Re: The Meaning of Life

From: John Mikes <jamikes.domain.name.hidden>
Date: Tue, 6 Feb 2007 09:17:57 -0500

Stathis:

is it not a misplaced effort to argue from one set of belief system ONLY
with a person
who carries two (or even more)? I had a brother-in-law, a devout catholic
and an excellent
 biochemist and when I asked him how can he adjust the two in one mind, he
answered:
"I never mix the two together". Tom is an excellent natural scientist and
has brilliant
arguments in it, as long as it comes to his 'other' belief system - what he,
quite
inderstandably - does not want to give up.
We all have 'second belief bases' in our multiple schizophrenia of
intelligence.
Some have 'Platonia', some 'primitive matter view' - it is your profession.
Do you really think you can penetrate one by arguments from another?

John M


On 2/5/07, Stathis Papaioannou <stathispapaioannou.domain.name.hidden > wrote:
>
>
> Tom Caylor writes:
>
> > On Jan 31, 10:33 am, Brent Meeker <meeke....domain.name.hidden> wrote:
> > > OK. But in that case your question is just half of the question, "Why
> do people have values?" If you have values then that mean some things will
> be good and some will be bad - a weed is just a flower in a place you don't
> want it. You must already know the obvious answer to this given by Darwin.
> And it doesn't even take a person; even amoebas have values. I suspect you
> have a set answer in mind and you're looking for the question to elicit it.
> > >
> > > Brent Meeker
> > >
> > Also Stathis wrote:
> > > Sure, logic and science are silent on the question of the value of
> weeds or anything else. You need a person to come along and say "let
> x=good", and then you can reason logically given this. Evolutionary theory
> etc. may predict what x a person may deem to be good or beautiful, but this
> is not binding on an individual in the way laws governing the chemistry of
> respiration, for example, are binding. Unlike some scientific types, I am
> quite comfortable with ethics being in this sense outside the scope of
> science. Unlike some religious types, I am quite comfortable without looking
> for an ultimate source of ethics in the form of a deity. Even if this
> conclusion made me very unhappy, that might be reason to try self-deception,
> but it has no bearing on the truth.
> > >
> > > Stathis Papaioannou
> > >
> >
> > Brent and Stathis exemplify two possible answers to meaning. Brent
> > reduces meaning to something based on mere existence or survival. Thus
> > amoebas can have such meaning.
> > Stathis says that meaning is an unanswered (unanswerable?) mystery.
> > We just somehow self-generate meaning.
> >
> > My introduction of the "Meaning Of Life" thread asked if the
> > Everything perspective could provide any answers to this question.
> > Looking at the contributions since then, it looks like the answer is
> > apparently not. This is what I expected. Thus, meaning is either
> > limited to trivial (non-normative) values or is without basis (the
> > Noble Lie). If you really read the modern philosophers seriously this
> > is their conclusion. Of course there is a third possible answer to
> > this question: Meaning is based on a source outside of ourselves, by
> > "making connections with others based on such ideals as honour and
> > obligation" (a quote I read from Dr. Laura Schlesinger off of a
> > Starbucks coffee cup this morning!) Of course people can poo-poo such
> > ideals as simply "sentiments", debunking them on a surface level
> > (which is the only level there is without them), just as C.S. Lewis
> > pointed out in his lectures on "The Abolition of Man". And indeed,
> > without such ideals, man will be discretized into a trivial skeleton
> > of his true self.
> >
> > Tom
>
> You seem to keep arguing that it wouldn't be very nice if there were no
> ultimate meaning. Is there any actual evidence that this alleged meaning
> exists? For example, suppose a society believes that the Sky God provides
> ultimate meaning and live their lives happily, whereas it could be shown
> that they would all be miserable and kill each other if they believed it
> were not true. On this basis there may be reason to think that belief in the
> Sky God is useful, but is there any reason to think that belief in the Sky
> God is true?
>
> Stathis Papaioannou
>
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> >
>

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Received on Tue Feb 06 2007 - 09:18:08 PST

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