we make it better for us, and the people we care about. that' a lot more meaningful than making it better for "god" or the universe, IMO.On the flip side of the coin, why bother to make things better if the world doesn't matter?
The people for whom you make it better. Just because that may not be 'everybody" does not make it worthless.Who cares what difference you make?
No, they are alive. Cell based automatons are alive, if they are functioning.Their appearance of being alive is an illusion--their brains are cell-based automatons, no more alive or of value than a rock tumbling down a hill.
No, it's real. it's subjective, but still real.But value isn't real.
Right.The ultimate, objective conclusion on the physicality of the universe would be that morals, emotions, and social norms are illusions of the brain, evolved out of necessity for survival.
But to the ten people, it matters. A lot. You are making the mistake of thinking only that which is objective and/or universal has value, which is not the case. Why?That means there's no difference between a philanthropist donating to charity or a homicidal maniac killing ten people. To the universe, it doesn't matter.
The people affected.Who cares what impact we leave behind?
Their biochemical signals have as much meaning to them as ours do to us.There's no eternal god to care, and future generations are robots who will live through their generation and die as we will, so their thoughts--nothing more than biochemical signals passing through some cells--have no meaning anyway.
Value is real. What is not real is intrinsic value. For something to be valuable, there must exist something for it to be valuable to. I think a lot of people get this thing backwards. Life is not valuable. Life values. We do not care about things which matter. Our caring makes them matter. And if that caring, that valuing, is nothing more than a physical state brought about by an inscrutably complex series of preceding events (as I do believe it is), what of it?But value isn't real.
You can seize the opportunity and choose your own point, or cling to this attitude and waste your one and only life pouting. That's up to you, but I know which I've chosen.It doesn't feel like an opportunity. It feels like a pointless excursion in physical suffering..
On the flip side of the coin, why bother to make things better if the world doesn't matter? Who cares what difference you make? If there's no reason or purpose, then this is simply a sphere of matter orbiting around a star in an observable physical universe that goes on existing, pointlessly. Those "real people" are just the latest generation of mathematically evolved cell structures that will reproduce more structures before dying off. Their appearance of being alive is an illusion--their brains are cell-based automatons, no more alive or of value than a rock tumbling down a hill.
But value isn't real. The ultimate, objective conclusion on the physicality of the universe would be that morals, emotions, and social norms are illusions of the brain, evolved out of necessity for survival. That means there's no difference between a philanthropist donating to charity or a homicidal maniac killing ten people. To the universe, it doesn't matter.
Who cares what impact we leave behind? There's no eternal god to care, and future generations are robots who will live through their generation and die as we will, so their thoughts--nothing more than biochemical signals passing through some cells--have no meaning anyway.
Am I coming off as overly analytical here?I don't mean to. This is just a realization that bothers and fascinates me, though I know it's nothing new.
On the flip side of the coin, why bother to make things better if the world doesn't matter? Who cares what difference you make? If there's no reason or purpose, then this is simply a sphere of matter orbiting around a star in an observable physical universe that goes on existing, pointlessly.
I'm struggling with the ramifications of being an atheist. If there's no soul and no afterlife, does that not make us cell-based automatons, going through the motions with the illusion that we're making decisions? What are your thoughts?
[nitpick]"Automata" is the plural noun. The singular is "automaton". There is no such word as "automatons".
Honestly, I can't understand how people can continually get irregular plurals wrong all the time![/nitpick]
Dictionary.com said:au·tom·a·ton /ɔˈtɒməˌtɒn, -tn/
Spelled Pronunciation [aw-tom-uh-ton, -tn]
–noun, plural -tons, -ta /-tə/ << emphasis mine >>
Spelled Pronunciation[-tuh]....
... snip ...
Which ... brings me to my point: You don't need a Purpose to have a purpose.
... snip ...
I see no way an automaton could make a set of unique decisions.
Sorry you're having a bad day. It will pass.It doesn't feel like an opportunity. It feels like a pointless excursion in physical suffering.
Doesn't matter to whom? It matters a lot to me, and to people who matter a lot to me. I care, and (to a lesser degree) they care what difference I make. They care, and (to a lesser degree) I care what difference they make.On the flip side of the coin, why bother to make things better if the world doesn't matter? Who cares what difference you make?
Suppose there was an eternal god. What makes you think it would care? Do you think you could impress it, really impress it, by trying to return a wallet you found to its rightful owner, or volunteering time at a soup kitchen? You could be the guy who designed the tallest building in the world, and god wouldn't even bother to look up from filing its nails to say "Big deal. I can spit out fifty billion galaxies before breakfast, hot-shot, and I'm supposed to care how high YOU can make a pile of rocks?"Who cares what impact we leave behind? There's no eternal god to care
Wow, all this despair because the god-prop was kicked out from under? See, people don't like it when I say this, but this is one of my problems with the god delusion. It makes people weak minded and dependent. It gives them a lifelong ingrained idea that they need something outside of themselves to give them purpose dressed out on a plate, rather than finding that purpose, deciding what that purpose will be for themselves, and that the value of our mortal lives is nothing.
What does a human do that an automaton could not?
Can you actually prove your answer to the above question, or is it merely yet another exercise in hand waving?
For starters, failing to treat them thus often leads to unpleasant reprecussions. Or, if you prefer a rosier view of things, treating them thus often leads to pleasant ones.To me, viewing humans as mechanistic structures raises the question of why we should regard their lives or feelings in the first place if they have no intrinsic value.
To me, viewing humans as mechanistic structures raises the question of why we should regard their lives or feelings in the first place if they have no intrinsic value. I wanted the opinions of others on this unsettling scenario.
What does a human do that an automaton could not?

Hi
Oh - and -
The Turing Test!
....
No - not pass it. Come UP with it.
I grew up agnostic in a neighborhood of churchgoing Christians. I don't consider myself weak-minded or dependent on a "god-prop," nor would I make those kinds of belittling judgements about you since I don't know you.
I'm not trying to justify religion, claim atheism and nihilism are the same, or anything else people might imply that I'm doing. I just wanted to see how other people approached this issue. To me, viewing humans as mechanistic structures raises the question of why we should regard their lives or feelings in the first place if they have no intrinsic value. I wanted the opinions of others on this unsettling scenario.

Hi
Oh - and -
The Turing Test!
....
No - not pass it. Come UP with it.
...and on and on and on....
Ok - with just a little hand waving.
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I see... so if an automaton were to pass a Turing Test, and subsequent generations to generate a new version?