As I get older, I also see the jack of all trades versus master of one dilemma. Of course it's good to keep the brain lit up as a whole, but our culture rewards specialization professionally. In private life, at least, wellroundedness is rewarded. One can relate to more types of people, etc. — dog
Aim for the wellroundedness. — Noble Dust
It's interesting, the process of songwriting: it happens in all sorts of ways, but I'd say 6 or 7 times out of 10, how it happens is that someone has a kernel idea, a sort of nugget that's a fusion of a snippet of lyric conjoined with a snippet of melody, rhythm and harmony, even a tone sometimes, and the song sort of "unfolds" from that nugget - you follow the internal logic of the thing wherever it leads from that initial nugget. Usually, with this method, the lyrics start off as open syllables and vowels that work well with the melody, but you're playing around with them with the background meaning of the song in mind, and with the "nugget" as the thing you're eventually going to "land on" (as it were), and precise words, and other sections of the song, gradually coalesce out of that. And you generally tend to have (for pop music at least) 2 or 3 "main" sections (verse and chorus, or verse, bridge and chorus) that get repeated a lot, and one extra section ("middle 8") that provides a break, and a little excursion away from the main themes for a while.
Damn, giving away the secrets here :) — gurugeorge
You Americans and Peterson >:O ...Peterson — Thorongil
I think it was evident that Benatar was trained in philosophy, he WAS more thorough, step-by-step and analytic than Peterson. However, Peterson was significantly more insightful than Benatar.Anyway, I thought Benatar was quite poor in this debate, despite the consensus from the comments that he "destroyed" Peterson. — Thorongil
No. You can have linguistic meaning in a material world, and science can be based on that, but you can't have meaning (with a capital 'M' as it were) in the sense of a kind of meaning that could counter nihilism - that is, the meaning of something's having a place in an over-arching narrative, or a telos, a purpose. — gurugeorge
Science leave out all questions of telos by design — gurugeorge
I should note that there's another important sense of Meaning, which is more related to mysticism - a sort of aesthetic arrest, suspension in the moment, nonduality, silence, "peace that passeth understanding" - although it can occur even in the midst of stress and action - etc., and that's a very important "thing" in this world, but it's non-conceptual. — gurugeorge
What you continue to not acknowledge is that aesthetics, "linguistic meaning," and capital M meaning is all based on our values. Values are expressed in 'right or wrong' evaluations, aesthetics, and in religious traditions. There's no vast gulf between these modes. — praxis
We're free to ask teleological questions, form hypothesizes, test, and so on. — praxis
No, you can't ask teleological questions in science. — gurugeorge
Try it. See what happens. It's safe, I promise. — praxis
Frankly, I'm skeptical if your 'clickety-clack, as if' explanation is worth deciphering. — praxis
Linguistic meaning isn't "based on values" it's a natural phenomenon that just grows. — gurugeorge
No, you can't ask teleological questions in science. The nearest thing would be the kind of reverse-engineering you get in evolutionary explanations, but of course that's just convenient shorthand for a bunch of complex mechanistic processes analyzed in other sciences. It's "as if" teleology. — gurugeorge
For science, everything must necessarily be clickety-clack, from top to bottom, because that's all science looks for (material/efficient causes). — gurugeorge
Of course it's metaphorical in biology. How could it not be? — praxis
linguistic meaning is something that develops spontaneously over generations, and to the extent that any values are involved at all, they're unconscious and derived from things like differential reproductive fitness, status seeking, etc. — gurugeorge
Metaphorical teleology isn't teleology. All uses of teleological concepts in science are necessarily metaphorical, or shorthand, because science cannot possibly deal with teleology, only material or efficient causes and mechanistic explanations.
As I keep telling you, that's built in to the very idea of science as a way of looking at the world, as distinct from religious or mythological explanations (which are all about teleology). — gurugeorge
the very meat of science as a distinct enterprise WAS the bracketing, the methodological shelving, of teleological questions. — gurugeorge
You're getting closer to accepting that "linguistic meaning" is based in values, it appears. — praxis
AGI will likely present the most serious teleological questions our species will ever know, because within a couple of decades our survival could depend on it. — praxis
Using my magic decoder ring translated this to: the substance of science was the methodical abandonment of teleological questions. — praxis
It's not usually considered a sign that you're winning an argument when you twit people for their manner of expression ;) — gurugeorge
To the extent that many naturalists/materialists think that teleology has been disproven - actually that never happened, it's just another bit of rationalist boosterism. — gurugeorge
I'm interested in what you're trying to say and your language is getting in the way of that. Perhaps you obfuscate by design? — praxis
No one can currently disprove the existence of an intelligent designer or whatever. — praxis
As far as I can tell we haven't had any movement in this discussion, which to my mind centers around your claim that once religious belief erodes, due to scientific discoveries that contradict religious doctrine, like evolution, for example, there's no possible over-arching narrative that makes any sense of a material universe.
My position is that the ONLY difference is that we are free, or freer, in modernity to find/construct our own narratives because there is no longer a reliance on an external authority. And to be clear, any such narratives don't need to be based on a "material universe." — praxis
Personally, I love living life, and I truly enjoy the pleasures of joy, camaraderie, whatever other good things occur throughout life. However, I do still feel living is somewhat pointless. Why slave all the hours of the day away working, studying, whatever, just to die one day? — Open-minded Opossum
To have everything forgotten. Every accomplishment you've worked so hard to achieve. Everything gone forever.
Well, unless it turns out the afterlife is a legitimate thing
, but until there is some sort of scientific evidence I won't believe in that fully.
Of course, the joys of life are enough to continue living, but as a human being the only thing we live for is to reproduce and to aid our species.
As Ender's Game says, humans are ultimately just tools, and the entire life we live is just to further our species. It's sad when I think about it that way.
Perhaps you're just deliberately being a dick? The possibilities are endless. — gurugeorge
civilized discourse normally proceeds under the assumption of charity of interpretation — gurugeorge
you don't have to subscribe to intelligent design in order to understand examples of what must necessarily be construed as "as if" teleology on the basis of a materialistic/mechanistic understanding of nature, as examples of real teleology. — gurugeorge
What I'm saying is that if you are thoroughly consistent in following a mechanistic/materialistic understanding of the world, then nihilism is the logically necessary conclusion. There's no other option. That doesn't mean a specifically religious stance is the only counter, it just means that as the religious basis for viewing the world fades, and so long as nothing else (e.g. no other religious type, or no alternative naturalistic understanding of the world) replaces it, then we're going to drift into nihilism. — gurugeorge
And then, as I said, I don't think you can "freely construct" any old alternative over-arching narrative and have it take hold. — gurugeorge
Of course you can "freely construct" any old story about the universe, but the fact that you've constructed it doesn't make it true. — gurugeorge
in fact, people thinking the materialistic/mechanistic view of the universe is true is precisely what's driving the drift to nihilism. — gurugeorge
I agree with you on the positive aspect of not relying on external authority, if by that you mean unquestioning reliance on authority. That's definitely a gain, but it's not really relevant to the main point. — gurugeorge
You seem to distinguish 'real' teleology from 'as if' teleology by whether or not there exists an intelligent designer, yes? — praxis
Naturalistic and mechanistic/materialistic are pretty much synonymous in this context, are they not? — praxis
It doesn't need to be true. It only needs to be meaningful. — praxis
You mentioned yourself that some sort of naturalistic understanding of the world could replace a "specifically religious stance" and avert a drift into nihilism. — praxis
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