Maybe there is no purpose and the only thing that wants there to be a purpose, is the human mind? Maybe (most likely) purpose in itself is just a product of human mind?
we perceive that it lacks purpose, and perception is reality
or you perceive that it does, and it's the same thing
life is what you make it
Why You Will Always Exist: Time Is 'On Demand'
Robert Lanza, M.D.
Scientist; Theoretician; Author, 'Biocentrism'
Posted: February 10, 2011 08:48 AM
link
afterglow just admit u got raped
imo
As we have seen, lack of empirical evidence is no reason not to believe something to be true.
One might think that the statement
'Murder is wrong', is true but there is no empirical evidence to prove this.
Hence, 'lacking empirical evidence is not a sufficient reason to believe something is untrue'
Therefore I cannot see the rationale that human life lacks purpose, simply because you lack empirical evidence for it.
I agree -- and also, there's no inherent human purposelessness.There is no inherent human purpose. Purpose is a man made concept. If we decide that there is a purpose for us, than there is. If we decide there isn't a purpose, than there is not.
The rest of the universe doesn't use the concept purpose, only us. Our purpose is what we see of it. That is why it is fair to say there is no inherent human purpose.
Moreover, the act of measuring it (and/or thinking about it) is timeless.Not exactly sure what you are saying, but I think I catch the drift. I would say that time is a man made thing for instance. There obviously is some sort of motion and transition but the act of measuring is all our own thing. It doesn't actually happen out there.
There is no empirical evidence that murder is wrong because it is not always wrong.
You can choose to believe whatever you want based on nothing.
How do you justify that belief?
@ Afterglow
Interesting, from what moral framework did you work through to arrive at this statement of fact?
Again your justification is a bit wobbly.
Not so sure about that, It seems to me all beliefs are rooted in something, however bizarre that something may be, but my personal beliefs are based on a lifetime of both experience, axiomatic and apriori truths, and careful study thereof. I trust this exchange has broadened your understanding of epistemology, and highlighted the folly in adhering to Scientism. I hope I have highlighted other categories of thought that explicate why empirical knowledge is not the sole category of epistemological enquiry.
SAPERE AUDE !
My own. I thought I explained it clearly. Men makes laws. Men are fallible and laws change over time. The illegal taking of a human life is not morally wrong simply because it is against the law. In the US, we take human life to punish criminals. In other countries, that it illegal. Is it ok in the US simply because it is legal?
There is no empirical evidence that 'x' is wrong because 'x' is not always wrong
So the lack of empirical evidence for 'x' being false is because 'x' has an variable truth value.
I don't see that statements with variable truth values necessarily lack empirical evidence. Therefore your justification as why there is no empirical evidence for moral claims is not only weak, but perfectly illustrates my point.
because "purpose" is fundamentally a value judgment and there is no inherent value in any one thing. you can assert the "general tendency" via empirical routes to display to me what most peoples' "purposes" are and create a sort of umbrella generalization for the "purpose of humanity" - but at the core "inherent purpose" is a sort of contradiction as purpose is not inherent in anything, it is created by the experiencer.
You can tell me that empirical evidence suggests that the purpose of humanity is to further consciousness (via many routes, reproductive fecundity, etc) - and i can tell you that's not a purpose, that's a tendency of the species. The human species tends to further consciousness. What makes that it's purpose, though? For the most, it's a hollow term for me in the context of philosophy and in the same realm as most ethics, because they cannot be constituted on any sort of logical solidity. think the is/ought gap; this really applies to ALL value judgments in an altered sort of way.
That's not exactly my position. For me to believe in something, I want solid proof to justify the belief. Until I have solid proof, I can only entertain the possibility. But even then, I need more than just a hunch.
Yes, I've enjoyed the exchange of opinions! But you have not changed my mind.![]()