SoCal, Nice article, looks familiar
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You Yahooka?
You Yahooka?
jbark said:insofar as "we" being god, I dunno. Familiar with the theory. Like it. Not convinced it's truthful. But hell, best way out of a buncha conundrums i can think of. So if you agree to be god, ill agree to be god too. if we can convince another 5 odd billion, we'll have a revolution on our hands!:d
However, thinking we are all god is kinda akin to saying "it's all goooood!" (an expression I loathe btw!). Meaning of course it let's us off the hook for all kinds of devious and irresponsible things.
jbark said:Agreed saidin; however, every new major accomplishment is orders of magnitude above what had come before, and intellectually and ethically incomprehensible (or at least ungraspable) by the vast numbers who live concurrently. Maybe i should have cited copernicus, galileo, christopher columbus or einstein to make my point, but I thought the subtleties of more mundane accomplishments might drive the point deeper.
so: the earth is NOT flat; the celestial bodies circumnavigate the sun in space, not heaven; the invention of bronze; alchemy then chemistry; and more recently, relativity, the heisenberg uncertainty principle, coherent superposition and nonlocality; and cloning and genetic modification, of course.
Saidin, I would forgive anyone underestimating me based on a few words typed in haste on an internet forum. i DO indeed understand. Its really not that sophisticated (or novel) a concept (albeit profound). But I did state that "I can't elaborate without writing a book, but hopefully you'll catch my meaning. In line with the system of beliefs i mentioned above that i didn't want to get into for fear of sparking a(nother) non sequitur sidebar debate."
Not a cop out. just a space saver. and a confrontation avoidance technique:wink: .
Incidentally, love your posts mr Satan... ooops. i mean saidin.![]()
But I really do. They are well thought out, introspective and while very different from my own, well argued and respectful. Thanks for that.
fractal enchantment said:I dont agree with that at all. It is not playing god. That sounds utterly rediculous when you think about it.
Would haves make no sense here..thats nonsense..it does exist because it happened, period. What you are saying is that essentailly we are above nature now, and that somehow we have the ability to alter the course of the universe.
Those discoveries are of things that already existed, and as such are irrelevant to the discussion. Before the other day, this organism didn't exist. It was created though intelligence. How is this in any way comparable to discovering something that has always existed but we were unaware of?
I have thought about it and it does not sound ridicules to me and I bet the majority of the world. To you, obviously it does sound ridicules which you have every right to believe but you are implying WE should feel that way as well.fractal enchantment said:I dont agree with that at all. It is not playing god. That sounds utterly rediculous when you think about it.
fractal enchantment said:We are not beyond nature and we cant controll nature any more than a blade of grass can.
fractal enchantment said:Sure, this canbe used to do "good" and "bad" things..but that doesnt change the fact that it exists, and naturally at that..just another reality of the natural progression of the cosmos.
jbark said:And any unknown quantity, by definition, can be good or bad, depending on OUR interpretation. No technologies are inherently good or evil, despite what some would argue. Its what we do with them that counts and renders them positive or negative.
An optimist will embrace change; a pessimist will foretell ill of change. Both POVs are slightly naive.
I fall somewhere between these poles. I have faith in humanity (yes, still), but i recognize that there is a huge responsibility that accompanies change.
So given that caveat, i will champion change, i will celebrate newness, diversity, progress and embrace the subconscious but ever powerful natural process of inexorable adaptation and evolution, of which technology is undeniably a part.
Under your idea of natural a high rise building is natural because it is man made which seems to be the opposite of the definition of the word.. What is your definition of natural?
jbark said:Ya got me! oh, but wait... (drum roll)
Cloning, genetic modification, bronze, all that chemistry has provided...
jbark said:why is a beaverdam natural but not the hoover dam?
dictionary.reference.com
Saidin said:jbark said:And any unknown quantity, by definition, can be good or bad, depending on OUR interpretation. No technologies are inherently good or evil, despite what some would argue. Its what we do with them that counts and renders them positive or negative.
An optimist will embrace change; a pessimist will foretell ill of change. Both POVs are slightly naive.
I fall somewhere between these poles. I have faith in humanity (yes, still), but i recognize that there is a huge responsibility that accompanies change.
So given that caveat, i will champion change, i will celebrate newness, diversity, progress and embrace the subconscious but ever powerful natural process of inexorable adaptation and evolution, of which technology is undeniably a part.
I agree with all this. Change is the nature of things, we can accept it, or we can fight against it. Technology is not inherently good or evil, it is what is done with it.
My current faith in humanity is not as stalwart as yours. I think this is too much power for our current level or moral and ethical awareness, as science in an of itself is neither moral nor ethical, and there are far too many that would use technology of this sort for thier own gain. I mean look at this planet and the life that is already here before this creation of new life. We have been terrible stewards of the only home we have. We can't respect the life that is already here, let alone worrying about what new sorts of things we'll unleash on an interdependent and interconnected biosphere.
Saidin said:Bronze...are we really going to relate non living chemical processes to creating living organisms? I mean sure, on a basic level they are similar, but might as well say lighting a match is the same as nuclear fusion.
jbark said:ThirdEyeVision wrote:
Under your idea of natural a high rise building is natural because it is man made which seems to be the opposite of the definition of the word.. What is your definition of natural?
a high rise IS natural. Insofar as we are natural and can only use what is natural to create natural things - notwithstanding the wikepedia definition, which i could have written had i been first to arrive.
Please don't take us out of the equation.
I have to thank entropymancer for this, but, paraphrasing:
why is a beaverdam natural but not the hoover dam?
JBArk the unnaturalist
ThirdEyeVision said:jbark said:ThirdEyeVision wrote:
Under your idea of natural a high rise building is natural because it is man made which seems to be the opposite of the definition of the word.. What is your definition of natural?
a high rise IS natural. Insofar as we are natural and can only use what is natural to create natural things - notwithstanding the wikepedia definition, which i could have written had i been first to arrive.
Please don't take us out of the equation.
I have to thank entropymancer for this, but, paraphrasing:
why is a beaverdam natural but not the hoover dam?
JBArk the unnaturalist
Your definition of natural is just different than the norm then. So a car, atom bomb or a jet is natural under your definition. I understand what you are saying as far as they're made of materials of this earth but that is not the typical definition of the word natural.
I like the analogy of the beaver dam.
fractal enchantment said:The reality is that if this all somehow was going against nature, than nature wouldnt have created us, would it? What we do is based on our NATURE, that which is innate to humans..just like a wolf runs of natural instincts, so do we..nature created us, therefore what we do IS NATURES doing, reguardles of what a dictionary says.
Honestly, why is that so hard to understand?
I get the feeling that some people dont want to accept that truth, while at the same time accepting that that means that nature decides to create some things like synthetic cells and atomic bombs, and even Adolf Hitlers, things that have may have the *potential* to do harm.
Thats reality. I dont get the point in trying to argue that. Nature isnt all unicorns and rainbows, sometimes its about opportunity, at the expense of taking risks. Thats just the way it seems to be.
jbark said:We are monkeys. we make monkey-things. sometimes monkey-things destroy tree-things and elephant-things and cell-things. Sometimes monkey-things help whale-things and ocean-things and forest-things and cell-things. Sometimes not.
But they ain't nothin but monkeys makin things that monkeys make.
And now the monkey made a cell thing! hoorah!