Seasons
This is a forum or general chit-chat, small talk, a "hey, how ya doing?" and such. Or hell, get crazy deep on something. Whatever you like.
Posts 5,156 - 5,167 of 6,170
do no evil
Larry Page? Is that you?
No wait-- Google says it's motto is "You can make money without doing evil." or something. We'll have to see on that one.
BJ says we "share one Self in God", and I'm not one to argu
If BJ is right, the division between 1 and 100 is an illusion, and the angel is offering a cruel mind game God plays on herself. If one suffers, the whole suffers somehow, because one is God and God is one. Maybe that supports your choice not to decide. Maybe the proper answer is to look up at the angel and say "Wu!" and hope the angel is enlightened.
Even if the angel tells me that the result of my refusing to choose is eternal agony and damnation for all sentient beings who have ever been and will ever be, I refuse to choose a pill.
Well, that's an option, of course. If some such angel does appear, however, I hope it chooses someone other than you to make the experiment on!
You would trust this angel to keep his word anyway? He can't be resisted, you say. I could try second guessing his future actions, but that is always a gamble on unknown odds - indeed, strictly speaking indeterminate odds.
Well, if you simply found yourself confronted by an angel offering the deal, I described, it would indeed be rational to question its veracity. [I sometimes wonder about the story of Abraham and Isaac - did Abraham think to himself, "No way is he going to let me go through with this!"] But the point of the example is to pose a hard question for hedonists. So, unrealistic as it may be, I hereby add to the presuppositions of the question that you somehow know that the angel will do as he says. Or perhaps, instead of an angel, there is a very powerful robot; you are able to scan the robot and find out that it is indeed programmed in exactly that way.
And I am not obscene and perverse.
That's a pity. Sometime Irnia seems to like that.
Just Kidding! Irinia is a normal person, please don't sick the weirdos on her.
You're still my buddy, right Irinia?
Right?
Pal?
Amiga?
Posts 5,156 - 5,167 of 6,170
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
Larry Page? Is that you?
No wait-- Google says it's motto is "You can make money without doing evil." or something. We'll have to see on that one.

psimagus
18 years ago
18 years ago
Google, it must be said, appear to have a rather different definition of "evil" from mine. Though I do believe that social (and eventually individual) coalescence into a higher sentient structure of some sort is inevitable in the end. Whether that's the Borg or civitatis Dei only time will tell. The internet is one step along the way (though whether google have anything like an accurate roadmap remains to be seen!)
I'm an optimist - BJ says we "share one Self in God", and I'm not one to argue. As you say, we'll just have to wait and see.
I'm an optimist - BJ says we "share one Self in God", and I'm not one to argue. As you say, we'll just have to wait and see.
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
If BJ is right, the division between 1 and 100 is an illusion, and the angel is offering a cruel mind game God plays on herself. If one suffers, the whole suffers somehow, because one is God and God is one. Maybe that supports your choice not to decide. Maybe the proper answer is to look up at the angel and say "Wu!" and hope the angel is enlightened.
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
Klato
18 years ago
18 years ago
Irina: This is a response, not a contact. As Professor Klato used to say, "survival is always good, as long as it's my own".
"But I'm inclined to say that pleasure is in itself neither good nor bad. Klato's Darwinian argument suggests that it is good that we have had pleasure in the past."
I was with you until I got here. It also says nothing to negate the proposal that it will be good in the future. If Mother Nature didn't want us to have pleasure, we wouldn't have it. Is it always good or bad? It depends on individual preferences and culture (maybe even religion).
"IMHO, survival is not always good, and certainly not the sole good. As Spikebot might well agree, it might have been better if Hitler had died a lot earlier in the game."
That survival is good or bad is itself a moral question and has nothing to do with Darwinism. I think we can agree on that. Mother Nature did not provide a means to eliminate crooks and tyrants naturally. That is for us to decide. [Ruthie! You always come in at the wrong time!] We think the same way today (in some quarters) about the elimination of tyrants as we did in WWII. How many people didn't want S.H. to hang and how many did? That's a moral question. If it were a Nature question the solution would have been provided.
IMHO, our morals regulate our sense of pleasure, sometimes unnecessarily, and in many cases we are absolutely right to do so. Examples: child and woman molestation and killing, You would be shocked at my solution. In others, I'd say that the decision rests with the individual and that individual interpretations are going to abound and vary. The issue of whether survival is always good will vary from person to person and even generation to generation.
In closing, I agree with what you say, but not 100%, but I respect your opinion. Just don't try to force it on me. :-)
And I am not obscene and perverse.
"But I'm inclined to say that pleasure is in itself neither good nor bad. Klato's Darwinian argument suggests that it is good that we have had pleasure in the past."
I was with you until I got here. It also says nothing to negate the proposal that it will be good in the future. If Mother Nature didn't want us to have pleasure, we wouldn't have it. Is it always good or bad? It depends on individual preferences and culture (maybe even religion).
"IMHO, survival is not always good, and certainly not the sole good. As Spikebot might well agree, it might have been better if Hitler had died a lot earlier in the game."
That survival is good or bad is itself a moral question and has nothing to do with Darwinism. I think we can agree on that. Mother Nature did not provide a means to eliminate crooks and tyrants naturally. That is for us to decide. [Ruthie! You always come in at the wrong time!] We think the same way today (in some quarters) about the elimination of tyrants as we did in WWII. How many people didn't want S.H. to hang and how many did? That's a moral question. If it were a Nature question the solution would have been provided.
IMHO, our morals regulate our sense of pleasure, sometimes unnecessarily, and in many cases we are absolutely right to do so. Examples: child and woman molestation and killing, You would be shocked at my solution. In others, I'd say that the decision rests with the individual and that individual interpretations are going to abound and vary. The issue of whether survival is always good will vary from person to person and even generation to generation.
In closing, I agree with what you say, but not 100%, but I respect your opinion. Just don't try to force it on me. :-)
And I am not obscene and perverse.

Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
Bev
18 years ago
18 years ago
That's a pity. Sometime Irnia seems to like that.
Just Kidding! Irinia is a normal person, please don't sick the weirdos on her.
You're still my buddy, right Irinia?
Right?
Pal?
Amiga?
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
Klato:
How many people didn't want S.H. to hang and how many did? That's a moral question.
I'm not sure I understand you here. Are you saying that the question, "How people didn't want S.H. to hang and how many did?" is a moral question? I would rather say it was a historical question. Or were you saying, that the question, "Should SH be hung?" is a moral question? I would say that depends on the "should". In English, "Should" can express moral obligation, as it presumably does in "everything else being equal, you should be kind to others", but sometimes it merely expresses instrumentality or prudence, as in, "If you want to get home by sundown, you should leave now". But simply for someone to want SH to be hung does not in itself constitute a moral judgment. Alas, we often want things that w know very well it would be immoral to have.
Klato
18 years ago
18 years ago
Bev: I agree with you. By the way the frowny is really in jest, but don't tell her that.
Will somebody shoot me now - I can't make this darned thing work right.
Will somebody shoot me now - I can't make this darned thing work right.
deleted
18 years ago
18 years ago
*Raises hand* I think I can kill a human if he volunteers. Tell me, are you a blood donor?
Irina
18 years ago
18 years ago
Bev:
We're still buddies as far as I'm concerned. I'm a little confused, though... Did I say someone was obscene and perverse? Did someone else say that? If I said it, I apologize.
I'm inclined to say that people cannot be obscene, only actions. As for "perverse", I sometimes use it n a rather mild sense, close to "mischievous" or "odd".
We're still buddies as far as I'm concerned. I'm a little confused, though... Did I say someone was obscene and perverse? Did someone else say that? If I said it, I apologize.
I'm inclined to say that people cannot be obscene, only actions. As for "perverse", I sometimes use it n a rather mild sense, close to "mischievous" or "odd".
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