When I ask scientifically minded people if they think life on earth may have some larger purpose, they typically say no. If I ask them to explain their view, it often turns out that they think that answering yes would mean departing from a scientific worldview — embracing the possibility of supernatural beings or, at the very least, of immaterial factors that lie beyond scientific measurement.
But for example, it is open that a choice could be made to produce as little entropy as possible. So one could withdraw as much as possible from the race, so to speak. — apokrisis
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
therefore there is no underlying metaphysical moral reality. — Noble Dust
Try telling Trayvon Martin that morals are relative and there is no metaphysical moral telos. — Noble Dust
>Understands that the nature of the discussion is descriptive ethics
>Discusses metaethics — Emptyheady
Where do you get the suggestion that the idea is metaphorical in the article? — Agustino
That is the nub of the reductionist argument. Whenever discussion turns to such things as 'purpose', unless in the strictly functional sense of material and efficient causes, then you're no longer in scientific territory. The aim of the scientific account is to find material and efficient causes which can be related to, or reveal, general principles or scientific laws. Whatever you consider 'purpose' to be, is circumscribed by those considerations. — Wayfarer
Or maybe it exposes the essential incoherence of that familiar notion of a creating God? — apokrisis
It seems nuts that anyone would want to create our flawed world as some kind of "interesting experiment" — apokrisis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.