Blobru, my sides are aching; life must really be a riot chez vous.
Got nothing better than attempts at humour to offer?
meher baba said:The law of gravitation, to which all the planets and the stars are subject, is in its own way a dim reflection of the love which pervades every part of the universe. Even the forces of repulsion are in truth expressions of love, since things are repelled from each other because they are more powerfully attracted to some other things. Repulsion is a negative consequence of positive attraction. The forces of cohesion and affinity which prevail in the very constitution of matter are positive expressions of love. A striking example of love at this level is found in the attraction which the magnet exercises for iron. - [my bold]
That isn't an answer as to why you object to such a society. I am looking for a non-arbitrary why.
Dodger, would you prefer to spend the rest of your life out of your head on crack rather than live out your life as you currently do?
Because anyone with half a brain can discern that life is not about maximising pleasure inducing chemicals within your noggin. Life is more about learning, growing, developing... and yeah, that sometimes involves putting some chemicals into the brain that won't feel too good. You know, as in remorse, conscience, feeling like you should make an effort to improve..etc..
Actually, on spiritual/religious/philosophical/moral matters no. I look forward to you actually reading all of his discourses which are freely available online, and coming back to me with your criticisms.Got nothing better than Baba to offer?
Pedantry. He was delivering teachings (in that discourse) on love, and was saying that gravity and magnetism are themselves forms of love which exist on a lower level to that of animal, human or divine love.His 'knowledge' of magnetism -- there is no magnetic repulsion between like poles then: magnets just get more and more attracted to other things as they get closer -- is telling.
If you have a quibble about exactly how things were stated in that respect, well, you're just a quibbler, and you willfully are ignoring the bigger picture.
Lots of A's and B's in that paragraph. Not much sense.Experiment: say magnets A and B have the same polarity. Put A on a table. Slide it about. Clearly it is being neither repelled nor attracted by anything else. Now put B on the table close to A. Move A about just as did before. The closer it gets to B, the harder it is to move. Everything else is in the same relation to A except B. If the only thing that has changed is the position of B, and it is now difficult to move A towards B, then A is being repelled by B. A is not suddenly being more powerfully attracted to some other things. Their position hasn't changed relative to A, only B's has. (And yes things outside the "lab" are always changing position relative to A but this is negligible; A moves about freely inside the lab as things outside change position, except when A approaches B. Therefore, A is being repelled B, and not "more powerfully attracted to some other things". Faraday: 15 - Baba: love).
Faraday and Baba both believed in God very strongly. Faraday gave sermons within his own branch of religion.
I can see that you like the word "Baba". Perhaps in the future this predilection of yours will stand you in good stead.That Baba was either too dense or too lazy to think this simple fact through doesn't give me much confidence in anything else he said, especially about something as complex as love.
There, that was fairly humorless, eh? How about some more Baba -- "Baba! Baba!" -- we could use another good laugh.![]()
I previously had pegged you as an intelligent contributor to the forum. These last few posts of yours are pushing you in the direction of silliness.
Some pretty poor replies , which is not surprising, as materialism struggles to accommodate the myriad forms of love.
Food for thought here, offered to my fellow forumites in a spirit of ....well, y,know:
http://discoursesbymeherbaba.org/v1-156.php
Because anyone with half a brain can discern that life is not about maximising pleasure inducing chemicals within your noggin. Life is more about learning, growing, developing... and yeah, that sometimes involves putting some chemicals into the brain that won't feel too good. You know, as in remorse, conscience, feeling like you should make an effort to improve..etc..
How so? what is it about materialism that makes you feel that respecting other conscious, sentient, intelligent beings is of any importance? I mean, as materialists we're all individuals, we're all going to die pretty soon, never to return. So what would be 'wrong' with maximising the pleasurable chemicals within your brain to the maximum viable extent for the rest of your life?I agree -- and I am a materialist.
I also feel, however, that respecting the autonomy of conscious, sentient, intelligent beings like other humans trumps all of that -- precisely because I am a materialist.
Why where you born?
Now what do you do in this world, do you do the best you can, lets say at work, does it affect others in a positive way or negative way, are you kind?
Do you love your mother and would you take care of her if she was immobile and bed ridden?
Would you do it for money or out of love? Or would you do it at all?
This is one type of situation is where you learn altruistic love.
Unselfish love is not something that pleases you chemically.
No, exactly the opposite. Pay attention.Hang on.
So, is your argument that via the 5 senses people perceive the objects of their experience the same way?
We all percieve in an impaired manner, we are just often unaware of our impairments. We cannot see infrared or ultroviolet, or see an electron. That's why "materialists" do not rely on the five senses.How about the colour blind, the hard of hearing, those with 20/20 vision, those with perfect pitch, those with pitch-deafness, the visually impaired, the short-sighted, everyone who has to wear glasses, wine experts, perfumiers...etc etc.. etc..
So, being able to perceive these objects of experience only in some impaired manner does not usually translate into any rational argument for the non-existence of said objects.
That's a subjective judgement on your part, proving my point. Not everyone agrees with your assesment of her work. But, you have already decided that there is something flawed with her music, so therefore anyone who likes it is "impaired". Preconcived conclusions again.Wrong again. Just as some people have impaired vision, some people have an impaired aesthetic sense. Think Britney Spears fans.
To a truly objective reciever- a tape recorder, a turtle, a rock, or a computer, there isn't an objective difference. it's all just sound waves. If you percieved the information any other way besides sound- looking at the digital code, for instance, you wouldn't know the difference either.The logical consequence of your position is that there is no real objective difference, in terms of musical aesthetic beauty, between an organg utan playing the bagpipes and a Mozart piano concerto.
It is neither. It is conceivable, possible, and given the baffling variety of taste I've observed, probably pretty likely. If there is just one person out there that prefers the former to the latter, your claim of objectivity is destroyed, and that is all kinds of rational.Which would be absolutely absurd, and yeah, irrational.
No. That different people can have different emotional reactions to the same stimulus- in this case, the chair.So would your argument be that the average person is equally likely to react emotionally positively to being beaten by their father as they would to kissing their first love?
There is no reasonable way to come to that conclusion. Contrarywise, if there were an objective emotional reality, we would expect everbody to have the same emotional reaction to the same stimulii. Which we do not see. We see a great variety. Some people, when given flowers, are charmed, some are insulted (a cheap apology for an egregious misdeed), some are horrified (severe allergies, complete lack of attraction), some are crushed (prize-winning blooms plucked before their time). An objective emotional reality is patetly hogwash.After all, if emotions are not referring to any objective emotional reality, then you'd reasonably expect people not in any significant way to react better to a beating than a loving kiss.
Yes, but it's objective existance can be verified by others and by how it affects the environment around it. "Beauty" cannot break a vase, or hold up a stack of books.The visual experience of the chair is in your head too. Maybe you have good eyesight and see it clearly.
But the very fact that there are several standards of beauty mean that no matter how "well-developed" one's aesthetic sense may be in on frame of reference, it will be meaningless to another standard. The only way to even pretend this is objectivity is to premptively conclude that one's own standard is superior to all others, and there's no way to do that except by stipulation. One million Elvis fans can be wrong, to the man who does not like rock and roll.The aesthetic experience of the chair is in your head too. Maybe you have a well-developed aesthetic sense and can gauge its level of beauty better than the average person can.
Whoah, sparky, I never said beauty wan't "real", I said it wasn't objective and it wasn't external to someone's brain.That doesn't mean either the chair or the chair's beauty are unreal.
Heh. Nice.Perhaps we should be discussing mirrors instead of chairs.
This might seem facetious, but bear with me.
If all you are after in life is complex neurological reactions that presumably engender an experience of pleasure, then you would have no objection to the perfect society being one in which everyone was constantly out of their heads on crack cocaine, so long as this did not reduce their lifespans.
Am I right?
I quite agree, it is certainly not about trying to carry out the mysterious purpose of a silent God.Because anyone with half a brain can discern that life is not about maximising pleasure inducing chemicals within your noggin. Life is more about learning, growing, developing... and yeah, that sometimes involves putting some chemicals into the brain that won't feel too good. You know, as in remorse, conscience, feeling like you should make an effort to improve..etc..
How so? what is it about materialism that makes you feel that respecting other conscious, sentient, intelligent beings is of any importance?
I mean, as materialists we're all individuals, we're all going to die pretty soon, never to return.
So what would be 'wrong' with maximising the pleasurable chemicals within your brain to the maximum viable extent for the rest of your life?
It's not even as though you have any obligation to following generations. I mean, you'll be gone, and forever in oblivion, so what does it matter to you what happens to any descendants of yours? Really?
Materialists try to maximise pleasure and minimise pain across an average 70 year life span. Theists try to maximise pleasure and minimise pain across all of eternity.How so? what is it about materialism that makes you feel that respecting other conscious, sentient, intelligent beings is of any importance? I mean, as materialists we're all individuals, we're all going to die pretty soon, never to return. So what would be 'wrong' with maximising the pleasurable chemicals within your brain to the maximum viable extent for the rest of your life?
It's not even as though you have any obligation to following generations. I mean, you'll be gone, and forever in oblivion, so what does it matter to you what happens to any descendants of yours? Really?
Exactly.Same thing -- empathy.plumjam said:It's not even as though you have any obligation to following generations. I mean, you'll be gone, and forever in oblivion, so what does it matter to you what happens to any descendants of yours? Really?
How so? what is it about materialism
And it make sense from an evolutionary standpoint that we should derive pain from the idea that our offspring and their offspring should come to harm. Or that we should derive pleasure from knowing that we have ensured their safety. Our selfish genes ensuring their survival.
Oh and by the way, exactly what planet do you live on that you think animals are of no practical use to humans?Why do humans love animals which are of no practical use to them whatsoever, and in fact are often a material burden?
Well yes - the machinery is the way it is because of evolution but we can use it the way we want now.I don't like to think of mental behaviors as the product of evolution. I prefer to think of our brains as the product of evolution, and our minds as an emergent phenomena that we are now in control of(for the most part).