Log In   or  Sign Up for Free
A one-of-a-kind oasis of intelligent, in-depth, productive, civil debate.
Topics are uncensored, meaning even extremely controversial viewpoints can be presented and argued for, but our Forum Rules strictly require all posters to stay on-topic and never engage in ad hominems or personal attacks.
anonymous66 wrote: ↑May 17th, 2019, 7:49 am now what?Depends on the God who or which is believed in, or converted into. A Deistic God demands little or no moral commitment. A God enthroned in an organized religion automatically mandates certain moral claims and perspectives. An internally experienced God of divine union mysticism may drive the experiencer to practice charity or conversely to retreat to a monastic life. Etc.
I know many people like to make arguments for God's existence. Let's say you convince someone. Is there anything else that follows? If so, what? And why?
snipped
anonymous66 wrote: ↑August 14th, 2019, 11:15 amA river changes and it will not have any new strategies or solutions. Gravity, the lay of the land will control what it does. Evolution produces solutions to various goals. It isn't teleological, but it does end up with new solutions - new ways to get food, get help in reproducing, moving, defending, avoiding...and so on. Rivers have no presented a new solution since their first few years of existence. And it's the same solution every time. Head downward or get pressed around by obstacles and its own water. And rivers do not engage in any proactive solutions. They react, period. If we look at minds, at least in part, as finding new solutions and problem solving, then evolution is doing this.Newme wrote: ↑June 13th, 2019, 7:58 amI don't find this to be compelling. There are all kinds of things that adapt to change- rivers for instance. I don't consider a river to be intelligent.
Evolution is intelligence. I think of Stephen Hawking’s definition of intelligence as “ability to adapt to change.”
Karpel Tunnel wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 6:54 amIsn't this begging the question, though? (you're assuming that evolution is mindless) Couldn't it be the case that evolution looks to be goal-directed because it is goal-directed?anonymous66 wrote: ↑August 14th, 2019, 11:15 amA river changes and it will not have any new strategies or solutions. Gravity, the lay of the land will control what it does. Evolution produces solutions to various goals. It isn't teleological, but it does end up with new solutions - new ways to get food, get help in reproducing, moving, defending, avoiding...and so on. Rivers have no presented a new solution since their first few years of existence. And it's the same solution every time. Head downward or get pressed around by obstacles and its own water. And rivers do not engage in any proactive solutions. They react, period. If we look at minds, at least in part, as finding new solutions and problem solving, then evolution is doing this.
I don't find this to be compelling. There are all kinds of things that adapt to change- rivers for instance. I don't consider a river to be intelligent.
steveb1 wrote: ↑August 14th, 2019, 6:17 pmI see myself as a free agent who is aware that there are many religions and many conceptions of God. I sometimes wonder... what makes one concept of God better than others?anonymous66 wrote: ↑May 17th, 2019, 7:49 am now what?Depends on the God who or which is believed in, or converted into. A Deistic God demands little or no moral commitment. A God enthroned in an organized religion automatically mandates certain moral claims and perspectives. An internally experienced God of divine union mysticism may drive the experiencer to practice charity or conversely to retreat to a monastic life. Etc.
I know many people like to make arguments for God's existence. Let's say you convince someone. Is there anything else that follows? If so, what? And why?
snipped
One basic component of Judaism and Christianity is "repentance" which does not mean self-punishment, but rather a return to "the Source", with "holiness" resulting from repentance. Repentance is based on a word, metanoia, which means to go beyond one's current mind or mindset. Inasmuch as repentance in this sense is part of religious conversion, then a new life centered in "Spirit" rather than in culture is part of the "anything else that follows" per the OP's question.
anonymous66 wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 8:58 am Isn't this begging the question, though? (you're assuming that evolution is mindless) Couldn't it be the case that evolution looks to be goal-directed because it is goal-directed?Sure. Though I was specifically saying that evolution had aspects of mind activity: problem solving and the creation of new things. I was arguing that rivers don't do what evolution does. Keeping my goal for the post rather humble and saying that it has aspects of mind. That it might have other aspect is another issue.
Karpel Tunnel wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 6:07 pm I was arguing that rivers don't do what evolution does.Fair enough. I agree.
anonymous66 wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 8:58 amNoKarpel Tunnel wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 6:54 am A river changes and it will not have any new strategies or solutions. Gravity, the lay of the land will control what it does. Evolution produces solutions to various goals. It isn't teleological, but it does end up with new solutions - new ways to get food, get help in reproducing, moving, defending, avoiding...and so on. Rivers have no presented a new solution since their first few years of existence. And it's the same solution every time. Head downward or get pressed around by obstacles and its own water. And rivers do not engage in any proactive solutions. They react, period. If we look at minds, at least in part, as finding new solutions and problem solving, then evolution is doing this.Isn't this begging the question, though? (you're assuming that evolution is mindless) Couldn't it be the case that evolution looks to be goal-directed because it is goal-directed?
Sculptor1 wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 6:59 pmA giraffe and a bacteria are not evolution. I am not saying I agree with him that evolution shows all the characterisitics of mind, though I think it does some. Making decisions is not one I see demonstrated, though if determinism holds, then minds don't make decisions, they simply process stuff like a pachinko game, but one that can come up with solutions. And evolution does come up with solutions.anonymous66 wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 8:58 amNo
Isn't this begging the question, though? (you're assuming that evolution is mindless) Couldn't it be the case that evolution looks to be goal-directed because it is goal-directed?
Because it does not even look goal oriented. It is results oriented, which is exactly backwards. Successful reproduction being the result of fitness to do well in your environment is rewarded with more progeny.
How can a bacteria identify a goal please?
How can a giraffe figure out it wants a longer neck then grow one?
Think about it!
anonymous66 wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 8:58 amIsn't this begging the question, though? (you're assuming that evolution is mindless) Couldn't it be the case that evolution looks to be goal-directed because it is goal-directed?I think that depends on at what level you consider evolution. I'd suggest that it only looks directed until you understand the way in which it occurs, then it looks pretty random. If I add mutagenic chemicals to a bacterial culture I can increase the natural rate of mutation. The mutations I get are many and very varied, but I have to search though a lot until I find the one I was trying to achieve, if I'm lucky. Combining sexually reproducing organisms with a goal in mind is just as unreliable as anyone who breeds animals will tell you, the numbers game favours variability not the maintenance of an aim.
Mark1955 wrote: ↑August 23rd, 2019, 2:25 amBut evolution is not mutation. Evolution includes natural selection for example. And here you end up with a problem solving process or the creation of solutions to getting dna around. Intentionality is just one property of minds. But then, if determinism is the case, intentionality in our minds is actually not goal direction but utterly caused.anonymous66 wrote: ↑August 22nd, 2019, 8:58 amIsn't this begging the question, though? (you're assuming that evolution is mindless) Couldn't it be the case that evolution looks to be goal-directed because it is goal-directed?I think that depends on at what level you consider evolution. I'd suggest that it only looks directed until you understand the way in which it occurs, then it looks pretty random. If I add mutagenic chemicals to a bacterial culture I can increase the natural rate of mutation. The mutations I get are many and very varied, but I have to search though a lot until I find the one I was trying to achieve, if I'm lucky. Combining sexually reproducing organisms with a goal in mind is just as unreliable as anyone who breeds animals will tell you, the numbers game favours variability not the maintenance of an aim.
anonymous66 wrote: Couldn't it be the case that evolution looks to be goal-directed because it is goal-directed?I think the word you want is progressive - upwardly mobile. There is an explanatory gap there: why should primitive organisms progress to something other than more robust primitive organisms? And why should they have a will to survive at all, isn't at least a germ of intelligence required for that to exist? People talk about the leap of faith required to believe in God, but it seems to me a leap of faith is also required to believe in Darwinian theory, the jigsaw puzzle is missing too many pieces.
Felix wrote: ↑August 23rd, 2019, 4:22 amFor post-enlightenment people evolution by natural selection seems more probable than the myth of god. It's not easy to get 'inside' the medieval mind and know from one's own experience what it felt like to know nothing of the modern scientific mind set, in its sceptical quest for evidence.anonymous66 wrote: Couldn't it be the case that evolution looks to be goal-directed because it is goal-directed?I think the word you want is progressive - upwardly mobile. There is an explanatory gap there: why should primitive organisms progress to something other than more robust primitive organisms? And why should they have a will to survive at all, isn't at least a germ of intelligence required for that to exist? People talk about the leap of faith required to believe in God, but it seems to me a leap of faith is also required to believe in Darwinian theory, the jigsaw puzzle is missing too many pieces.
Karpel Tunnel wrote: ↑August 23rd, 2019, 2:55 amBut evolution is not mutation. Evolution includes natural selection for example. And here you end up with a problem solving process or the creation of solutions to getting dna around. Intentionality is just one property of minds. But then, if determinism is the case, intentionality in our minds is actually not goal direction but utterly caused.Asexually reproducing organisms, which are about 99% of all organisms since this is how the bacteria work, can only produce a variation by mutation. Sexually reproducing organisms can also vary the genes in specific individuals by chromosome recombination during meiosis and by the act of recombination that is the fusing of sperm and ovum, but this does not actually vary those in the pool. These are the mechanics of how an individuals decendents genetics change. No evidence of any form of intentional action has been shown for these events.
Mark1955 wrote: ↑August 23rd, 2019, 1:39 pmPeachy, but then natural selection comes in. We have a complicated stochastic process that create solutions and produces diverse ecosystems. That's a lot like parts of minds. Evolution is not just mutation.Karpel Tunnel wrote: ↑August 23rd, 2019, 2:55 amBut evolution is not mutation. Evolution includes natural selection for example. And here you end up with a problem solving process or the creation of solutions to getting dna around. Intentionality is just one property of minds. But then, if determinism is the case, intentionality in our minds is actually not goal direction but utterly caused.Asexually reproducing organisms, which are about 99% of all organisms since this is how the bacteria work, can only produce a variation by mutation.
Sexually reproducing organisms can also vary the genes in specific individuals by chromosome recombination during meiosis and by the act of recombination that is the fusing of sperm and ovum, but this does not actually vary those in the pool. These are the mechanics of how an individuals decendents genetics change. No evidence of any form of intentional action has been shown for these events.I never claimed there was intention. In fact I think in my previous posts I specifically mentioned it wasn't there. It was other aspect of mind that I thought were present. Not my idea, got this from Gregory Bateson.
Natural selection is the process by which unsuccessful genes fail to reproduce, while the successful ones do. Evolution does not include natural selection it is the process of natural selection.And mutation. BEfore you or someone said it was mutation. I broadened it to include NS and now evolution is NS. It's a few things.
No evidence of intentionality unless you wish to impute the intention to cause trouble.And again, I did not argue there was intentionality, however, again, I will point out that determinism puts intentionality in our minds as a potential quale, since we are simply pushed forward by causes, chemical machines produce solutions to problems inevitably. Libet's experiments and so on. IOW intentionality may be an experience that is misleading. Internal and external causes lead to those 'decisions' and 'goals' that are made, inevitably in us.
How is God Involved in Evolution?
by Joe P. Provenzano, Ron D. Morgan, and Dan R. Provenzano
August 2024
Mark Victor Hansen, Relentless: Wisdom Behind the Incomparable Chicken Soup for the Soul
by Mitzi Perdue
February 2023
Rediscovering the Wisdom of Human Nature: How Civilization Destroys Happiness
by Chet Shupe
March 2023
This is very true and can be observed easily in in[…]
First of all, I believe that there are two realm[…]
You see nothing because you don't want to see […]