R
ribozyme
Guest
My question is rather simple: could exploiting humans lead to a greater good? I thought this idea was rather disgusting as it calls for a dereliction of “social justice” (however defined: John Stuart Mill and Catholics use of different definition of this concept). Why should I have hope that “injustice” will be solved?
Yes, I am a misanthrope and I have conveyed that here in several other threads. I do not like human nature and I find that humans are addicted to sex (they use advanced technology to feed this extremely primitive predilection). Why should I have hope in human progress if all we are hardwired to do is to reproduce and compete for mates? Gee… life really is pointless if the only goal is to preserve our genes.
Anyone want to give me some hope regarding humanity? Why should I even respect human life?
I found some interesting rant on the Immortality Institute forum.
imminst.org/forum/index.php?showtopic=18740
I do not advocate some positions that I used to anymore… for example; I will ask why do people value intelligence? Does intelligence have any value?
In other words, if everyone is intelligent, intelligence would have no value; intelligence is only valued because it provides an advantage against others. Therefore, it has no utility whatsoever. Another example is human height as being tall provides little advantage except for being tall and attractive to others (and in sports, a zero-sum game). This propensity for status allowed our progenitors to effectively compete for mates and further propagate their genes. Such an attitude was valuable in a competitive environment with limited resources.
I think efforts to improve humanity will ultimately fail because of human nature. I used to think eugenics (in the form of embryo selection and genetic engineering NOT selective breeding) would lead to a utopia. It is likely it would lead to a world with more hatred, conflict and strife.
Yes, I am a misanthrope and I have conveyed that here in several other threads. I do not like human nature and I find that humans are addicted to sex (they use advanced technology to feed this extremely primitive predilection). Why should I have hope in human progress if all we are hardwired to do is to reproduce and compete for mates? Gee… life really is pointless if the only goal is to preserve our genes.
Anyone want to give me some hope regarding humanity? Why should I even respect human life?
I found some interesting rant on the Immortality Institute forum.
imminst.org/forum/index.php?showtopic=18740
The problem with your ideals is that it is both a lot easier and much more agreeable with natural evolution to rely on elitism to improve the human gene pool as well as the standard of living for the most amount of people. For example, without feudalism and slavery the West would not have been able to industrialize, without the exploitation of the masses by the capitalists the industrialized nations would not have been able to develop the most basic machines which all our modern technology relies on, and without wars we would not have any of the cutting edge technology which have provided the greatest increases in both lifespan and in living conditions for the most amount of people.
I found it ironic that someone would say that on a “pro-life” (look at the name of that forum) message board.The hierarchical nature of evolution provides the ideal and most proven way of improving species to adapt to their environments. This also applies to human society which without the exploitation of the weak by the elite would not have advanced to the technological and social levels we are experiencing today. No one lives without the will to power and the will to reproduce which necessarily requires domination and elimination of competitors for mates and resources. I would argue that by attempting to defy nature through the widespread adoption of technologies that would benefit the masses, we are surrendering our species to forever imperfection.
I do not advocate some positions that I used to anymore… for example; I will ask why do people value intelligence? Does intelligence have any value?
Whether a general ‘improvement’ in height, strength, or intelligence
would be a benefit at all is even more questionable. To the individual such improvements will benefit his or her social status, but only as long as the same improvements are not so widespread in society that most people share them, thereby again leveling the playing field. . . . What would be the status of Eton, Oxford and Cambridge if all could go there? . . . In general there seems to be no connection between intelligence and happiness, or intelligence and preference satisfaction. . . . Greater intelligence could, of course, also be a benefit if it led to a better world through more prudent decisions and useful inventions. For this suggestion there is little empirical evidence…
nickbostrom.com/ethics/statusquo.pdfIn a recent article, another author opines: “Crucially, though, despite the fact that parents may want their children to be ‘intelligent’, where all parents want this any beneficial effect is nullified. On the one hand, intelligence could be raised to the same amount for all or, alternatively, intelligence could be raised by the same amount for all. In either case no one actually benefits over anyone else. . . . [The] aggregate effect, if all parents acted the same, would be that all their children would effectively be the same, in terms of outcome, as without selection.”16
In other words, if everyone is intelligent, intelligence would have no value; intelligence is only valued because it provides an advantage against others. Therefore, it has no utility whatsoever. Another example is human height as being tall provides little advantage except for being tall and attractive to others (and in sports, a zero-sum game). This propensity for status allowed our progenitors to effectively compete for mates and further propagate their genes. Such an attitude was valuable in a competitive environment with limited resources.
I think efforts to improve humanity will ultimately fail because of human nature. I used to think eugenics (in the form of embryo selection and genetic engineering NOT selective breeding) would lead to a utopia. It is likely it would lead to a world with more hatred, conflict and strife.