Is the real world fair and just? — Gnomon
Yes; however, we h. sapiens have not been "fair and just" enough – too often at all – to one another for the last several (recorded) millennia at least. — 180 Proof
The world is not fair and just because some people are unfair and unjust hence why we have a justice system for serious breaches of injustice. — kindred
From a human perspective, non-human nature can seem "unfair and unjust" ... to some less fortuitous "human populations".Nature is not created equal or fair, and as a result, some human population had fared better than others. — L'éléphant
From a human perspective, non-human nature can seem "unfair and unjust" ... to "some human populations". — 180 Proof
You and I can choose Gaussian or scalefree -- but that's not the philosophical question. the question is: Which do you choose? — Moliere
On the whole, folk have voted for growth. And yearned for steady state. They want 3% as a basic forever rate of economic improvement and then they bellyache at the yawning inequality gap that such a regime creates simply as its equilibrium outcome. They remember the good old days when incomes were almost Gaussian flat. The good old days being the post-war anglosphere and not the pre-industrial era when GDP had flat-lined for millenia.
So there is the moral conundrum. The physical world foots the entropic bill. Fossil fuels are the explosive basis of modern economics and its scalefree social complexification. Peasants and serfs can now be pickleball professionals and influencers. — apokrisis
Non sequitur & category error. — 180 Proof
Given the context (our two posts at the top of this page), ask a question that makes sense.Please answer my question. — L'éléphant
Yes. If you define "real" as anything that can interact with other things, then the human mind is real. A rock is inert in itself, but can be used to break a window. An idea is subjective and invisible, but it can be used to affect other minds. For example, your post elicited this reply.Yet, do you find the "mind of the observer" to be any less real than the physicality which it observes and thereby knows? And, if not, are not both then equally real aspects of that which constitutes "the world" as-is. — javra
Pardon, my intrusion. But I suspect your failure to communicate with may be foundering on the notion of "transcendent" ideas. If he is an Immanentist regarding abstract concepts --- God being just the most common example --- any reference to something transcendent may be meaningless to him.That's all very clever, but tells me very little. — Banno
Clean out your ears. This was the OP that I was addressing. I was pointing to the third option of the pragmatic/semiotic view that stands beyond the impasse of the idealism vs realism debate. — apokrisis
I've been thinking along similar lines since my last reply toIs unfairness or injustice really just the product of human action? — L'éléphant
Human actions are what we have control over, and so we ask what we should do.There’s also a sort of latent animism in some of our expressions in that we do attribute intent to things around us as well as to people. — Banno
The only way in which we can "address those that are the products of the natural world" is by human action.So do we only address those unfairness caused by human actions? Or do we also address those that are the products of the natural world? — L'éléphant
I'm sorry if the image shows you nothing. For others, it shows the difference between equal and fair. There is considerable literature on this topic - you might be familiar with John Rawls and Martha Nussbaum. But of course these are but two in a multitude.But you have to clear up why your saccharine image illustrates anything in the first place. — apokrisis
The question then is "What do we do?". Answering that might well involve being clear about what is "balanced, fair, equal and just".This is a quite normal political question. Any fool would say we want a society that is balanced, fair, equal and just. The question then becomes well which version of a society is that which you have in mind? — apokrisis
If he is an Immanentist regarding abstract concepts — Gnomon
Human actions are what we have control over, and so we ask what we should do. — Banno
It's your thread, so your response is welcome.If he is an Immanentist regarding abstract concepts --- God being just the most common example --- any reference to something transcendent may be meaningless to him. — Gnomon
Hmm. I'm wondering what you think the naturalistic fallacy is. It is not an appeal to nature.While I don't want to invoke the naturalistic fallacy, it's hard for a human to look at nature and think that we inhabit a fair world. — Tom Storm
Your trivialising them does not do you proud. — Banno
My repeated question to you is, how does thermodynamics help us here? — Banno
nor shown how physics helps with the ethical problems commonly discussed hereabouts, such as antinatalism, run-away trams, and keeping promises.
There are profound and important issues here that remain unaddressed by mere thermodynamics. — Banno
The case was put. The burden is on you to explain how it does not. — apokrisis
The second direction is that we can change how things are to make them as we want. We alter how things are in order to match our theories and language. This is not the province of science so much as of ethics. — Banno
Except we have to live together in the actual world — apokrisis
I was waiting for that. The next rhetorical move, after abuse and ridicule, is to claim that you already answered the question. — Banno
Ok. That's the pop understanding of "naturalistic fallacy". — Banno
The naturalistic fallacy in philosophy "is the claim that it is possible to define good in terms of natural entities, or properties". Saying that the good is what is pleasurable, or what makes the greatest number of folk happy, and so on. — Banno
I, by contrast, have pointed out that an asymmetric distribution of boxes is what would constitute "fair and equal" as a powerlaw thermodynamic balance – the one of a growing system. While a symmetric distribution is "fair and equal" as the Gaussian balance of a no-growth system. — apokrisis
It seems to me that your description of how things are does not tell us how they ought be. — Banno
seems to be one of the most philosophically knowledgeable posters on this forum. But his arguments tend to be rather terse, as if he has a canned answer for common problems. So, some fraught terms may be trigger-words for a succinct reply. Based on his dismissal of your arguments, I suspect that he equates both "Metaphysics" and "Transcendence" with other-worldly religion and spiritualism, instead of with abstract concepts and philosophical metaphors.And clearly the Cosmos, life and mind have turned out to have just that kind of self-organising logic. And thermodynamics – as a general label for a vast field of maths and science now – is all about systems that self-organise. So thermodynamics is how we can bring 21st C precision to a metaphysics of immanence. — apokrisis
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