That’s evidence of diversity, not of ‘survival’ as the reason for diversity. The question isn’t ‘why are all these other species extinct?’ It’s ‘why has evolution led to our particular arrangement of systems and structures?’ This myth that survival, dominance and procreation are the prime directives - you know that’s not true. I believe we will go extinct only if we keep insisting that this is the plan
— Possibility
This is a very skewed logic in my opinion and It makes very little sense to me. — universeness
Well I appreciate you giving me a little room as maybe having genuinely beneficent intentions. — universeness
I applaud and approve of your skepticism. You would perhaps make a good scrutineer of those who have been trusted enough, to be given a position of power. I am an advocate of powerful checks and balances fully established and representative of the people who are being represented.
You are right not to trust what people say, only trust what they do and demonstrate. We must insist that if a person holds a significant position of power and influence then their actions must be in the full view of everyone they represent. No autocracy/plutocracy/aristocracy/cult of personality/cult of celebrity/religious doctrine etc should ever be able to gain and hold power at any significant level of society. — universeness
If most scientists agree that survival is more luck than superiority, then the notion that they’re extinct because ‘they couldn’t do what humans can’ is unfounded. — Possibility
So, too, the notion that the purpose of evolution is survival, dominance and/or procreation. — Possibility
That, and ‘natural selection’ is a misnomer borrowed from the practice of pigeon breeding - the fact that some variations survived while others didn’t is circumstantial, not by deliberate selection (teleological). — Possibility
And our relative ‘success’ in terms of dominance and procreation have come at the cost of this ecosystem that sustains us — Possibility
If we do manage to get through this, do you honestly think it will be because of a focus on maximising our individual/species survival, dominance and procreation, or on maximising awareness, connection and collaboration - ie. with the ecosystem/cosmos and each other? — Possibility
And if we look at a broader, cosmic evolution of structures of existence, a slightly different pattern emerges to the one Darwin saw. — Possibility
A minority of collaborative, homeostatic systems with high variability arise as the foundation for cosmic development at every level, including atomic structure, a carbon basis to life, natural selection, DNA and sexual reproduction, neural networks, social value structures, etc. — Possibility
The high variability in each system enables awareness, which in turn enables connection, which opens the door to collaboration... it seems the cosmos has a trajectory with or without us. So, do we go with the flow, or stick with our own plan? — Possibility
While I do believe in speaking truth to power, my approach is not so much top-down, but more about encouraging a groundswell that leaders will eventually be unable to ignore, isolate or exclude - even if democracy fails. I can really only determine what I think, say and do, after all. If I can’t start there, what hope do I have to change the world? — Possibility
So yes, humans are lucky to be here and not be extinct but the reason they are still here is due to their evolutionary path. — universeness
There may be other base lifeforms in the vast Universe. — universeness
So yes, humans are lucky to be here and not be extinct but the reason they are still here is due to their evolutionary path. — universeness
Evolution has no 'purpose,' it is what happens when vast variety combines in a vast number of ways.
Evolution is ongoing and always will be. — universeness
I think it might be easier to understand what you are typing about if you offer one or two real-world examples to illustrate the points you are trying to make rather than offer a list of generalities.
For example, carbon-based lifeforms are all we know of yes but I don't see what that's got to do with your attempted downplay of the facts of evolution. There may be other base lifeforms in the vast Universe. That would not downplay the facts of evolution as they happened on Earth either. — universeness
So are these just words in support of a panpsychist viewpoint or are you trying to make some other rather esoteric or metaphysical point I am missing?
I certainly don't think there is a self-aware, manifestation of individuality that we can assign to the word 'cosmos,' which has a 'plan,' or a 'trajectory,' that it's trying to ensure happens.
What do you mean 'go with the flow?' Do you mean stagnate? wait for the 'cosmos' to demonstrate its plan whilst we just watch the pretty flowers grow? Is that the alternate choice to 'stick with our own plan?' — universeness
This sounds much more hopeful! I don't care whether you go top-down or bottom-up as long as you are part of the solutions rather than part of the problems. You sound a bit downhearted to me and a bit disappointed in your whole species. In my opinion, the majority of human beings are good and strive, damn hard, every day, to give, build, create, embellish, enhance and pass the baton, not take, destroy, control, indulge, use up and wear out, as the nefarious do. I think you are in the majority. — universeness
Yes, but that path isn't necessarily determined by genes accidentally mutating in a way that the organism changes and the best adapted survives — Haglund
I think you are trying to constantly give the kiss of life to this limited and singular example of the use of the word 'dogma' in a science paper that you have found. You also ignore the fact that dogma is the foundation of all religions. I think the score remains scientific dogmatism:0, Theistic dogmatism: big BIG number!That's what the dogma of molecular biology tells, but there is zero evidence for that (which is exactly why it's a dogma). — Haglund
What??? Please quote where you think I was being helio/geocentric?That's the same heliocentric (or geocentric) worldview all over again. Why should Earth be special wrt the evolution of life — Haglund
it's likely that dead matter contains the seed of consciousness. Not that the universe contains god, but it carries their imprint. Who knows what's the nature of the basic stuff they created? It's divine! — Haglund
Yes it is 'necessarily determined,' we have shown how we can MAKE it happen in our genetic manipulation of dogs, sheep, cows etc. — universeness
think you are trying to constantly give the kiss of life to this limited and singular example of the use of the word 'dogma' in a science paper that you have found. You also ignore the fact that dogma is the foundation of all religions. I think the score remains scientific dogmatism:0, Theistic dogmatism: big BIG number! — universeness
What??? Please quote where you think I was being helio/geocentric?
We have had no contact from other lifeforms yet. We may be the first but I think that is highly unlikely — universeness
You are one of the most unconvincing theists I have encountered. You are role-playing, for your own reasons. That's the only logical conclusion I can make. I think you just enjoy taking the more esoteric viewpoint. I can't help seeing you try to convince yourself with 'I do believe, I do I do I do believe, I Do I DO I DO. But I am not convinced you do. — universeness
Based on what convincing, scientific, empirical evidence?But the evolutionary narrative is not ‘survival’, as much as we wish it was.The reason humans are still here is due to a series of variably stable structural relations. — Possibility
Survival is the result of the process. The fact that a result or consequence occurs in the natural world is not evidence of intent.Agreed. So why configure it as a narrative of ‘survival’, except to allay our primal fears? — Possibility
All you offer is your opinions which is fair enough as on some points I am not offering much more.This makes it systematically ideal to maximise awareness, connection and collaboration with everything else. — Possibility
You type that you don't believe in a Universal intent and then you type that it appears there might be.It just all appears to be moving in a particular direction, and we happen to be part of that. — Possibility
Evolution, which we agree to be ongoing and without purpose, is also part of that. We can work with this direction, and in doing so maximise our survival with minimal effort, or we can insist that we’re inherently equipped to determine our own survival plan, and continue to wrestle with forces we’ve yet to fully understand. — Possibility
Well, you sound like you would be attracted to a more buddhist or tao type approach to life and living. Not for me. I am happy to be labeled anthropocentric in general but not to the extremes of fanaticism.When we understand that, it’s no longer so important that WE are the one to achieve anything. — Possibility
I think you are trying to constantly give the kiss of life to this limited and singular example of the use of the word 'dogma' in a science paper that you have found. You also ignore the fact that dogma is the foundation of all religions. I think the score remains scientific dogmatism:0, Theistic dogmatism: big BIG number! — universeness
You are one of the most unconvincing theists I have encountered. You are role-playing, for your own reasons. That's the only logical conclusion I can make. I think you just enjoy taking the more esoteric viewpoint. I can't help seeing you try to convince yourself with 'I do believe, I do I do I do believe, I Do I DO I DO. But I am not convinced you do. — universeness
The difference being that if we make it happen the organisms aren't determining it for themselves and we are basically playing for god — Haglund
No sorry but you are the opposite. You have not even indicated that you engage in any particular theistic daily practices. Do you pray? do you congregate with like-minded theists, do you financially contribute? does your theism manifest or gravitate towards any organised religion? Do/have your god(s) intervened in your personal life? Your polytheism even includes dino gods. You seem to give space to every god ever invented by humans. So, yes, I think your theism is contrived but I don't think you have any malice aforethought. I think your primal fears have manifested in complex ways and you are attracted to passing on responsibility to imagined god(s). I know I am attempting to psychoanalyse you with no experience in the field other than my knowledge of people I have interacted with, in my lifetime.I think I'm the toughest theist you have encountered. — Haglund
No sorry but you are the opposite. You have not even indicated that you engage in any particular theistic daily practices — universeness
You are just confirming my view of your proposed polytheism — universeness
You're just as dogmatic as Dawkins. There is no escape! — Haglund
I do engage in belief systems, yes, but mostly, what I currently accept as true, is based on empirical evidence. I appreciate your permission to continue to do so even though I don't require it.But believe what you like! Thanks for the discussion! — Haglund
Survival is the result of the process. The fact that a result or consequence occurs in the natural world is not evidence of intent. — universeness
All you offer is your opinions which is fair enough as on some points I am not offering much more.
I simply disagree with your imo generally pessimistic viewpoints. I think your 'scientific points' are trivial and incorrect. — universeness
It just all appears to be moving in a particular direction, and we happen to be part of that.
— Possibility
You type that you don't believe in a Universal intent and then you type that it appears there might be. — universeness
So, give us some actual examples of what you think we should stop doing and what you think we should do more of. Don't make any obvious suggestions such as 'stop hurting the planet,' or stop warring with each other etc — universeness
Well, you sound like you would be attracted to a more buddhist or tao type approach to life and living. Not for me. I am happy to be labeled anthropocentric in general but not to the extremes of fanaticism. — universeness
[Eric Schank, SALON] :chin:Those who have experimented with psychedelics often describe a sensation of connectedness with objects around them, things like rocks, trees, or rivers. Sometimes the "connectedness" is more literal, as high doses of psychedelic drugs like LSD may cause users to believe the walls are talking to them.
Those who have experimented with psychedelics often describe a sensation of connectedness with objects around them, things like rocks, trees, or rivers. Sometimes the "connectedness" is more literal, as high doses of psychedelic drugs like LSD may cause users to believe the walls are talking to them.
[Eric Schank, SALON] — jgill
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