Long ago I was fortunate to be part of a community along such lines, although these days I get such needs met through talking with individual friends. Anyway, I'll PM you, because a public forum isn't a very good place for discussing such things. — wonderer1
And yet consistent with your (Ligotti's) defeatist premises that's still a MALIGNANTLY USELESS "notion", no? :smirk: — 180 Proof
THAT it is malignantly useless, doesn't mean we are thus malignantly indifferent to it. — schopenhauer1
Apparently, as your 'dogmatic ontophobic idealism' shows, you do not grok absurdism as expressed by (e.g.) PW Zapffe, A. Camus, C. Rosset ... Instead, schop, you fetishize the lyrical "antinatal" musings of a minor horror novelist and latter-day disciple of a haute bourgeois, misanthropic, dyspeptic pessimist (who also happens to be a great neo-kantian philosopher).Absurdism is a response, similar to existentialism, but it doesn't see the problem for what it is. — schopenhauer1
A society without pain, suffering, disease, wars, poverty or even death. — kindred
Why would people drag 'happiness' into social organization? — Vera Mont
What is a singular society? — Vera Mont
This is one basic assumption about humans on which you and I disagree. All living things have needs in common; all members of a phylum have even more in common; all members of a family have even more in common; all members of a species are more like one another than they are like any other species. — Vera Mont
Needs, yes. Wants are individual; all the society can or should do is provide the opportunity for people to satisfy their own wants.Satisfying people's wants and needs is part of the utopian ideal. — I like sushi
Why the hell not? Native tribes on various continents managed quite well to remain separate, and yet trade and party and look for marriage partners.Separate communities in a utopian society cannot stably coexist because of this limitation. — I like sushi
Why should they? What - aside from cultural indoctrination - are these prominent differences? Even with cultural diversity, people can get along just fine. Toronto used to enjoy a thriving Chinatown, a Jewish district and market, the Italian strip, the Ukrainian and Hungarian, Greek and Caribbean, Irish and Portuguese neighbourhoods. Yonge Street got pretty raucous during FIFA playoffs. St. Patrick's day was a lot of fun, and so was Caribana. If there is no scarcity of resources or ethnic dominance to compete for, and nobody inciting one group of people against another, what have they to grate about? Anyone is free to associate with those they find pleasant company and avoid people they don't like.Yes, but people still differ. the larger the population the prominent differences become as they grate harder on each other. — I like sushi
And yet, cities and nations consist of many million citizens, and don't break out in civil war. Why does everyone need a direct tie to everyone else? How long has the place where you currentIy reside existed? If you can tolerate the presence of strangers there, in spite of whatever inequalities, injustices and annoyances exist there right now, why could you not accept them in a fair and benevolent society?With Dunbar's Number we know that societal ties breakdown over a certain population threshold. — I like sushi
Needs, yes. Wants are individual; all the society can or should do is provide the opportunity for people to satisfy their own wants. — Vera Mont
Why the hell not? Native tribes on various continents managed quite well to remain separate, and yet trade and party and look for marriage partners. — Vera Mont
Why should they? What - aside from cultural indoctrination - are these prominent differences? — Vera Mont
Toronto used to enjoy a thriving Chinatown, a Jewish district and market, the Italian strip, the Ukrainian and Hungarian, Greek and Caribbean, Irish and Portuguese neighbourhoods. Yonge Street got pretty raucous during FIFA playoffs. St. Patrick's day was a lot of fun, and so was Caribana. If there is no scarcity of resources or ethnic dominance to compete for, and nobody inciting one group of people against another, what have they to grate about? Anyone is free to associate with those they find pleasant company and avoid people they don't like — Vera Mont
And yet, cities and nations consist of many million citizens, and don't break out in civil war. Why does everyone need a direct tie to everyone else? How long has the place where you currentIy reside existed? If you can tolerate the presence of strangers there, in spite of whatever inequalities, injustices and annoyances exist there right now, why could you not accept them in a fair and benevolent society?
Of course a utopian or optimal society cannot be brought about in our present state of affairs. And maybe too many of us are too crazy to want it. Nevertheless, I believe it to be a theoretical possibility. — Vera Mont
Of course a utopian or optimal society cannot be brought about in our present state of affairs. And maybe too many of us are too crazy to want it. Nevertheless, I believe it to be a theoretical possibility. — Vera Mont
No. I defined it as a society that satisfies peoples needs and provides opportunity for people to satisfy their own and one another's wants. This should not be such a difficult concept, since all functional societies have a mandate to do this. They just don't do it very well.So you define a utopian society as being one that keeps people alive rather than one that also satisfies people's wants? — I like sushi
I say that if we don't have to fight over the necessities, we are better able to choose and create the luxuries. You say the luxuries must come with the package. You demand more than is possible and then argue that it's not possible.If we all envisage different things they also contradict each other. — I like sushi
And all these differences grate on you? You want to kill all those 'other' people? Me, I find uniformity rather a bore.Height, sex, weight, intelligence, personal preferences, tastes, fortitude, vulnerability, sociability, etc.,. — I like sushi
And yet they did. And we do, with people around the whole globe. (We're even trying to communicate with other planets.) Even now, with all the strife over territory and resources and population movement. So why would we suddenly stop being able to communicate if the strife ended and there was nothing major to negotiate? I don't see the logic of people being on the fringes (whatever fringes are when the needs of all are satisfied) because they're less able to communicate with people they don't choose for company than the ones they do choose.Because they would not be able to communicate and negotiate well enough leaving many on the fringes of society. — I like sushi
I'm not opting for it. The option was never open to me. I'm saying it's theoretically possible. And also that having a destination in mind is useful in choosing one's path; that a clear vision of how society should work is helpful in making incremental improvements. ....I do not feel that you appreciate the danger of opting for some utopian scheme rather than just trying to improve the current state. — I like sushi
No. I defined it as a society that satisfies peoples needs and provides opportunity for people to satisfy their own and one another's wants. This should not be such a difficult concept, since all functional societies have a mandate to do this. They just don't do it very well. — Vera Mont
I say that if we don't have to fight over the necessities, we are better able to choose and create the luxuries. You say the luxuries must come with the package. You demand more than is possible and then argue that it's not possible.
A place where there is nothing left to try and nothing left to desire is not Utopia - it's death.
If you prefer fish and I prefer pasta, we don't need to fight over either. All we need are some very basic laws regarding personal liberty and responsibility. (Not the million contentious laws we have been trying to uphold and knock down in civilized countries.) — Vera Mont
And all these differences grate on you? You want to kill all those 'other' people? Me, I find uniformity rather a bore. — Vera Mont
In fact, I don't see the logic of variety as an obstacle to social cohesion. — Vera Mont
I'm not opting for it. The option was never open to me. I'm saying it's theoretically possible. And also that having a destination in mind is useful in choosing one's path; that a clear vision of how society should work is helpful in making incremental improvements. .... — Vera Mont
In actuality, we're just hanging on the precipice of extinction by our fingernails. Survival is still possible, but it's not going to be any picnic. — Vera Mont
Well, if you're not inclined to kill people for being different, why assume everyone else is? Why assume diversity equals conflict? I have lived peaceably among enough people who are different from me and different from one another not to believe that.No? This is not about me. Kill? That is a bizarre interpretation of what I outlined. — I like sushi
It cannot be brought about in one fell swoop. I have several times stipulated as much: the good society is an ideal to aspire to and work toward, not a state that can be created wholesale.Utopia cannot be brought about under any state of affairs without causing mass harm, genocide, homicide or some means of 'levelling the playing field'. — I like sushi
It all makes sense from a certain perspective, based on a certain set of assumptions. You may be right; humanity may be altogether irredeemable. I was speculating based on a different POV.Is anything I have been saying made any sense whether you agree or not? — I like sushi
I will try.Did you look at the book by Nozick btw? It is an interesting read. — I like sushi
Well, if you're not inclined to kill people for being different, why assume everyone else is? Why assume diversity equals conflict?I have lived peaceably among enough people who are different from me and different from one another not to believe that. — Vera Mont
You may be right; humanity may be altogether irredeemable. — Vera Mont
I didn't drag genocide into this discussion.Killing? Conflict does not mean 'killing'. — I like sushi
There would be all kinds of local disharmonies. So what? Any functioning society can institute a mechanism whereby people can resolve their arguments and restore harmony to the community. It's certainly not an existential problem.There would be disharmony of a sort.
Then why is every society on Earth not tearing itself apart over the existence of all those fat and thin, dark and fair, tall and short, clever and dull, brisk and relaxed men, women and others, some of whom like jazz while some prefer rock, some of whom eat rice while some like potatoes?Diversity does necessarily involve conflictions. — I like sushi
And yet consider us so short-sighted and intolerant that we can't live in a society with people who are unlike us, or share resources among occupations.Believe it or not I am optimistic for humanity — I like sushi
I didn't drag genocide into this discussion. — Vera Mont
There would be all kinds of local disharmonies. So what? Any functioning society can institute a mechanism whereby people can resolve their arguments and restore harmony to the community. It's certainly not an existential problem. — Vera Mont
Diversity does necessarily involve conflictions.
— I like sushi
Then why is every society on Earth not tearing itself apart over the existence of all those fat and thin, dark and fair, tall and short, clever and dull, brisk and relaxed men, women and others, some of whom like jazz while some prefer rock, some of whom eat rice while some like potatoes? — Vera Mont
Diversity does necessarily involve conflictions. That is what differences are. They are different due to some degree of confliction. The greater the differences the more likely the possibility for conflict. — I like sushi
And yet consider us so short-sighted and intolerant that we can't live in a society with people who are unlike us, or share resources among occupations. — Vera Mont
Show me. In context, if at all possible.You brought it up on that particular point and I have no idea why. — I like sushi
Could - not must. OKI mentioned that to achieve utopia could involve something along those lines or some other means of levelling the playing field. — I like sushi
Instances of ideological conflict were obvious. To what extent they were utopian, or even sincere, is questionable.Instances of these kinds of actions were obvious enough in the 20th century. — I like sushi
Yup. Fundamental difference of opinion.I am stating that aiming for a utopian ideal is wrong and you are saying it is right. — I like sushi
Yup. "some better world" is too vague for my taste. Better than what? Better for whom? Better in what ways?Aiming for a utopian ideal would involve having a target to aim for, not merely the incremental pursuit of some better world. — I like sushi
It wouldn't, had I done so.arguing about the present situation helps your position how? — I like sushi
Yup. That has to be one of the first problems needs solving - assuming there is time to solve problems before the whole house of cards collapses. Is it a conflict between two individuals, or between two equal sized groups of persons? Or between a very few people and an enormous number? I wonder how that would play out, hand-to-hand, without a mercenary army on one side.We can see currently that rich and poor and differences in status or cultures does cause confliction. — I like sushi
What's causing the growing strain in your scenario? Differences among persons, disparity of resource distribution, ideologies or goading by demagogues with their own agenda?What I am saying is that as population grow and conflicts of interest appear then there is growing social strain - this should be apparent enough from what I have previously written surely? — I like sushi
There is nothing feasible about means that would destroy the ends they aim for.our reference to me bringing up genocide and such, or some other means of leveling the playing field, was in regards to feasible pathways to a utopian ideal. — I like sushi
Yes, and that's pretty much the point. Up front, I said that a utopian vision depends on eliminating wealth disparity, uneven distribution of resources and ideological indoctrination. You seem to assume these things are inevitable and unavoidable. I believe they will crumble with the current world order.We can see currently that rich and poor and differences in status or cultures does cause confliction. you can se this literally anywhere on the planet. When there is a problem with resources or large cultural disparities - basically conflicts of interest - then things can turn nasty fairly quickly. This is not new news to anyone. Understand? — I like sushi
As I've said several times already: You can't get there from here, except with many, many baby steps (some of them backward). Nationalism and religion have to go. Politics has to change dramatically. Tradition is okay, in the form of parades and festivals, as long as it doesn't try dictate decisions for the future.there would still be matters of religion, pride in the group, politics, traditions and of course individual abilities. — I like sushi
We are basically the same. Two arms, two legs, one head, opposable thumbs, warm blood, insufficient body-hair, big brain, needs air, water, food, shelter, mating opportunities, companionship, something to think about, something to do, respect of peers...The reason is the utopian ideal springs from equality and true equality can only be achieved if everyone is basically the same - which we are not. — I like sushi
In general, I would prefer a leader with vision. In particular, I would want to know what improvements they proposed to make.If the head of state in your country decided to reveal an incremental roadmap towards some vision of utopia would you back them over someone looking to make some improvements to the existing scheme without any idealistic goal? — I like sushi
All right. I won't do that.I am not interested in some combative debate where one of us pumps the air with our fists at the end taking delight is 'winning an argument' rather than exploring ideas. — I like sushi
I said that a utopian vision depends on eliminatingwealthdisposition, skill and determination disparity — Vera Mont
What's causing the growing strain in your scenario? Differences among persons, disparity of resource distribution, ideologies or goading by demagogues with their own agenda? — Vera Mont
Yup. "some better world" is too vague for my taste. Better than what? Better for whom? Better in what ways? — Vera Mont
arguing about the present situation helps your position how?
— I like sushi
It wouldn't, had I done so. — Vera Mont
Yup. That has to be one of the first problems needs solving - assuming there is time to solve problems before the whole house of cards collapses. Is it a conflict between two individuals, or between two equal sized groups of persons? Or between a very few people and an enormous number? I wonder how that would play out, hand-to-hand, without a mercenary army on one side. — Vera Mont
our reference to me bringing up genocide and such, or some other means of leveling the playing field, was in regards to feasible pathways to a utopian ideal.
— I like sushi
There is nothing feasible about means that would destroy the ends they aim for. — Vera Mont
Yes, and that's pretty much the point. Up front, I said that a utopian vision depends on eliminating wealth disparity, uneven distribution of resources and ideological indoctrination. You seem to assume these things are inevitable and unavoidable. I believe they will crumble with the current world order. — Vera Mont
As I've said several times already: You can't get there from here, except with many, many baby steps (some of them backward). Nationalism and religion have to go. Politics has to change dramatically. Tradition is okay, in the form of parades and festivals, as long as it doesn't try dictate decisions for the future. — Vera Mont
The reason is the utopian ideal springs from equality and true equality can only be achieved if everyone is basically the same - which we are not.
— I like sushi
Rubbish! — Vera Mont
But the question: Do you believe it is possible for future generations of humans to become more moral by comparison to the morality of humans today? — javra
The economic and political specificity of the hows aside, I take it that this would in part require that people become better parents of their own volition, thereby resulting in future generations of people that have less childhood psychological trauma, that have less defense mechanisms as adults for the traumas they / we experienced as children, and that thereby grow up having more scruples. (Though only part of the story, I do deem this step requisite to any actualization of the aim just specified.) — javra
If it is metaphysically possible for people to of their volition become better parents (say, maybe, in part due to changed societal constraints), then it is possible for next generations to become more moral. And were this to persist we would attain a society wherein people no longer rape or murder other people. And this, to me, would be a utopian society. One whose very notion and possibility many nowadays will scoff at. — javra
In short, should this ideal of humans no longer raping and murdering other humans – which is quite utopian – be denounced and shunned by everyone the world over? This on grounds that some of the possible means toward such an end can only result in dystopias? — javra
Even with this there is a question of how we can possibly measure morality let alone dictate what degree of morality is optimal. — I like sushi
A perfect example of how doing something that seems good, like protecting children from trauma, actually results in something bad. Making mistakes and having 'traumas' as children is a good thing. Children need to learn how to deal with difficult situations rather than be protected from them. The assumption that such parenting would lead to more 'morality' in society could just as easily do the exact opposite. — I like sushi
if such an ideal comes at the cost of increased discrimination then is it utopian? — I like sushi
Or are you basically framing this as a more progressively moral society will extinguish all of these inequalities to the point where we all see each other as being equal? If so, this is 'leveling the playing field' and I think it would fall apart fairly quickly in larger populations for reasons I have outlined. — I like sushi
In short, what you are proposing is a ideal but does not look anything like a utopian ideal as it is looking at societal problems as being ONE problem and in pursuing with the same vigor as a utopian ideal would leave other pressing matters floundering in its wake. — I like sushi
If something we would refer to today as a utopian ideal was to come into existence in our lifetime, via some unknown paradigm shift, I absolutely do not believe anyone would purposely have instigated it. — I like sushi
If things go our way we claim authorship, yet if things go against what we say we are even more quick to distance ourselves from immediate participation (the neuroscientific evidence for this is pretty conclusive)*. — I like sushi
Within our lifetime I find it exceedingly doubtful, if not laughable. Still, I agree with this conclusion. It would by entailment need to be purposefully enforced by everyone (or at least the vast majority) from which the society is constituted. — javra
I wasn't addressing parents' reprimanding their children or the like but to all various forms of child abuse. — javra
But, again, who would deny that a world devoid of rape and murder is not sheer utopia from today's vantage? — javra
But the question: Do you believe it is possible for future generations of humans to become more moral by comparison to the morality of humans today? — javra
But the question: Do you believe it is possible for future generations of humans to become more moral by comparison to the morality of humans today? — javra
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