It's not clear what you mean by us being pawns. Am I a pawn of gravity? Am I unwittingly (or wittingly) being made to move towards the Earth's core? If not, is there something different about biological (or cultural) influences that makes it more a case (than with gravity) of being used for something else's purposes? — Michael
Purposes only occur when sentient creatures think about things in tems of an overarching goal or credo that they're attracted to. — Terrapin Station
I do not feel like a pawn. In actuality, I feel like someone who is learning and exploring. When I observe babies growing into children growing into adults, this is what I also observe. So I make this the starting point for my philosophical thought. Rather than a pawn, I feel like someone who is learning to pawn structures in a game of chess. — Rich
Dawkins had his "gene-centered" view. — schopenhauer1
... so who cares? — schopenhauer1
Even Dawkins himself admits under pressure, (and then ignores) that the selfish gene is a mere analogy; that genes have no will, no desire, and no view. And certainly nothing remotely like a purpose. — unenlightened
Memes are an analogy of the analogy, and the same applies only even more emphatically. — unenlightened
Even Dawkins himself admits under pressure, (and then ignores) that the selfish gene is a mere analogy; that genes have no will, no desire, and no view. And certainly nothing remotely like a purpose. — unenlightened
Only living beings care. — unenlightened
perhaps the individual person exists for something else . . . here to unwittingly (or wittingly) carry out . . . pawns in the greater scheme . . . — schopenhauer1
It doesn't matter what we call the idea you're getting at there. Doing things "for something else," being pawns to some aim or motivation or whatever, or your later comment re "reasons for," where you're not simply talking about a descriptive accounting of what's going on causally, etc. doesn't refer to anything that occurs in the world sans sentient beings assigning aims and goals and so on. — Terrapin Station
It does not matter whether the it is "motivations" or for some unthinking mechanism- it does not destroy the argument that it is doing something DUE to a thing outside the individual (mechanism or otherwise). — schopenhauer1
The denial of agency is justified by its projection onto 'the blind watchmaker'. It's really poor philosophy, motivated by bad psychology. Mechanisms are unthinking, but people have no such excuse. — Unenli
It is strange and disconcerting to disconnect the idea of consciousness from free will.
What other beliefs or types of action do people have no excuse for? — Nils Loc
Then you can switch purpose with a word you like better. It does not necessarily change the whole "whole" versus "individual" part — schopenhauer1
And therefore an imaginary view, since genes do not have eyes or a viewpoint of any kind. — unenlightened
But they do not really have a will to survive, a desire to propagate, or a purpose of their own. — unenlightened
Are we just pawns in the greater scheme of some sort of natural/cultural project of continuance? Is the goods of life consolation enough to make this not matter? — schopenhauer1
A physicist is just an atom's way of looking at itself. — Neils Bohr
Man is a product of nearly three billion years of evolution, in whose person the evolutionary process has at last become conscious of itself and its possibilities. — Julian Huxley
I disagree. The word 'purpose' is in the title of your thread. The question of the whole in relation to the individual is a different issue, if 'purpose' is not involved. A word someone likes better will not mean the same thing. Human-defined systems have purpose ascribed to them by seemingly purposive humans. — mcdoodle
The problem with Dawkins, and neo-Darwinism generally, is treating a biological theory - how species survive and replicate - as an actual philosophy or 'meaning of life'. — Wayfarer
From the (true) gene-centred perspective, — tom
From the (true) gene-centred perspective, an individual is a conjecture, one of a population of variants, that is tested against reality. — tom
Neo-Darwinism is mostly metaphysical. — tom
That's a succinct illustration of 'scientism vs humanism'. There are no persons, only gene-carriers. — Wayfarer
It's opponents (of which I'm one) would say that it uses the language and rhetorical techniques of metaphysics against metaphysics. — Wayfarer
It's not a true perspective, it's an imaginary perspective. Truly, there is no such perspective. — unenlightened
I guess you are so anti-evolution that you just make stuff up. — tom
The problem with Dawkins, and neo-Darwinism generally, is treating a biological theory - how species survive and replicate - as an actual philosophy or 'meaning of life'. This has happened because science has been slotted into the role previously accorded to religion as 'a guide to how right-minded people should think' — Wayfarer
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