Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 8th, 2024, 12:18 amThere is no such thing as large or small, but only through comparison. We seem to be missing each other. Do you not think you adapt to the larger self of the earth and the cosmos? Evolutionary development in the absence of relativity/reactions to our ever-changing earth would make adaptation impossible.popeye1945 wrote: ↑February 7th, 2024, 8:50 pmI don't see that at all. Consider the relativity between the Sun and the Earth, or the Earth and humans. Scale matters - and a great deal.Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 7th, 2024, 6:57 pmRelativity underlines our reactive nature and the reality of being part of something larger than ourselves.popeye1945 wrote: ↑February 7th, 2024, 8:57 amArrr, Mr Spock, the warp drive is down and I cannae say if I can fix it before the whole thing blows!
Where no man has ventured warp drive Mr. Scot!!
I don't think a lack of absolutes renders reality meaningless. Rather, it's the relativity between things that brings meaning.
popeye1945 wrote: ↑February 7th, 2024, 8:50 pmReaction is relativity, the meaning of which is the subject's property alone, and never the object's property. The physical world or apparent reality is a biological readout, it is not the knowing of ultimate reality, it is but the emergent property of its effects/or alterations to our biological natures at rest.SY BORG// It's just epistemic uncertainty. We don't have to know everything, which is just as well because there's too much to know to learn in a lifetime.[/quote] // SY BORG
Sorry, I do not make much sense of the above. What is the intent? Do you believe we should not inquire about certain things?
popeye1945 wrote: ↑February 7th, 2024, 8:50 pmWe are the instruments of the universe, and the melody it plays upon us is meaning in the form of an apparent reality, our everyday reality. It is a weird situation that makes the organism the source of all meanings. Biology is the measure and the meaning of all things. Another way of saying what you just said is, the relation between subject and object brings about meaning for the subject, at which time the subject then bestows that meaning onto a meaningless world, forgetting in the moment its projections.SY BORG// I don't even see us as instruments of the universe. Most of the stuff of the universe consists of plasma and dark matter, and we don't think these are sentient. There a small percentage of rare, precious rock, but almost all of it is abiotic. So we are exudations of the Earth, driven by a combination of the Sun's current energy and its stored energy in the planet's core, a remnant of the early solar system. [/quote] //SY BORG
It is true, as far as we know only life forms are sentient beings, but for us, the physical world/ or energy is the fuel of the mind. Something like the subject's need of object for there to be anything whatsoever. Do you believe in evolution? If so, you should be able to realize just how all organisms are reactive creatures. The organism's reactions then become the causes of changes/alterations to the physical world, the mere presence of life on earth is the cause for the changing conditions that in turn again affect our biological natures.
SY BORG // That subjects mainly find meaning in that which involves subjects in no surprise. Is biology the measure and meaning of all things, or just the first step in the wakening of matter? I don't see humans as an end product but the first model of a new series, so to speak, like Windows 1.0. [/quote] // SY BORG
Subjects find meanings through the experience of objects, objects altering the resting state of an organism's biology, this is both experience and subjective meaning. If you wish to consider the consciousness of organisms the first step in the awakening of matter, I don't think anyone would argue with that statement. Biology is the measure and the meaning of all things, as all meanings, all knowledge is subjective knowledge, there just is no other source of meanings other than a conscious organism.