Metaphors reappear in new guises as fashion and technology change. A sceptic like me is unlikely to be won over but won't ever be seduced by the New Atheists either. — mcdoodle
sources for "popularisation" aimed really at the idiotification of the masses — Agustino
If you have a good family, good health and source of wisdom and knowledge around what more do you need? — Agustino
Yes. For something to be aimed towards something else does not require that this act is intentional. For example, for Aristotle, the final cause of a match is fire. Yet it does not mean that the match consciously aims itself at producing fire.Do you literally think articles like this are "aimed" at that goal? — Noble Dust
No I don't mean with conscious malicious intent - but this makes little to no difference. This is the effect they have.I just mean literally in the sense that they are very purposively aimed at the goal of idiotification, presumably with malicious intent. — Noble Dust
Okay, well that was my reaction :PYeah, those 4 myths, and Hamilton's ridiculous idea of aliens creating us as an experiment aren't even really worth addressing. I posted the article more because it's a general topic of interest to me. I figured some reactions here might be worthwhile. — Noble Dust
But the simulation isn't a God hypothesis at all... the simulation is a physical event - it's an empirical matter, in a way that God is not. To say that simulation hypotheses suggest that "theology has enter secular discourse" is a tragic source of misinformation. Or the idea that some very powerful being is equivalent to the notion of God... really??"That said, one interesting feature of current discourse is a growing openness among some scientifically minded people to the possibility that our world has a purpose that was imparted by an intelligent being. I’m referring to “simulation” scenarios, which hold that our seemingly tangible world is actually a kind of projection emanating from some sort of mind-blowingly powerful computer; and the history of our universe, including evolution on this planet, is the unfolding of a computer algorithm whose author must be pretty bright...You may scoff, but in 2003 the philosopher Nick Bostrom of Oxford University published a paper laying out reasons to think that we are pretty likely to be living in a simulation...If you walked up to the same people who gave Bostrom a respectful hearing and told them there is a transcendent God, many would dismiss the idea out of hand. Yet the simulation hypothesis is a God hypothesis: An intelligence of awe-inspiring power created our universe for reasons we can speculate about but can’t entirely fathom. And, assuming this intelligence still exists, it is in some sense outside of our reality — beyond the reach of our senses — and yet, presumably, it has the power to intervene in our world. Theology has entered “secular” discourse under another name." — Noble Dust
But what kind of answer are you looking for? How do you expect to recognise it when you find it?As I've said elsewhere, I'm a sucker for teleology. What more do I need? I need to know the secret to the whole thing; I need to know where this thing is going. That preoccupies my philosophical interests more than anything else. — Noble Dust
But the simulation isn't a God hypothesis at all... the simulation is a physical event - it's an empirical matter, in a way that God is not. To say that simulation hypotheses suggest that "theology has enter secular discourse" is a tragic source of misinformation. — Agustino
Or the idea that some very powerful being is equivalent to the notion of God... really?? — Agustino
But what kind of answer are you looking for? How do you expect to recognise it when you find it? — Agustino
Moral descriptively, I think relativism is true. I do not believe in a universal moral telos. — Emptyheady
It is not surprising that scientists personal views of life may diverge from scientific journal acceptable ideas. The v two fulfill different purposes and do not have to coincide. — Rich
Empirical evidence, moral views differs by location, time, religions, cultures, countries, etcetera -- to the point that moral relativism is the most accurate position to hold. — Emptyheady
As I've said elsewhere, I'm a sucker for teleology. What more do I need? I need to know the secret to the whole thing; I need to know where this thing is going. That preoccupies my philosophical interests more than anything else. — Noble Dust
But, via induction, I suppose that evolution might hold the telos of “adaptation and acclimation to that which is objective”. And this can be translated into being in accordance to that which is regardless of biases. — javra
What's so sacred about overcoming biases at the altar of Lord Science? I've never understood that. If the entire world shed it's biases and accepted an analytic, rational, scientistic belief system, how would this serve some sort of evolutionary telos? What exactly would be accomplished for mankind? What would mankind accomplish by doing this? I'm not interested in living in a world full of philosophy forum members. :P — Noble Dust
Just so it’s said, I wasn’t intending to be ironical-ish in any way. — javra
Still, the gist of this better argument would be that objectivity is not physical reality but the metaphysical Real/Truth … to which we are all subjects of. — javra
With the presumption of such telos, physical reality would indeed be objective, but objectivity itself would be equivalent to an existent state of being that could be expresses as perfect selflessness and, thereby, a perfect equality of being. Fairness, impartiality, and an unbiased opened mind/heart all then could be expressed as facets of being closer to this metaphysical state of objectivity—which could also be expressed as perfect innocence. — javra
Well, my response may have been a little over-zealous. I was maybe reading a pet peeve of mine into your post. Apologies. — Noble Dust
I think I agree with this concept if I'm reading it right, I just use the word objective in a different sense. I think of the physical world as an objectified form of spirit. Which is ironically sort of an opposite use of the term, so maybe not. — Noble Dust
So what would bring about that state, evolution? — Noble Dust
maybe your not wrong in thinking of the physical world as an objectified form of spirit; its close to what objective idealism would affirm ... though I've come to see myself more of a neutral monist. — javra
No, it's more like that state exists as a future potential that nevertheless predates all being as telos. — javra
Like I said, its a long spiel. And in summative form it can well be less than cogent. (Still working on it by the way.) — javra
I'm intrigued but confused by this. I'm also struggling to understand the ensuing paragraph. — Noble Dust
Seems worth expanding into a longer from, though. — Noble Dust
I don't see that as parallel at all. In one case you're dealing with an empirical fact - a physical computer working away. In another case, you're dealing with a transcendental spirit, of spiritual origin, becoming instantiated in the world.I admit I haven't studied that hypothesis enough to know if or why they wouldn't be similar. I just imagine a "computer projecting a hologram which is the physical world" as a crappy metaphor for the physical world as spirit objectified. They seem like parallel concepts to me. Although I guess the physical world as spirit objectified isn't really classical theology. — Noble Dust
Because it's not sufficient for something to be powerful to be God. Goodness for example is more important than power in what we call God. If there existed an all powerful being who was evil, you wouldn't call that God - you wouldn't want to worship it.Why is this inaccurate? — Noble Dust
I know what descriptive ethics are — Noble Dust
I don't see that as parallel at all. In one case you're dealing with an empirical fact - a physical computer working away. In another case, you're dealing with a transcendental spirit, of spiritual origin, becoming instantiated in the world. — Agustino
Because it's not sufficient for something to be powerful to be God. Goodness for example is more important than power in what we call God. If there existed an all powerful being who was evil, you wouldn't call that God - you wouldn't want to worship it. — Agustino
Where do you get the suggestion that the idea is metaphorical in the article?But surely that hypothesis about the computer is just some sort of vague metaphor, right, like I already suggested? If it's not a metaphor, then, like I've already said, that's some really shitty antrhopomorphization to imagine some actual massive computer brain creating the world we know. So, taking it as metaphor, a metaphorical super computer projecting a "hologram" which is the world has parallel's to the idea of God creating the world through a process of spirit becoming objectified. In other words, if you're talking about a metaphorical supercomputer creating the world, you're basically talking about God. It's just a crappy metaphor. — Noble Dust
Your reply did not give the impression you do. — Emptyheady
How does the fact that moral views differ lead to the conclusion that moral relativism is the most accurate position to hold about morality? — Noble Dust
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