Whitedragon wrote:Greta said, What you each say is true only because we humans have progressed via struggle and suffering. The motivations for immortal original beings who never had to struggle could be to grow and create, simply because they can. A "why not?" attitude. They would have positively based psyches rather than ours negativity bias-influenced minds.
In a sense this is what human progress has been all about - escaping the privations of the wild so we could improve our collective lot. Our success in that area is patchy but without our protective bubble of infrastructure we'd stagnate, being too busy with infant and maternal mortality, parasites, predators, the elements and so forth.
Felix, if "mortality is merely a form of temporal amnesia" then that's a flawed system too. Think of all those wasted life lessons. Nobody would want to start all over again as a clueless, helpless infant. Maybe masochists and lunatics :)
Is that not how we started out originally?
We humans, like everything else living in the wild, started out basically living in a dangerous hell. We have gradually tried to climb out of the pit. The system of reality is a mess, easily improved upon, as shown above. Reality takes a ridiculously long time to get anything done, resulting in this ruin of slowly developing changes. The constant change - construction and destruction - relentlessly inflicts suffering on living things, who are permitted brief islands of happiness to break up the vast oceans of struggle and pain before their final, often brutal, extinguishing.
There surely could be no high mind behind such a system - either no mind, a primitive mind or a sadistic one. The "God has a greater plan" explanation is absurd. How long are we supposed to wait for this dog's breakfast of a universe to get its act together? (Apocalypses don't count - that would just be another dog's breakfast). Are we to take succour from the possibility that in many billions of years perhaps ultra-advanced life forms somewhere may manage to fully conquer suffering?
It's a harsh, violent and viscous world that we live in, have always lived in, with the only compensation being that the world is at least not as unthinkingly brutal as it was in more primitive times. The universe started out mindlessly, like a humongous organism, and it is seemingly in the process of growing minds that may work out how to find sustainable ways of growing and progressing without leaving a trail of suffering and death in their wake. Not that that helps all the suffering species on this planet.
-- Updated 13 Dec 2016, 16:21 to add the following --
Felix wrote:Greta: The motivations for immortal original beings who never had to struggle could be to grow and create, simply because they can.
But if everything is perfect as it is, what is is there to grow into? (or out of).
No need to grow into anything. These beings wouldn't be perfect, just immortal, and with no need to kill, harm or exploit to thrive. They could simply freely create for enjoyment.
Felix wrote:Think of all those wasted life lessons. Nobody would want to start all over again as a clueless, helpless infant.
Well, the idea is that the primary life lessons are not really lost, there is an innate "soul memory" of them. A scientist might attribute all talents to genetics, but the gestation of them is still rather mysterious. And when you say that no one wants to "start over" as a helpless infant, you could have just said that no one wants to start out that way at all.
Science tells us that environmental stress and competition is what leads to human diversity and the lavish and marvelous diversity of all life on earth. If you remove it, you may just end up with a real yawner of a play that puts even the actors to sleep.
And God may not be omniscient, in fact I found a picture that supports that premise:
http://i.imgur.com/QbUW88T.jpg
Souls are speculative concepts, at least ones that retain form after brain death. Maybe, maybe not. Some information is retained - via DNA, cultural transmission, individual memories etc - but much is seemingly lost, recycled in the "cosmic compost heap". Seemingly wasteful. I have an idea that all information is stored at the Planck scale and the universe's information store is thus growing exponentially but that's as speculative as souls (and if souls exist, that would probably be the physical basis).
I wonder why must we only be stimulated by struggle and strain? We take it for granted that we are supposed to need a certain level of adversity to entertain us, but that's just a function of our animal nature, and my fictitious immortals would have no adrenal glands, no fight-or-flight reflex. Consider those who enjoy hunting. Many cannot imagine being content doing only civilised things. We can, though. It's just another step in that direction to see how joy can be had from a more civilised way of being still (much more civilised than we are), without needing threats for stimulation.
Another of my speculations, not miles from your Larson cartoon, is that God is a work in progress, being created by the universe, but not yet present. In that case I am essentially criticising the work of a toddler :)