Yeah that's stark Nihilism, basically life has no inherit meaning or value.
There's no value to life, but if we lived as if there was no value to life, we would create negative value. A bit of a contradiction isn't it?Or is this bad you speak of just not an inherent bad?
it's interesting to see how people respond to the "blank slate."
Some people say, "I can't believe life has no inherent meaning, because then I just really don't have a reason to exist." It's like they're looking at the blank slate, hoping to take something from it and finding nothing.
Others say, "The slate is empty? Wonderful! Let me paint it and create a picture!"
So there are those try to derive meaning from life, and those who create meaning in life.
Universal meaning might not exist, but it doesn't mean personal meaning doesn't. Looking beyond life to demand a universal meaning to justify for your own... is that something visionary, or is that an unwillingness to accept death and the temporal nature of our own existence? I think that's an interesting question.
I came here to say exactly this. I think history has proven that life has no inherent value -- for example, the Holocaust caused no disturbance in the Force, resulted in no righteous wrath from Above. Millions of people were murdered, and the world didn't even know until the Allies won. Then most of us looked with horror at the camps, and we Americans thought "...And we put Hitler on the cover of Time magazine!"
Which is exactly the kind of event that demonstrates why the 'Life is Precious' sentiment/philosophy is so important, even if it is demonstrated nonsense.
I don't see how it's a contradiction. The way I see it, is it would result in people stop caring. Living conditions would slowly decrease and people would slowly cease to experience joy. I think that can be universally regarded as a bad thing.
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It's a contradiction because for life to have no inherent value, good and bad could not be applied to life (or aspects of life such as living conditions and joy) because they are terms denoting value.
edit: (however I see that you've said "Since the end game to me is essentially deletion, there isn't much value. I mean, there is, but it's produced, not inherient". That's what I meant in saying " is this bad you speak of just not an inherent bad?". So, problem solved I think)
whether an idea is true or not, the fact that it has been thought means that it exists as an idea even before the first time it was thought of since ideas exist even if no one has them.
We knows this because our experience indicates, as well as objective evidence, that ideas do not come singularly but in clusters since all scientific advances have been forwarded by multiple people contemporaneously. There is not a single idea that one man ever had that at least one or two other contemporaries have also had...and since this is true, and a fact...it must be that ideas are not bound by space and time as we are.
Finally, we also know this to be true if we broaden our definition of existence to include all those things outside of time space, and if this is the case then in that super-space all ideas would be present on the tail of time, so to speak, for lack of better word...
In other words, plato was half right, and half wrong, not totally wrong....based on the objective facts of our history....
I'm all for it, but don't tell Charlton Heston about it. He's gonna freak.Also when anyone is any sort of problem, we could just kill them and recycle their body parts for things that we normally use other animals for.
Human gelatin, anyone? Glue? Fertilizer?
How about a baby leather hat?
Ideas are actions living things have, therfore they never existed before we did. while the actual "thing" existed, it was not an idea, but reality. Reality is not an idea, it is what is, and idea is what may or could be. Reality is what makes it real, not the idea itself.
no one knows if life has inherent meaning or not. That is essentially unknowable.
Still not true.Ideas are objects in themselves which exist whether we do or do not....
Still not true.
False
My counter-argument:
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she's hiding her clam yet standing on a giant clam...lol.
When two people look at the same picture, it is not unusual for them to form similar perceptions.yes they do....two people can have the same idea, in fact they always do, separated by time and space...they exist outside of us.
All of einsteins theories for example can be traced to other scientists who would have come to the same conclusion albeit it a few days to years later...same with tesla, same with newton, same with all recorded breakthroughs...there is always other people separated by vast space and time, isolated from each other, coming to the same idea, just describing it using different thoughts.
When two people look at the same picture, it is not unusual for them to form similar perceptions.
The reason I said 'still' is that you claimed this nonsense before without any sensible argument to back it up. Platonism is folly. It always has been.
Ideas are not thoughts...hence not actions. Ideas are objects in themselves which exist whether we do or do not....
Thoughts can shape an idea's implementation or discovery....but hence we say, "We invented or we discovered an idea or technology" we don't say...we say we thought of an idea...we don't say...I ideas...we say I had an idea...an idea is an object outside of ourselves and we unconsciously know this if not conscious of it.
Why posit a kind of entity of whose existence you have no indication whatsoever since all it is supposed to explain can be explained much better in other ways? You face the same problems Platonism has always faced: How can you possibily know abstract entities exist? How do they exist? How do our minds connect or discover them? Is there any way to prove them? What do they explain which could not be explained without them? How do they differ from subjective ideas and thoughts?ahhh...i see...you think that abstract forms do not exist and that our experience creates form instead of a pre-existing form which emerges through us...
in truth it matters in the sense that it's interesting but the results are the same whether one believes in existentialism or in some archtypal pre-form form...either way....the earth will be consumned and we will take pahllus shaped space shuttles to mars if Ellon doesn't stop us.
Why posit a kind of entity of whose existence you have no indication whatsoever since all it is supposed to explain can be explained much better in other ways? You face the same problems Platonism has always faced: How can you possibily know abstract entities exist? How do they exist? How do our minds connect or discover them? Is there any way to prove them? What do they explain which could not be explained without them? How do they differ from subjective ideas and thoughts?
There is wisdom to Occam's razor.