It is the nature of life, it is the entire purpose of being alive, the sole definition of life itself is to flourish competitively. — Marzipanmaddox
The nature of life is just to flourish as much as possible. Every organism has this instinct, regardless of whether they are conscious or not, all life seeks to do is flourish to the greatest extent that it possibly can. — Marzipanmaddox
Life spreads and consumes fuel in the exact same manner that fire does. — Marzipanmaddox
Life exists purely because there was this potential energy that could be reduced, and it exists solely to reduce this potential energy, in the same sense that fire exists with the sole purpose of reducing combustible chemicals with high volatility into less volatile molecules with lower potential energy. — Marzipanmaddox
The natural action would be to pursue this end and only this end, to ensure our own indefinite and perpetual survival to perform exactly the process that life naturally and spontaneously arose to do. — Marzipanmaddox
I even go so far as to argue that the more we stray from this natural definition of life, the less and less the human race can truly consider themselves life. When we stop pursing this natural goal, this maximization of the reduction of potential energy induced by life within the universe over the lifetime of the universe, we stop being life all together, we simply become death, we are no longer the righteous fire that was birthed from fuel, but smoldering ashes that failed to sustain the blaze. — Marzipanmaddox
"Eels don't reproduce. They spontaneously generate from the mud." That's a claim about a fact. It's asserting something about what the world is like, how the world works. It's wrong, of course, but that's irrelevant. It's a claim about facts. — Terrapin Station
I'm not following you on this one. Are you saying that facts can be false? — EricH
h yeah, well my definition of life is the best, most perfect definition of life imaginable, and it reflects the ideal, objective, scientific, utopian vision of a blah blah blah. — S
Everything within this universe, everything within the planet earth, is inherently numerical... — Marzipanmaddox
I can't see how everything - absolutely everything - is "inherently numerical". — Pattern-chaser
is wrong - at least in this context. True propositions describe facts ((wikipedia uses the term structural isomorphism), but the word "fact" and the word "proposition" have very different definitions.Philosophy) philosophy a proposition that may be either true or false, as contrasted with an evaluative statement — Janus
And another thing. What if morality is not a policy considered and adopted by societies, but is an emergent property of societies that just appears? The way you put it, you expect evolution to get rid of it if it does nothing. But there are many attributes that have no critical survival value, so they are not selected for or against. Maybe morality is such a thing? — Pattern-chaser
So, to paraphrase, philosophy is crap because it isn't science, and only science can be not-crap? Is that about it? — Pattern-chaser
"Factual claim" instead refers to "a claim about a fact; a claim that posits what the world is like; how the world works." — Terrapin Station
It is the nature of life, it is the entire purpose of being alive, the sole definition of life itself is to flourish competitively. — Marzipanmaddox
That's not even close to the actual definitions of life being proposed by biologists. — Echarmion
The nature of life is just to flourish as much as possible. Every organism has this instinct, regardless of whether they are conscious or not, all life seeks to do is flourish to the greatest extent that it possibly can. — Marzipanmaddox
What is the evidence of that? — Echarmion
Life spreads and consumes fuel in the exact same manner that fire does. — Marzipanmaddox
Literally in the exact same manner? — Echarmion
Life exists purely because there was this potential energy that could be reduced, and it exists solely to reduce this potential energy, in the same sense that fire exists with the sole purpose of reducing combustible chemicals with high volatility into less volatile molecules with lower potential energy. — Marzipanmaddox
Purpose to whom? — Echarmion
The natural action would be to pursue this end and only this end, to ensure our own indefinite and perpetual survival to perform exactly the process that life naturally and spontaneously arose to do. — Marzipanmaddox
What is a "natural action"? How do we establish what is natural? — Echarmion
I even go so far as to argue that the more we stray from this natural definition of life, the less and less the human race can truly consider themselves life. When we stop pursing this natural goal, this maximization of the reduction of potential energy induced by life within the universe over the lifetime of the universe, we stop being life all together, we simply become death, we are no longer the righteous fire that was birthed from fuel, but smoldering ashes that failed to sustain the blaze. — Marzipanmaddox
And just why should we care about being life according to your definition of it? — Echarmion
(I'm new, just looking for a place to argue. Hopefully this will be ok.)
Why is subjective morality respected?
By my ken, morality is simple. It is a collective of people mutually sacrificing their natural freedoms in order to empower the collective. They all mutually refrain from doing things that are naturally within their power, and thus the society benefits. — Marzipanmaddox
The point about providing a hard, quantifiable definition is that it allows for an actual functional system to emerge, an actual system that provides actual answers to questions. — Marzipanmaddox
When I say that morality is based on flourishing, I don't mean that in a kind of "universalist" sense, but I am saying that is the most useful, fruitful and coherent way to think about it. — Janus
The very idea of being moral is conceptually based on the idea of benefiting others, and the idea of being immoral is based on the idea of harming others. — Janus
Ok. Logically, life has a definition. — Marzipanmaddox
You claim that this is an argument about collectivism, it's not. It's an argument about the definition of civilization and morality, it is pure coincidence that the definition I am able to derived from history is one that is similar to collectivism. The point here is not for me to defend collectivism, the point is for my to defend my reasoning and metrics from which I am able to derive the objective definition of morality. — Marzipanmaddox
Factual claim = a claim about a possible fact. — EricH
I believe that Terrapin & I are using the word "fact" as it functions in the context of the Correspondence theory of truth . . . — EricH
At this point, by your logic, how do opinions exist? — Marzipanmaddox
Basically, once you start to count things, you can tell that everything is countable. — Marzipanmaddox
Think of a rock falling from a person's hand towards the ground. This may not seem numerical, but even if it does not naturally appear this way, we can still represent and describe it numerically. — Marzipanmaddox
If it was not selected for or against, then it would not be so prevalent — Marzipanmaddox
I'm saying philosophy is not reliable method of deriving truth because it deviates from the scientific method. — Marzipanmaddox
Cows are countable; milk is not. — Pattern-chaser
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