Originally posted by Blue Lion
No, you should talk to this woman and ask why she is having more children when clearly she can't support them and they_are_dying.
She probably wouldn't know, because if she is in such a situation it means she didn't have proper education. If she did have proper education, she would at least know how to keep her children alive. Now let me see, you'll say this is caused by misgovernment. Don't even bother.
Originally posted by Blue Lion
That isn't Americans putting their noses where it don't belong? I thought we weren't supposed to be meddling with other nations governments?
Unless they have a good deal of some black oily liquid-type substance, you surely mean.
Originally posted by CP5670
That's not what I am saying; how is following the ethics like a super religion helping us in our objective of attaining knowledge?
How can you assume our objective is to attain knowledge? It's obvious that out objective is to survive. If attaining knowledge helps that cause, great, but it doesn't mean it's our new objective. If we didn't have to survive, we should just kill ourselves as soon as we are born.
Originally posted by CP5670
Because all other objectives are far more contradictory and logically inconsistent (including the survival of the species by itself), and we cannot do nothing. I said this many times before.
Tell me, then, why attaining knowledge isn't contraditory if it's not for the objective of keeping us alive.
Originally posted by Bobboau
"Because all other objectives are far more contradictory and logically inconsistent (including the survival of the species by itself), and we cannot do nothing."
why do we have to do anything then, why not just kill ourselves to keep from being an illogical inconsistancy
Exactly.
Now the
fun part begins.
Originally posted by CP5670
Okay, I am back. 
Logically speaking you didn't have to say that, as the single fact of something new being posted by you makes it obvious.
Originally posted by CP5670
I had already pretty much decided that already (anyone who uses something like your second post in this thread in place of an argument is not really worth my, or anyone else's time) but you did not start arguing more until later.
I only argue when it's necessary. Most of the time I just try to have and make fun. I should be the one saying that you're not worth it, it's obvious that nothing can change your disturbed mind, with the possible exception of a drastic personal experience. You don't believe in what people with more experience than you in this area say, even though they live right next to the problem and don't spend their lives at the comfort of their homes going from the computer to the fridge endlessly. By this I'm not implying I'm one of those people, clearly.
Originally posted by CP5670
And you must be having fun too, or you would not be posting. 
You want to know why Im posting this? I'm posting this because I'm trying to help you. Help you change your biased opinion about certain things and how they work. Someday you might even be thankful for my intentions.
If I wanted to have fun I'd be spending my time on the internet playing Ultima Online or talking about fun stuff. This thread is serious, not fun. If you consider this subject fun, it tells us something else about you. But then again, I wouldn't be surprised if you did.
Originally posted by CP5670
That depends on whether or not there is something to learn in the first place. You could, for example, type in a bunch of random characters into your keyboard and try to find some meaning in that, but you probably would not get anywhere soon.
I couldn't care less if you think like that. I know how much sense my posts in that thread made, and I'm not the only one. Keep believing it isn't true, it would be just one more fantasy in your mind.
Originally posted by CP5670
As I see it, you posted some inside joke that would also make sense to some people, but was not really related to the argument.
It might not have been related to the argument, but it did show how much thought you put into your statements. And it was funny.
Originally posted by CP5670
And why would the organism need all the existing people to join when it can simply manufacture new people that are much better suited to it? Once it is started up, it can progress very rapidly. And I doubt that it would need more people beyond a certain point anyway, namely, the maximum value that best balances rapid scientific progression and low maintenance.
If it could make existing people join and manufacture new people at the same time it would gain power at a much higher rate. People would be resources which would go to waste if didn't join. And the maintenance mention brings up a whole new area of discussion. How would it work in order to need external maintenance? Wouldn't it, having more
members, create much more resources?
Originally posted by CP5670
And I have played SS2; very nice game. 
Oh, so in one thing we both fully agree! It did seem to me like some of your ideas (the concept of
joining specifically - "
Are we joined?") were based on The Many. And I have to agree it does seem like a perfectly reasonable system, and freaking cool too, but I'm not sure if it's viable and doable. Even if it is, I don't know if it's the best option.
Originally posted by CP5670
That is not important; the rate and direction of change is what counts, and the rule remains that they are quite ready to forsake any freedom for material gain.
Wait, wait. Who says they're ready to forsake
any freedom? They might be ready to forsake
some amount of freedom, but if they lost all of their freedom they wouldn't have the power to take advantage from this material gain, thus making it useless.
Originally posted by CP5670
The individuals do not need any commitment but to themselves to do this, and it would work in the same way the current civilization formed, where they join in out of a mutual interest alone.
The current civilization formed out of a mutual interest, of course, but in order to attain its objectives each individual needed a commitment to the others, to respect and be respected by them. The ones who didn't agree to this commitment were left out, and represent the criminals of today's society. They broke that commitment, and had to suffer the consequences.
You have to agree that it would be
much easier (if not the only possible way) for this organism to be formed if not only the initial individuals shared a mutual interest, but also a commitment with one another. So it seems more likely to me that the ones commited to the species by ethics and morals would take the initiative to create this new system, and the ones who didn't accept it would be left out.
Originally posted by CP5670
Besides, I already said that this is not going to happen for all the people, or even a thousandth of them, but 10 would be enough to get it started, and considering the diversity of opinion in the world, that would be easy to obtain.
If one thousandth of the species decided to form a new being to compete with the other 999 thousandths, I don't think it would survive a very long time, in all seriousness. At its initial stages of development it would be very vulnerable, a good time to be eliminated by a force a thousand times greater than its own.
Originally posted by CP5670
Also, if this is the "foundation of every government", how is it that there exist governments today that do not abide by many of these morals...
You stated it correctly. They do not abide by
many of these morals, but certainly do abide by a lot more. The point is, governments need
some level of ethics, they can't work in the total absence of morals. If an already formed government lost all of its ethics and morals, the people wouldn't accept the old laws anymore, as there wouldn't exist anything that made them act like they did before. New laws would be created to reflect these changes, and at some point all of them would disappear, leading to anarchy and the end of government.
Originally posted by CP5670
...and still do fine in the material world?
They might do
fine, but do they do
great? Governments with a higher level of morals do better than the ones with lower levels, as you might have noticed.
Originally posted by CP5670
Next, you will tell me that religion is a "natural survival strategy."
I never said anything about religion, as each individual chooses what he or she should or shouldn't believe in. Religion is not a natural survival strategy, at least not as much as ethics and morals are. Some religions do provide a great deal of support for the continued existance of society, by spreading concepts such as loving not only yourself, but all the others as well. This prevents people from causing harm, and that's beneficial to the species.
Originally posted by CP5670
(and yes, ethics in the sense you speak of is a religion, and stronger and more restrictive than all the others out there combined)
You got it completely wrong, and you exagerated just a
little bit in the last part. Morals and ethics represent the mutual objective of a species to survive. Religions spread beliefs that may or may not be of mutual interest, there are so many differences from one another that it's not possible to generalize as much as ethics and morals.
Originally posted by CP5670
Uncommon, maybe, but confusing?
Just tell me how they would become gods and how they didn't have a free will from the first place. It didn't seem like a very serious argument anyway.
Originally posted by CP5670
Depends on whether or not their ancestors and ours were descended from the same species.
Right, so imagine this. Humankind, after a lot of research, is able to make monkeys evolve into a much more advanced race than itself is. Would this new race of monkeys become the true humans?
Originally posted by CP5670
Look at my previous post; they and only they understand what is best for them. How in the world is your conclusion about this being good for them more accurate, or even as accurate, as theirs?
Because their conclusion would result in their death, my conclusion would result in a peaceful productive life. Unless you want to discuss what makes something good or bad, in which case I'd have to ask you (again), why we shouldn't all just kill ourselves.
Originally posted by CP5670
Well, how are the parents more knowledgable about the child's objectives than the child is? Only the child knows what he/she wants and unless the parents are contributing to that objective, they are not helping the child.
The parents are helping the child because they know that the child wouldn't be benefitted in any form by eating dirt. It's the child the one who doesn't want to help him/herself, not the parents. The child's objectives are to cause harm to him/herself, which wouldn't be helpful at all. Not eating dirt offers more advantages than actually eating it, so it's better not to eat it, no matter what the objectives are. By providing the best situation to the child, the parent's
are helping him/her.
Originally posted by CP5670
You cannot help someone unless you are contributing to their objective, since that is necessary to define te concepts of good and bad in the first place (suppose a guy wants to kill himself and tried to jump off a cliff, but you try to stop him, it is hurting him, not helping);
Same thing as in my previous paragraph. Would, then, the man be helping himself by commiting suicide? Would death be the best situation in which he could find himself? Are his objectives beneficial to himself?
The proper help in that case would be making him not want to kill himself anymore, not just stopping him from doing it. That's the concept of good and bad.
Originally posted by CP5670
I cannot see why you are having such a hard time understanding this.
Ask yourself, is letting the child eat dirt helpful for him/her? And answer by your real opinion, not trying to prove the point you're making so far, that'd be like cheating yourself.
Originally posted by CP5670
The simple conclusion to this is that individual objectives are meaningless on a social scale, and thus there is no reason to help out individuals.
No reason to help them attain their objectives, you mean. Plenty of reason to actually help them.
Originally posted by CP5670
It is not better for them for the reasons stated above, and I cannot see how it would be better for society either. If you simply kill all the criminals, you will not have to worry about them at all and you will also discourage further crime. Problem solved, no ethics needed.
You would indeed be solving the problem, but would it be the
best solution? If the criminals are no longer criminals, but regular working citizens, isn't it better than having a few more corpses in the cemetary, or ashes in the sea? Wouldn't they, by working, contribute to the society? Wouldn't that be a better example for the others?