3017Metaphysician wrote: ↑June 7th, 2022, 8:48 amThe only weakness I see in evolutionary theory is that it starts with abiogenesis. I would have it start with the molecular clouds that form stars. That's when the organisation started that, in time, resulted in abiogenesis and subsequent life. The problem IMO is too much scientific siloing, although new fields like geobiology are emerging, which recognises the links between biology and geology, and the chemical changes that needed to occur to create conditions where abiogenesis can happen.Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 6th, 2022, 10:10 pmWith evolution, you have limitations to that theory (it's only a theory, and in the sense that it excludes the first species it only refers to an ensemble of creatures 'already' existing). And, if I remember correctly, even Darwin acquiesced to its limitations. Nevertheless, (you didn't respond to my query which in-turn may provide for more insight) I think you have a few concepts that we are working with here:3017Metaphysician wrote: ↑June 6th, 2022, 10:52 amMeta, how related are emotions and will? A brainless and ostensibly emotionless sea star possesses a powerful will - a relentless drive to do what it needs to do, and those caught in its grip will feel the force of that drive. The will - the drive to do things - evolved because organisms that worked fiercely and tirelessly out-competed their less-driven peers. It is a powerful, extremely common, aspect of evolution.Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 3rd, 2022, 4:40 pmSB!
Let's consider the origin of "will". This begins and ends with the drives to grow and survive. How did the survival instinct come about? Organisms that actively worked to survive would have out-competed more passive creatures, which would then resign themselves to a sessile or passive lifestyle of filtering. There was no need for emotions. The organism would sense stimuli and respond with reflex actions.
In time, both the sensing and the reflex responses evolved to become more complex, like a series of if/then statements: With brained animals, the complexity required was too great for reflex responses. Instead, there were vast groups of reflexes which could be triggered by a single sensation. So, if you see a tiger ahead, you don't have time to increase heart rate, dilate pupils, release bladder, stop digestion, release cortisol, and redirect blood to major organs, you only have time to go "Faaarck!", at which point your body's "orchestra" plays that Golden Oldie - The Symphony of Fear.
So emotions can be thought of as compound reflexes, somewhat equivalent to subroutines.
In your view (then), if there was a point in time where there was not a survival need for emotions, when did emotion(s) appear on the scene of conscious landscape? You may have touched on it, but am not sure... .
But perhaps more importantly, back to the existence of the (metaphysical) Will. To get certain definitions out of the way:
1. According to Schopenhauer, the will is the 'inner essence' of the entire world, i.e. the Kantian thing-in-itself (Ding an sich), and exists independently of the forms of the principle of sufficient reason that govern the world as representation. Schopenhauer believed that while we may be precluded from direct knowledge of the Kantian noumenon, we may gain knowledge about it to a certain extent (unlike Kant, for whom the noumenon was completely unknowable). This is because, according to Schopenhauer, the relationship between the world as representation and the world as it is 'in itself' can be understood by investigating the relationship between our bodies (material objects, i.e. representations, existing in space and time) and our will.
2. All phenomena embodies essential striving: electricity and gravity, for instance, are described as fundamental forces of the will. Human capacity for cognition, Schopenhauer asserts, is subordinate to the demands of the will. Moreover, everything that wills necessarily suffers. Schopenhauer presents a pessimistic picture on which unfulfilled desires are painful, and pleasure is merely the sensation experienced at the instant one such pain is removed. However, most desires are never fulfilled, and those that are fulfilled are instantly replaced by more unfulfilled ones.
SB, this seems to align with Voluntarism where the Will somehow takes primacy in cognition (our way of thinking and feeling about things like fulfillment of wants and needs, happiness and so on that needs to be satisfied first). It also speaks to modern day cognitive science (Maslow, James, and others) wherein one's stream of consciousness, one's needs are never satisfied (after one need is met, it is normal to-interminably-have another need waningt to be fulfilled). So we are always wanting/needing individuals. That is all part of the verb Being. Being dynamic, not static.
To parse, then, the Will itself, along with being self-aware of our own intellectual powers, makes us unique amongst the species. Unless of course, for one, you are thinking self-consciousness is an illusion. Taking that into account, I think one would then have the burden of explaining that which is beyond the self, in a purely objective way. That need to want to exist and be. Or, that thing-in-itself that exists a priori (innate/intrinsic to the species) that causes one to be.
As such, one way of looking at this problem is to consider three things:
1. Does the Will cause humans to be. (Subjectivity)
2. What caused the Will in the first place (Objectivity)
3. The Will, that thing-in-itself, is it metaphysical, physical, or both?
Humans experience their own drives, and then rationalise them post-hoc. This rationalisation seem comical when viewed existentially, but it serves the function of engendering trust that one is civilised, controlled - that one can is capable of overcoming their drives with their executive faculties, which philosophers call will (but I think is part of a greater subset, as above).
Will is the capacity to deny oneself a lesser reward now so as to enjoy a better reward later one. There have been many impulse control tests on children (the Marshmallow Test), and it seems that at around age for or five they are capable of controlling themselves. Other species have passed the control test - apes and monkeys, corvids and parrots, some dogs too, even cuttlefish!
Ultimately, the whole of reality is a game of Survival of the Persistent. All that we see are the winners of this game, who lasted long enough under entropy's constant assault to be observed. Exertion of will in life has been selected as a useful trait for growth and survival. Will is a quality of some physical beings. Rocks don't need will - their entire existence is a metaphor for will. Unyielding. Stars and planets too, by their huge scale, are metaphorical declarations to entropy that they are here to stay.
Small and fragile structures, if they are to persist, must work harder to persist than the large and robust.
1. Emergence
2. Self-awareness
3. Volition
4. Intellect
5. Evolution of the will and sentience
6. The world as Will (propagation of the species through DNA/genetically coded design and other physical/metaphysical phenomena)
We've briefly touched on 1-5 ( and I welcome more discussion as it relates to the contrasting limitations of evolution), but 6 , I think, is the most glaring discrepancy. Essentially, 6 is that which Stephen Hawkins so infamously enunciated to the world of physics: :
"Even if there is only one possible unified theory, it is just a set of rules and equations. What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe? The usual approach of science of constructing a mathematical model cannot answer the questions of why there should be a universe for the model to describe. Why does the universe go to all the bother of existing? "
First, my interpretation to that metaphorical fire as it were, is the thing-in-itself called the metaphysical Will. Agree/disagree?
The points to consider of course, are consciousness, cosmology and a bit of Kantian/Schopenhauer metaphysics... . But, we can certainly exhaust those things that may relate to inert matter and evolution and whether things like feelings have evolved... .
I think it's rather a jump to take Hawking's "fire in the equations" as being a metaphysical will. The equations did not exist in the pre-big bang universe, just waiting to be actualised. Matter and information being inextricably linked. If the matter is gone, then so is the information. Meanwhile, matter cannot avoid having a configuration.
Maybe your will is dark energy? Life's constant drive towards growth does rather echo dark energy's relentless expansion. We all tend to radiate outwards, physically and informationally.