Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pmSo when you say "meaningful relationships", what you are talking about is conscious relationships? Are you saying that a relationship that does not involve life has no meaning? If it has no meaning are you saying that it is not causal? Is this some form of solipsism or idealism?
When one views the world, one essentially looks into infinity until one meets an object. Pattern recognition introduces a "begin" by which the world becomes finite and definable. Meaning that is derived thereof is relative only to the individual self.
When one views another 'self' a special situation arises by which one's view into infinity meets another view into infinity. Pattern recognition cannot find a begin or end and
meaning therefor is applicable to a "shared future".
The 'self' can exploit the other as an object, an example being a chicken farm with barbaric circumstances. However, at question is (for me), would morality be applicable by which the potential "good" that is possible, may be enhanced?
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pmWhat are you talking about here? That plants talk???
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pmAll life signals other life; there is no reason to call this "talking".
The concept "talk" may be invalid by definition.
Communicating meaningfully may be more appropriate. Yes, I believe that plants are capable of that. But at question will be: what could a plant possibly intend to communicate in relation to a human? Perhaps it is very little in the 'fast time space' that is most relevant to the human (i.e. the human wants to eat every day). It is likely that potential communication is far from the scope of what humans consider sensible from their individual perspective. By sharing its actuality with another being and thereby becoming part of it, the relation itself provides sensibility for the human. The fullest sense of a plant complements the fullest sense of the human/animal.
As presumably being a "slow animal", a response by the plant may span many years to thousands of years.
What is required for a plant to prosper, not just in and of themselves, but in a shared future with a human? It may be vital that the human develops morality by which the plant can be given that which it needs.
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pmarjand wrote: ↑April 22nd, 2020, 6:00 pmThe concept "idea" as it is perceived by humans is not likely to be transferred by plants out of themselves, however, when a plant touches the reality of a human and becomes part of its actuality perhaps something is possible by which ideas that are formed by the human are sensible in relation to its interaction with a plant.
Exactly what does the underlined above mean?
What would happen when a plant would communicate that it observes the human 'self', is that the human can consider its 'self' observed by which the plant has become an extension of what is considered a manifestation of intelligence by the human 'self'. The plant achieves a state of fulfillment of the human potential to be observed as what it is. It can result in a moment of awe.
On plant scales some aspects may span thousands of years. But it may be considered apparent that a symbiosis has started at some point in time, and that it would imply the requirement of awareness of the animal by the plant.
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pm
Plants dream? Is there evidence of this because it is news to me; I didn't even know they had an unconscious mind (which would be the minimum required for dreaming). There are other things that could try to explain the Gaia philosophy.
Plants may become part of what is experienced as a dream by the animal. The plant itself likely has a different experience but that doesn't mean that what is experienced as a dream by the animal in relation to the plant is not sensible for the plant.
The plants would not need to dream like an animal. The plant would merely complement it as being and provide sensibility and potential for fulfilment.
With 'dream' I intend to denote imagination for a better future (a dream to be fulfilled) or to derive purpose.
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pmNo that does not make the presence of a "self" evident. Baby dolls, radios, and robots "talk", does that mean that they have a "self"? I can't imagine how you decided that talking and self were related.
If you want to prove that plants have a "self", it is easy. All life has survival instincts, aka self preservation, so all life has a self that it is trying to preserve, to make survive. After that it starts to get complex, because there are more selfs and there are larger and smaller selfs, like the self of your family, your race, your nation, your specie, your planet, and maybe your Universe. Then it gets more complicated even if you don't address issues like reincarnation: I think Dennett decided that self did not really exist. (chuckle) But you can look up "self" in Wiki to get an idea of the problems involved with this idea.
If we are going to get technical, all of the cells in your body 'talk' to other cells and other systems in your body, and all life is intelligent. So according to your ideas here, there is a good possibility that it would be immoral to pick a scab, cut off a toe nail, cut your hair, or scratch your backside, as you may be damaging cells.
The consideration of morality for plants does not entail that it is immoral to for example cut a plant. The questions that arise out of moral consideration could be of a different nature. For example, it could entail how or when to cut a plant or how to shape human culture for optimal treatment of/interaction with a plant.
When one intends to achieve the ultimate condition for human and plant life to prosper, morality may be essential.
Chickens can easily remain in a healthy/liveable condition in chicken farms under extreme harsh conditions, while growing up with their feet in a layer of feces by which their feet rot. However, after a few hundred years, will the chicken as a specie have evolved in the most optimal way, by which in turn, it can complement the human in the best way?
With cows it can be seen that the specie is driven to extinction.
The way we breed cows is setting them up for extinction
https://qz.com/1649587/the-way-we-breed ... xtinction/
For plants similar questions may be applicable. Morality may be important for plants - and nature as a bigger whole - to prosper when human science evolves further, for example considering the developments in synthetic biology and GMO.
Exponential growth introduces unique and serious risks by which morality may be vital to prevent potential fatal flaws in human evolution.
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pm
Well you can beg all you want, but there is a reason why spirituality and morality are both studied by religion, and that reason is that religion studies emotion, and both of those ideas are based in emotion. All morality is, is laws and rules that are guided by emotion; conceptualizing that emotion is what makes them good or bad (evil). Spirituality is also conceptualized emotion.
Beg to differ is an expression that one considers to have a reason to doubt an argument while maintaining that it is merely an opinion.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/diction ... o%20differ
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pm
I agree that emotion is real, whereas I am not sure how real thought actually is, but you are missing a step. Consider that when you have surgery, you feel no emotion. This is because knowledge of the "biochemical processes" are cut off from the brain and from your knowing, so you have no emotional response -- like a vegetable.
The actual 'biochemical process' produces an attraction/repulsion or want that works much like magnets in many ways. Knowledge of that want or repulsion is what we interpret as emotion. But this also works top down and bottom up, because knowledge of emotional ideas can also cause biochemical processes -- like a blush. But without thought, knowledge, there is no actual emotion. This requires conceptualization, knowledge, a brain of some kind.
In my opinion, emotion as you describe it, is merely a functional end of something that has preceded it. It could be argued that the actual truth aspect of the emotion is thereby not to be found in the process that you described, despite what it entails as manifestation for the human as individual, but in that which has preceded the emotion. From that perspective, plants may have a different method to manifest that same aspect of which it may not be possible to state that it is of a lesser intrinsic value than what has preceded human emotions.
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pm
arjand wrote: ↑April 22nd, 2020, 6:00 pm
A plant may have formed a different system by which that which precedes the senses is valued in relation to its 'self'.
May have? You are stretching here.
There are scientific clues and some of the studies with new discoveries are from 2019. For example, the presence of neurotransmitters combined with the fact that it has been discovered recently makes one wonder what more will be discoverable and by definition it makes the following question relevant:
why did plants develop the same neurotransmitters that are used in animal brains?
Neurotransmitters, neuroregulators and neurotoxins in the life of plants
https://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pd ... 41/P06-034
How is it possible that a plant would develop neurotransmitters that in animals are essential for the functioning of the complex brains of animals?
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pm
arjand wrote: ↑April 22nd, 2020, 6:00 pm
If a plant does not have a 'self', how could it develop a symbiosis with animals?
I don't see where a plant's 'self' would have anything to do with it. On the other hand, a larger 'self', like an ecosystem or Gaia, might have something to do with it.
There appears to be no argument to consider that a 'self' arises out of nothing. A larger 'self' could merely be the result of an accumulation of 'self' when considering that the parts of the whole are individuals. The parts must hold the quality in and of themselves for it to be possible to arise in a bigger whole.
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pm
arjand wrote: ↑April 22nd, 2020, 6:00 pm
For symbiosis to be possible, the plant must be aware of the interests of others (animals) before it can develop in a way that serves that other. (In most cases) it is not the other that is creating something in the plant. The plant is giving it.
I don't see where it has to be aware of the interests of others. Give me an example.
Soul Mates: Nutcrackers, Whitebark Pine, and a Bond That Holds an Ecosystem Together
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/news/soul ... -together/
It may be evidence that the tree has been aware of the animal. The tree has made itself dependent on the animal and will go extinct if the animal goes extinct.
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pm
arjand wrote: ↑April 22nd, 2020, 6:00 pm
Why are flowers beautiful for animals/humans? Is it plausible to assume that the beauty of flowers is an accident?
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Flowers are beautiful; weeds are ugly -- to some, but not to others.
I do not agree with that argument, although you may be correct that the beauty of flowers does not imply that the plant must have been aware of an animal observer. I consider the question whether it could be so worthy of consideration.
Gee wrote: ↑April 23rd, 2020, 8:16 pm
arjand wrote: ↑April 22nd, 2020, 6:00 pmConsidering the recent scientific discoveries that plants may have something similar to neurons, there is a basis to consider that plants may in fact be capable of intelligence and thus it would be relevant to question whether plants deserve moral consideration.
I think that all life has some intelligence, which is why it evolves, but is intelligence alone a cause for morality? If so, can I be sued or maybe jailed for throwing my smart phone on the ground?
Gee
It is argued that plants are essentially "slow animals" that can see, hear and smell – and respond, i.e., that have a 'self' that can have a meaningful relation/interaction with an animal. If such is to be considered valid, then morality may be important.
Plants can see, hear and smell – and respond
http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20170109 ... nd-respond