But where are you getting the idea that humanists are basing their ideology on evolution (thereby committing the naturalistic fallacy)? — SophistiCat
They often believe that humans are smarter than other animals and capable of more things. I am not sure if 'human dignity' is one of their beliefs. They value human capabilities and nature. — Coben
I am not sure humanism is an ethical system, but it does certainly value humans. However the main point is you are not taking my comment in context. When I say they can value whatever they want, I meant that Humanists are not bound, for some reason, to value based on evolution, which the other poster seems to think. Nor more than they need to justify or rationalize their values in terms of the theory of relativity or in terms of gravity.An ethical system is typically named after its core value. The core value of humanism is the human being. If they are basing this value on something else, then they shouldn't be called humanists - they should be something else-ists (rationalists perhaps, if they claim to have purely rational foundations for their values). — SophistiCat
Humanists are not bound, for some reason, to value based on evolution, which the other poster seems to think — Coben
"Evolution" means:
- a blind and purposeless process driven by variation plus selection plus reproduction;
- survival of the fittest ;
- the absence of morality (to be a predator or parasite is not reprehensible) ;
- no species is superior to other species (only in the tautological sense that species A spreads at the expense of species B because A has traits that make it "fitter" in a certain environment. In a different environment the roles could be reversed) — Matias
You have to be able to consider the meaning of actions for the idea of morality to mean anything. That’s why insanity is a defense. — Wayfarer
How can it be justified given that from the point of view of evolution H. sapiens is 'just' another animal? — Matias
In this approach, evolution is not blind and purposeless, but rather through natural drift and organism-environment coupling the organism is predisposed to mutate in directions that are compatible with its ongoing ways of functioning in its environment. — Joshs
where does this unalienable dignity come from? How can it be justified given that from the point of view of evolution H. sapiens is 'just' another animal? — Matias
one of the dogmas of the secular view of evolution, is that it has nothing like an overall direction or purpose, and so the fact of the existence of intelligent self-aware beings has no particular significance in the overall scheme. — Wayfarer
It comes from the religious conception that "Jesus died for all mankind". — Wayfarer
But one of the dogmas of the secular view of evolution, is that it has nothing like an overall direction or purpose, and so the fact of the existence of intelligent self-aware beings has no particular significance in the overall scheme. — Wayfarer
Wouldn't it be better to affirm the value of all living things? — Joshs
Heideggerian disclosers of our ownmost uncanny, mysterious possibilities of being, without needing to get closer to some pre-figured end? — Joshs
Now one can put a metaphysical spin on it and claim something along the lines that in this way nature becomes aware of itself, but this kind of closed circle, teleological self-realization is not inherent in evolutionary theory. — Fooloso4
One of the challenges of evolution is to figure out how this came to be. It is in this sense no different that figuring out how features, or feet, or lungs came to be. — Fooloso4
No question there - except, again, for 'why'? What drove that? Is there any overarching purpose to it beyond survival and propagation? You may or may not agree but whichever view you take, I don't think that's a scientific question. — Wayfarer
i suppose i often dont have too much to say
— Frotunes
Then don't. — SophistiCat
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