apply what you say to these quotes and the result to the book when it arives. I feel I may have a way to go.Energy leaks out of the vacuum for no reason at all exept randomness and the pressure exerted by a sink of infinite negative energy. Overall the universe is nothing at all.
I'm still kind of in awe of the fact that purpose can be introduced into reality in the first place, even if only subjective. It comes about from entirely purposeless events, in a universe without purpose. That's kind of amazing.
If human conscience has no genetic basis, then from whence did it spring. In a harsh and brutal struggle to survive not to steal the bread from a sleeping child because it makes you feel guilty ain't going to improve your survival chances.
They may “feel” that way, but it’s not about feelings. We act the way we “feel” all the time, and yet we can know that we ought not to have acted that way before, during and after the action. We act on our “feelings” all the time, sometimes for good and oftentimes for ill. I don’t “feel” like taking out the trash, paying that visit, taking that phone call, etc., but I do it anyway, and when I don’t, I know I should have. Why? Because some learned human trait has taught us that our pack partners will make our lives miserable if we don’t and therefore we do it for selfish reasons anyway? Perhaps that enters into it, but I think more often we force ourselves to do it because we want to do what’s right, we want to do it for one another, it pleases us to make another person happy. We have seen it play out both ways and we know that it’s simply more worthwhile, more joyful if you will, to behave one way rather than the other. We have a truth of wisdom about it, and we trust that the same understanding applies to other things as well and so we begin to take on that manner of behavior in general, and then we understand that there is a design to it, that it comes from a love of the whole idea of it, and that how it all works in people’s lives is the right way of living. And so it all came about not from what we “felt” about it, but from what we “did” about it because we knew we ought to have done it.Until you give me reason to believe there is such a thing as human conscience - as opposed to some people feel one way, and some feel another - I don't have to show how it came to be. I don't suspect anyone here agrees with me, since I've never heard anyone say they did in my many times posting about this. OTOH, nobody has ever explained why, despite huge numbers of people acting against it every day, they think there is such a thing. The most anyone has done is, citing C.S. Lewis' Mere Christianity, tell why some of those who do feel that way act after acting against it. Which is a world away from giving evidence that all who act in certain ways are acting against their feelings. Until there's reason to believe otherwise, the default position is that those who act a certain way feel that way.
But we know that these various kinds of truths exist, and that they lead to something higher and outside ourselves. That should lead us all to start to put our faith in something other than what mere science can explain.At the end of the day alls I can say is 'I don't know'.
A question that arises from a reading of the Old Testement [and I'm sure the New when I get there] is 'why would these people lie about the things they say the saw, the things they say happened to them?'
…but the nature of the tales, interwoven as they are in the historical story of the Jews does fascinate and puzzle me.
I don’t disagree that the world is changing all the time, and one day will assuredly end. We humans do what we can with the time we are given, and that’s pretty much all we can do. But that’s all we’re expected to do. And so we can’t become anxious or overwhelmed by it all (or tempted to despair, as Lord Foul would have of us). We press on and frustrate the evil ones of this world, doing things they won’t expect, making a difference, changing a life, our own lives, for the good of one another and our creator. And why can’t that be reality? It sounds like a nice plan to me, if only we’d all agree to stick to it. I think I’ll start with myself.After all, wasn't this the point of the Chronicles we all love? Truth and Beauty must perish, but this doesn't mean it's meaningless to resist the process and preserve as much as we can ... certainly we shouldn't help nature along on its destructive path.
If that's true, then he's one sick bastard. Who would take pleasure, for instance, in a place that repeatedly produces mass extinctions? That's not even delving into the issue you'd no doubt excuse by referring to freewill (like rape, murder, child prostitution, war, etc.).Dondarion wrote:I believe that the universe certainly has purpose, and it is sufficient (for me at least) to say that its purpose is to please our creator and give glory to him that created it and us in his image and likeness to dwell therein.
Z, would it not be possible for a being of such a different nature from ours to have a higher state of consciousness at all times? To have "a deep sense of connectedness with the universe, as if everything was just as it was supposed to be."? To not have "any resentment, aversion, or displeasure with any aspect of reality."? As though "It was all embraced with the 'holy' YES."? Just because I'm having fun busting your chops (:mrgreen:) doesn't mean I'm not honestly wondering why such a being couldn't see it the same way you do when on psilosybin.Zarathustra wrote:If that's true, then he's one sick bastard. Who would take pleasure, for instance, in a place that repeatedly produces mass extinctions? That's not even delving into the issue you'd no doubt excuse by referring to freewill (like rape, murder, child prostitution, war, etc.).Dondarion wrote:I believe that the universe certainly has purpose, and it is sufficient (for me at least) to say that its purpose is to please our creator and give glory to him that created it and us in his image and likeness to dwell therein.
Either that, or this "purposeful" universe has gotten out of his control, which doesn't speak well of his "glory," much less his purpose ... how can the purpose of an omnipotent being go awry? Either god revels in all the evils of this world (hence, 'sick bastard') or he didn't plan for there to be evils in the first place (blame it on Lucifer, Adam, whomever). Surely he didn't plan for his glorification by creating place that would need a Hell. Thus, if the creation of evil wasn't his intention, his plan, that means the universe violates his purpose.
Now we're left asking what's the point of claiming that the universe has a purpose--specifically one that suits god's pleasure--if that universe explicitly violates it? That's the same as it not having this purpose you're talking about.
And if this universe doesn't violate god's purpose, in other words, if it was god's purpose to create a place where evil can take root and cause the suffering of billions, you might as well call Lucifer the Creator. There's no glorification in such a place.