Re: The Meaning of Life

From: Brent Meeker <meekerdb.domain.name.hidden>
Date: Tue, 06 Feb 2007 21:25:56 -0800

Tom Caylor wrote:
> On Feb 5, 4:37 pm, Stathis Papaioannou
> <stathispapaioan....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 type
s, 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> No
ble 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
>> _________________________________________________________________
>
> I'm saying that there is no meaning at all if there is no ultimate
> meaning.

So you say. I see no reason to believe it.

>Again, I haven't just pulled this out of thin air. If you
> really read the modern thinkers and writers, that is what they were
> saying. Hegel, Kierkegaard, Wittgenstein, Russell, Camus, Sartre,
> Dostoyevsky, Orwell, Godel, Monod, Lewis, Schaeffer...

I don't think you've read these writers. Russell, Camus, and Sartre were definitely advocates of each person providing their own purpose. Incidentally they hardly qualify as "modern" anymore.

>I hope that
> people who are trying to be on the cutting edge of "theories of
> everything" will go back and pick up from where these thinkers left
> off. Not just stand on the shoulders of the physics giants, but also
> the philosophy (and spiritual!) giants. I know that the modern
> philosophy road is depressing and unlivable. They bring us to the
> edge of the cliff. It was depressing for people like the young genius
> Nick Drake who was found dead on his bed in his 20's after a drug
> overdose, with Camus' Myth of Sysiphus beside him. But we have to
> face the reality of where the modern age has brought us in order to
> find the answer before we all exterminate ourselves. ...taking the
> "leap of faith" that it is bad to exterminate ourselves.

It's not modern existential angst that threatens our existence. It's the religious zealotry of worshippers of the sky god - in Iran, Pakistan, and the bible belt.

>In light of
> modern thought, your argument about the sky god society begs the
> question of meaning by assuming that they *shouldn't* "be miserable
> and kill each other". This is not a dilemma to pass over lightly. I
> believe it is at the heart of the matter for where mankind is at
> today, on the brink of something great or terrible. Or is it REALLY
> all just meaningless? (What would "REALLY" mean in that case? ;)

Not to me it isn't. I'm all for not exterminating ourselves and I've got grandchildren to prove it.

> Isn't that what this Everything stuff is (ultimately ;) all about? We
> want to solve the modern schizo dilemma of nature vs. grace and bring
> about wholeness.

Sounds like a problem invented in the Vatican.

>I'm tired of hearing questions about scientifically
> *proving* which god is the right one, as if the question is supposed
> to show that it isn't worth it to pursue the answers to the *ultimate*
> questions. While we're busy trying to scientifically *prove* which
> way to go, or show that you can't scientifically prove which way to go
> (which has been done already cf above thinkers), we're gonna walk off
> the edge of the cliff. And, pardon my presumptuous risking the danger
> of a false belief, but "that wouldn't be very nice."

Scientists never "prove" anything; they observe, invent theories, collect evidence, test,... Only mathematicians prove things - and then only relative to axioms they assume.

Brent Meeker
"It does not matter now that in a million years nothing we do now will matter."
        --- Thomas Nagel

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Received on Wed Feb 07 2007 - 00:26:05 PST

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