the … experiential transformation from typical matter into a human is literally unimaginable. — Dogbert
If you think I somehow don't believe/know about evolution than you've missed the point of the question entirely. — Dogbert
On this planet, they're not exactly a rarity. And humans are only a fraction of the life forms on this planet. If you consider the size of the galaxy, in which there may be 300,000,000 habitable planets, then the number of other galaxies, all the suns and planets they contain, even if only one in a thousand of the potential life-generating planets actually does, life itself is not all that miraculous. The distances involved make it unlikely for us to meet any others like us, but that would also be true of a perfectly average fly buzzing around your window: it will never meet an equally common fly from Germany.Either I "just happen" to be among the infinitesimal fraction of matter that became human beings, — Dogbert
You are allowed to infer anything you like from any fact you come across. You exist. You feel special. From there to:or this seeming miracle actually allows me to infer something about the nature of reality — Dogbert
is a longish leap of the imagination, but you're not alone in taking it. Lost of people find reasons for their feeling of specialness.(maybe all minds are somehow destined for a higher state of being within their respective timelines, idk). — Dogbert
Ok let me put the question another way. Either I "just happen" to be among the infinitesimal fraction of matter that became human beings, or this seeming miracle actually allows me to infer something about the nature of reality (maybe all minds are somehow destined for a higher state of being within their respective timelines, idk). — Dogbert
I "just happen" to be among the infinitesimal fraction of matter that became human beings — Dogbert
If you consider the size of the galaxy, in which there may be 300,000,000 habitable planets, then the number of other galaxies, all the suns and planets they contain, even if only one in a thousand of the potential life-generating planets actually does, life itself is not all that miraculous. — Vera Mont
Why? Or why not go back to a flat Earth with a moon and sun circling around it and stars painted on the night sky?Let's hypothetically say that the solar system is all that exists. — Dogbert
And none of it could exist without all the matter that isn't alive. So?Even then, even just on Earth, the fraction of matter which constitutes life is so infinitesimal as to be zero. — Dogbert
Does the amount of matter have any bearing on the intelligence of life-forms? You're still going on about rarity by through quantity, as if rarity by itself, conferred some special value. Life has no value to non-life, so only an infinitesimal fraction of all the matter in the universe gives a damn whether it exists or not. So small a fraction, in fact, that it approaches zero.Including the entire universe, while there are likely aliens on many planets, exacerbates this to unconceivable proportions. — Dogbert
Yes. I believe it to be irrelevant.Your perception of the percentage of matter which constitutes life is unbelievably biased. — Dogbert
Does the amount of matter (I'm assuming you mean, "the amount of matter in the universe") have any bearing on the intelligence of life-forms?
Only you can decide whether it's worth it to you. As for me, I've heard so many arguments that begin with some version of 'the miracle of being me', I'm a bit jaded on the subject.And this is just one example. I honestly don't know how I'm supposed to express my ideas to you anymore or if it's even worth it. — Dogbert
↪Dogbert Dude, you propose an answer that merely begs the question (i.e. precipitates an infinite regress). Argument from incredulity – lack of imagination – is also fallacious. Talking out of your bunghole, Dude. "That's just the way it is" – brute fact of the matter – suffices. — 180 Proof
my experiential transformation from typical matter into a human
...
my miraculous existential fortune — Dogbert
Either I "just happen" to be among the infinitesimal fraction of matter that became human beings ... — Dogbert
"How" would be a scientific question (i.e. to explain empirically) instead of a philosophical question "why" (i.e. to clarify-justify conceptually). For instance, imo, "panpsychism" – (i.e. that's just the way woo is (aka "woo-of-the-gaps")) – begs a philosophical question about "the cause of consciousness".How about the question “how” instead of “why?” — Fire Ologist
As a panpsychist I believe that the rarity and privilege of my experiential transformation from typical matter into a human is literally unimaginable. In fact, I think my miraculous existential fortune should be justified by something other than "it just is that way". My question is what you think this justification might possibly be, or why you think "it just is that way" suffices. — Dogbert
If atoms somehow have some sort of subjective life, how does it illuminate the phenomenon of consciousness simply by supposing everything has it? — Bodhy
"How" would be a scientific question (i.e. to explain empirically) instead of a philosophical question "why" (i.e. to clarify-justify conceptually). — 180 Proof
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