Any living and mindful system is a dissipative thermodynamic structure that employs information to regulate dynamics. It uses a symbolic memory and code - like genes, neurons, words - to step back from the world so as to be able to control that world. — apokrisis
In terms of purpose, the only biological purpose is survival and reproduction, but the end point - the ‘final cause’, so to speak - is the recovery of thermodynamic equilibrium, which is to all intents non-existence, is it not? — Wayfarer
the drive towards the ultimate simplicity and tranquility of its Heat Death — apokrisis
Well, you see, I think this is ultimately a nihilistic attitude, regrettably, and that it comes from limiting the understanding to only what is physical or natural. — Wayfarer
Something like Pascal’s Wager (although not quite the same). — Wayfarer
Plato was clearly concerned not only with the state of his soul, but also with his relation to the universe at the deepest level. Plato’s metaphysics was not intended to produce merely a detached understanding of reality. His motivation in philosophy was in part to achieve a kind of understanding that would connect him (and therefore every human being) to the whole of reality – intelligibly and if possible satisfyingly. He even seems to have suffered from a version of the more characteristically Judaeo-Christian conviction that we are all miserable sinners, and to have hoped for some form of redemption from philosophy.
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The important thing for the present discussion is that if you have such a belief, you cannot think of yourself as leading a merely human life. Instead, it becomes a life in the sight of God, or an element in the life of the world soul. You must try to bring this conception of the universe and your relation to it into your life, as part of the point of view from which it is led. This is part of the answer to the question of who you are and what you are doing here. It may include a belief in the love of God for his creatures, belief in an afterlife, and other ideas about the connection of earthly existence with the totality of nature or the span of eternity. The details will differ, but in general a divine or universal mind supplies an answer to the question of how a human individual can live in harmony with the universe.
In order to pursue the question, it has to be meaningful, but if you’re sure at the outset that it can’t be, then indeed it will not be. — Wayfarer
I do have an objection to the way that biosemiotics claims to incorporate the Aristotelian sense of ‘final purpose’ however. And that is because from the biological perspective, the only purpose can be to survive and pro-create. — Wayfarer
Whereas for Aristotle himself, the final goal of the philosophical quest was something much more ethereal - the philosopher contemplating the eternal Ideas (or something along those lines). — Wayfarer
I mean, Aristotle is counted as a ‘pagan philosopher’, but it was a different age, and had a very different mentality. — Wayfarer
if you want to talk about what lies "beyond" our current understanding of nature, you have to speak about something that might make an actual causal difference. — apokrisis
Whereas for Aristotle himself, the final goal of the philosophical quest was something much more ethereal - the philosopher contemplating the eternal Ideas (or something along those lines).
— Wayfarer
Hmm. You may be projecting here. — apokrisis
Aristotle develops his argument by incorporating the life of the Gods' in...his theory. He is careful in making sure that the Gods are seen as beings that have reached fulfillment of life and "above all other beings blessed and happy". According to Aristotle, since continuous activity is what provides continuous pleasure and fulfillment of life, he believes that the Gods do not sleep, therefore allowing them to be in a constant state of contemplation. Furthermore, Aristotle states that Gods do not have the concerns and troubles that plague human thought, these things are "trivial and unworthy of the gods". The question which then arises is if the gods do not sleep, and do not occupy their minds with the concerns of humans, then how do they remain active. To this, Aristotle replies by saying that they must simply live in a state of contemplation; "and you take away from a living being action, and still more production, what is left but contemplation?" Furthermore, Aristotle argues that since Gods are the happiest of us all and they live a fulfilling life of contemplation, then the life of contemplation will be the happiest for us humans as well; "Therefore the activity of God, which surpasses all others in blessedness, must be contemplative; and of human activities, therefore, that which is most akin to this must be most of the nature of happiness"
Remember how "hard free will" appeared as complete randomness? Nobody wants that. — Metaphysician Undercover
And, it's quite evident in communication, and most social activity, we make an effort to be predictable. — Metaphysician Undercover
Constraints of the past restrict the reality of what one can get, or bring about, create, in the future, but they do not put restrictions on what one can want, or desire. — Metaphysician Undercover
In reality though, thinking is not necessarily clear, accurate, or correct. We often use thinking to rationalize goals which are really irrational. — Metaphysician Undercover
This implies that thinking is really a process whereby intentions for the future incline us to make a representation of the past (memory), and bring this representation to bear upon future possibilities. Therefore it is not the actual past which is doing the constraining in the act of thinking, it is really just the representation of the past (memory), and this is why we are prone to making mistakes. — Metaphysician Undercover
So when we make decisions concerning free will and determinism, we must be careful not to consider these representations (memories) as the past constraining the future in a determinist way, because the memories are produced and employed in a free way. The consequence, mistakes. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm not so sure about this. I think we learn what's possible from the past. — mrcoffee
Memory in the present is a function of the past, and the constraints we project on the future are a function of memory and therefore a function of the past (by composition of functions)? — mrcoffee
As I use the words, a goal cannot be irrational. — mrcoffee
How about we put it this way? Memory in the present is a function of the past, and the constraints we project on the future are a function of memory and therefore a function of the past (by composition of functions)? — mrcoffee
But we don't learn what's possible from the past, we make that up. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is not really a case of the past constraining the future though. Our memories are selective, always incomplete, and sometimes wrong. So it's really a case of the person in the present attempting to use past experience to constrain the future, for the sake of some purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would you think that a goal cannot be irrational? Irrational means unreasonable or illogical. Do you not think that a person may at sometime set as a goal something which cannot be obtained by that person? Wouldn't that goal be irrational? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not a function of the past, it's how we relate to the past. And those properties of memory which I mentioned, that 'it's selective and sometimes wrong, indicate that it's really not a function of the past, but a function of the living creature, now. — Metaphysician Undercover
The past constrains the future, but it doesn't absolutely determine the future. So the past leaves the future only relatively determined in terms of its propensities.
Physical models can of course simplify the situation and treat the dynamics of the world as mechanical and time-reversible. But that Newtonian view is known to be an over-simplification both due to the laws of thermodynamics and quantum theory.
If we put all our physical laws together, they tell us the world is a place where the past does constrain the future, but can't absolutely determine the future. — apokrisis
It uses a symbolic memory and code - like genes, neurons, words - to step back from the world so as to be able to control that world. — apokrisis
I don't claim that the future is 'actually' constrained by the past, though I do in fact believe this on a gut level. — mrcoffee
This is the 'spiritual' side of philosophy, and I'd say that non-objective side. — mrcoffee
On the lower levels though, I imagine some codes just replicating more than others. Would control not be metaphorical here? — mrcoffee
Now, it might be that Aristotle was mistaken in this regard, but that is not really the point at issue. — Wayfarer
It's not the future that is constrained by memory, it is the choices that we might make. — Rich
So the basis of freewill - that is intelligent, selfish and goal directed behaviour - is there right from the ground up. As soon as a molecule becomes a message, we are talking about life being freed from the kind of strict Newtonian determinism that causes all the metaphysical angst about human freewill. — apokrisis
So my image of the future is constrained my the memory of this avocado. — mrcoffee
The future is seen as virtual (possible actions). Your choices are: when to get it (initiation of will), how to get it (directional action), what to do with it once you get it. — Rich
he future is also the background of possible actions, their context. — mrcoffee
Certain actions are possible or not according to whether this 'background' is one situation or another. — mrcoffee
This is straying from the topic, but it seems a contradiction that Aristotle starts by defining flourishing in terms of self actualisation and building a life through rational action, then you want to make this the final takeaway - that contemplation is an “ethereal” ultimate stage of development. — apokrisis
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