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Mystic_Banana
Guest
But it still gives you no reason think it matters whether you get in the morning, does it? Personal feelings is are not logical impetus - at this level, they become little more than unthinking inclinations, don’t they?No, you’re not following. I’m not claiming that “consequence isn’t somethign that in reality is our concern.” Obviously we take consequences of actions into account. I’m saying that the consequences we take into account are the ones that pertain to the span of our lives, or – when we think “big picture” – the span of the human race.
The fact that the universe will one day be a cold and desolate place with no trace of life and absolutely no sign that we have ever been here has nothing to do with the fact that I, at the moment, prefer to live in a nice comfortable society and want to do everything I can to work for it.
Is probably a better example than any of the illogic of temporary concerns! The dent in your car wil have no negative result on you unless you want to sell it before it fails to be saleable as a vehicle. It’s value for sale will effect you financially when you sell it. The amount of money you have will serve to buy you new things, save cash, perhaps towards your pension… your pension will allow you money to live when you are not working, up until death. And when you die, the chain of events, indeed all chains of events, will not have effected you at all, or anybody else when they die, making all these efforts essentially fruitless for anybody at a point you know will occur in the future. Even casting this causal flow across teh big picture of humanity, or the big party, leaves zilch result in the end without some form of perpetuityPerhaps this example will help: my car has a value to me now, but will one day be scrap metal, and then one day there will be absolutely nothing left of it, not even a trace that it existed. But that has nothing to do with the fact that I don’t want it to get dented while I own it!
When I think about my car, I take into account consequences that pertain to the span of its existence as a car.
It would be utterly ridiculous to say, “Well, one day my car is going to be gone, so I won’t bother to prevent it from getting dents right now.” It is equally ridiculous to say that “Well, one day the universe as we know it will be gone, so I won’t bother to work for the pleasant society that I want right now.”
So, ignoring that, you are recognizing the flow of causality and consequence, basing your values around that, but ignoring the logical conclusion of all of that, which, within your conception of existence, renders all of your values valueless
The inclination to earn money, and inclination to work are 2 different things, as is the urge to have money. Everything you do is a matter of value, according to the way you percieve them, but doing something which does not bear benefit results in you valuing things wrongly… you can value something, but it does not neccesarily mean it actually has value to you. All which rather pressingly relates to the issue of whether or not there is life after death or not, the nature of existence on general etc.It is if you’re not a loony killer. Having zero inclination to do something is a pretty good reason not to do it.
Or do you regularly go around doing things that you’re not inclined to do? (Note that I’m using “inclined” broadly here. You might not love your job, but you’re “inclined” to earn a living in one way or another. You might not want to pay your taxes, but you’re “inclined” to contribute like a good citizen, for one reason or another. Everything you do is a product of your inclinations, including the fact that you don’t go around killing people like a loony killer. All of this is totally unrelated to the question of whether there’s life after death or whether there’s a “meaning” to life)
I’d say it would be rather radically different,.as would yours for you if you believed differently… or do you really think what we believe has no effect on how we act?It doesn’t matter. The point is that we want to live “fulfilled” lives (whatever we consider that to be) and that we want to prevent people we care about from dying if we can prevent it. Whether it “matters” in some abstract, cosmic way has absolutely no effect on my desire to not kill people and live a fulfilled life. And if your only reason for not killing people and for trying to live a fulfilled life is that you have some cosmic notion of “purpose,” then I think you have a really lousy reason for wanting to do those things.
Seriously, let’s say, for the sake of argument, that I prove to you that there is no objective meaning to the universe. What exactly would you do differently from that day on?
I submit that your life would be entirely the same, and if that’s not the case, then that’s very sad for you.
They’re the ones who didn’t try and get by what, for them, was simply an obstacle to getting what they want! The ones who didn’t are presumably (hopefully) locked away…So the laws are working, then. Good.
As to the specific people that you know, my only response is that you should probably try to hang out with better people. No wonder you have such a low opinion of people – the people you know sound like dummies.