From the beginning of the thread, that phrase has been parenthetical, hence the thread name “Limits of Thinking.â€RandFan posted:
Reading through the thread has left me a bit confused. Have you abandoned the notion that the world is in a tragic state or is the premise even important any more? If it is can you define "tragic state"? Please define "harm"?
I can offer you some examples of harm to life, human, animal and plant. Harm in this sense means destruction and stifling of life, which includes individual as well as collective. Individuals who believe they have been chosen in some way and destroy human life as a result. History is filled with such stories. The businessman who directs the spilling of oil in the waters and contamination of the environment. I could go on and on listing examples. Please let me know if you need me to elaborate any further.
The interpretation of state, the setting of goals, and the feeling of desires, are all within the framework of thought. This includes the idea of utopia. So utopia itself is idealistic idiocy.Does the problem lie with "thinking" or simply with the inevitable conflicts that arise when state, goals and desires conflict?
If we look at the world around us we are tempted to believe that the world outside of human contact is in stasis. This simply is not true. It never has been true. The ant wants what the tree provides and the tree wants to protect itself from the ant. Both are in an evolutionary arms race. As soon as one overcomes the mechanism of the other new defenses or offenses evolve.
Utopia does not exist because,
1.) humans are diverse and have competing goals, definitions and meaning as to what is "tragic", "success", "quality of life", etc..
2.) There is no such thing as stasis.
The idea of going back is nonsensical. Humans could not return to any past state even if they wanted to. The past has passed.Our thinking is simply a product of our evolution. It has served us well in that we have become successful as a species in the anthropological sense of the word.
I would reject the notion that we go back to where we began. Where thought has been allowed to solve problems we are measurably better than our forbearers. It does not follow that because one solution brings other problems that nothing has been solved. Of course, again, it depends on one's definition of better off.
Correct, “It does not follow that because one solution brings other problems that nothing has been solved.†What follows is that solutions come with problems. Also, what represents a problem and what represents a solution is subjective. It is subjective both on an individual level as well as a cultural level. For example, to a person dying of hunger or aids in Africa, the technological advancement is insignificant compared to the condition that person is in. Likewise, to a child dying of a bullet wound.
Does it matter? Very few of the threads on this site have advanced in any significant way. It would be a delusion to think differently of this one. If anything, it serves to clarify language a bit.I don't think the discussion can advance without defining your terms.