Life's redundancy - Page 2
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cz
United States3249 Posts
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Tossup
United States208 Posts
On October 28 2010 14:55 cz wrote: Here, let me explain your argument via quoting you and substituting your definitions in for the words they define (that shouldn't affect anything as the word is a placeholder for the definition): "By parts I mean the combination of atoms together to create what we refer to as Life." Now let's take your definition of "life" and replace the word life with the definition: "By parts I mean the combination of atoms together to create what we refer to as components of the universe, which is the bases for what is living, interacting with each other." That sentence, if I can understand it, is basically obviously true. Which is good except that it hasn't added any new information. Okay, What is the common definition for life? On October 28 2010 14:55 Kwidowmaker wrote: atoms have very different properties than blocks of metal. At the atomic level there are all sorts of things that you have to consider that aren't applicable at the block level. For example, the force of gravity on the atom is insignificant compared to the coulomb (electric) forces between other atoms, whereas gravity plays a very important role with a block of metal. Also, you could see every rational number as every other rational number in your view, kind of redundant, no? Aren't we still searching for the universal force? From what I've read, there are 4 forces, gravity, magnetism, and two atomic forces. @ your number statement Yes! That is what math is. | ||
Redunzl
862 Posts
Concept of Anxiety The first part deals with your same problem but applied to Man and History. | ||
Randomaccount#77123
United States5003 Posts
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HULKAMANIA
United States1219 Posts
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GERMasta
Germany212 Posts
On October 28 2010 14:37 cz wrote: Because whatever starts something must exist: if X doesn't exist, X can't start Y. If X=Y, then X can't start X (by the first premise). Therefore something can't start itself; therefore life can't start itself. As far as this argument goes, I believe we're all on the same page, unless you advocate ID. Life is not eternal, so it had to start at some point. It cannot start itself, so something that is not life had to start it. I take for granted that we don't consider the universe alive, so the universe is a pretty good candidate for starting life. That's why abiogenesis is our best bet so far when it comes to the origin of life. Good blog entry, by the way, even though I don't agree with it. | ||
TheAmazombie
United States3714 Posts
Now that may seem silly in some ways and in some ways recursive as well, but to a humanist, it actually makes perfect sense. These questions of meaning, a priori ideas, and theology/God mean nothing. They are just fodder for conversation and work well in songs, poems, and plays. I see it as we are asking the wrong questions sometimes. William of Ockham once stated not to multiply needlessly. The more complications you add that do not really matter, the further and further away from the truth you will get. Reality works, science and other epistemological philosophies work in conjunction with fact and evidence and therefore we have been able to deduce a model of the universe that does not need meaning, just causality. I am not saying that there is not meaning or God or any other abstract human idea. Just to me, until reality requires the question, then it is the realm of myth and legend. Fun to think about and play with, but far from any truth. Meaning may be out there, but until it manifests itself in a real and measurable way, it may as well not exist. I know this is a little off topic, but it is always my point of view when talking about the meaning of life. | ||
kineSiS-
Korea (South)1068 Posts
Nevertheless... You assume life started itself. Is this given the assumption that the material necessary for life to manifest itself was already there? Also... The world of math, numbers and symbols represent things that are already there, only broken into pieces. For example, 2+2=4 is the idea of 4, broken into halves. So in that sense, two sets of 2 is the same thing as a single set of 4. I would have to disagree with the broken into pieces part. Although it "works" in your analogy it is incorrect. A more aptly suited statement would be the constant discovery of what is unknown but once discovered and proved is a fact. Because we discover it in infinitesimally small pieces, I guess technically it's not even pieces, but could be considered in piece because it is infinitely decreasing pieces ( if processes are included ). Math is discovered constantly, not in pieces. | ||
Severedevil
United States4822 Posts
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Tossup
United States208 Posts
define this sentence. Okay, well here, aren't we limited to our own definitions of each word? Therefore, it is impossible to truly define life. It exists outside of language. By asking me to define this sentence, you're asking me to define language with language which as cz pointed out, is useless. The best I can do is tell you examples of my own experiences and allow you to interpret as you will. @ kineSiS When I said life started itself, it's more like it was a the result of the universe. We both agree there is a starting point of what we 'commonly' call life. How it started is still a mystery but it started nonetheless. Then, it could have only started out of what was already there, the universe. What I'm trying to get at is that, this result of 'life' works in the same mechanisms as the whole of the universe. So, by understanding how life works, we can understand how our universe works as well. I'm not quite sure what you mean with the second part after also.. So, I'm getting that you're saying math is too discrete to be in this analogy? Because 2 and 2 are pieces of 4, then the two of them combined is equal to 4. But you said that we discover our world to be in infinitesimally small pieces which does not apply to math. Basically, you're saying 4 is made up of 4 units which cannot be broken down and therefore, life cannot be like math. Well, that's easy, 4 is just a convention that people use to tell how many measurable units, which ever they choose (apples to nanometers). In actuality, the number 4 is made up of infinitely smaller pieces, exactly how life is. | ||
Navane
Netherlands2727 Posts
The world of math, numbers and symbols represent things that are already there, only broken into pieces. For example, 2+2=4 is the idea of 4, broken into halves. So in that sense, two sets of 2 is the same thing as a single set of 4. So, moving to more tangible matters, a single atom within a block of metal has equal properties to all the block of metal that make up the block. Therefore, it is equally valid to represent that block with either the atom or the block of the material. This is not true. You cannot make a block of 6 using only 4's. In the same way you cannot explain magnetism if you only use atoms instead of protons/neurons/electrons. The bigger block is a simplified model. | ||
KrAzYfoOL
Australia3037 Posts
On October 28 2010 15:53 Redunzl wrote: You should read Soren Kierkegaard's Concept of Anxiety The first part deals with your same problem but applied to Man and History. that was a hilarious read, thank you. | ||
HULKAMANIA
United States1219 Posts
On October 28 2010 17:54 TheAmazombie wrote: I am a big Kurt Vonnegut fan and he stated on many occasions that the meaning of life is "to help each other through this thing, whatever it is". Now that may seem silly in some ways and in some ways recursive as well, but to a humanist, it actually makes perfect sense. These questions of meaning, a priori ideas, and theology/God mean nothing. They are just fodder for conversation and work well in songs, poems, and plays. I see it as we are asking the wrong questions sometimes. William of Ockham once stated not to multiply needlessly. The more complications you add that do not really matter, the further and further away from the truth you will get. Reality works, science and other epistemological philosophies work in conjunction with fact and evidence and therefore we have been able to deduce a model of the universe that does not need meaning, just causality. I am not saying that there is not meaning or God or any other abstract human idea. Just to me, until reality requires the question, then it is the realm of myth and legend. Fun to think about and play with, but far from any truth. Meaning may be out there, but until it manifests itself in a real and measurable way, it may as well not exist. I know this is a little off topic, but it is always my point of view when talking about the meaning of life. That's all well and good except for ideas like science, fact, and reason are a priori ideas as well. They're abstract and human. You've simply traded a few outdated cultural myths for a few trendier ones. | ||
HULKAMANIA
United States1219 Posts
On October 28 2010 18:43 Tossup wrote: "what is the meaning of life?" define this sentence. Okay, well here, aren't we limited to our own definitions of each word? Therefore, it is impossible to truly define life. It exists outside of language. By asking me to define this sentence, you're asking me to define language with language which as cz pointed out, is useless. The best I can do is tell you examples of my own experiences and allow you to interpret as you will. @ kineSiS When I said life started itself, it's more like it was a the result of the universe. We both agree there is a starting point of what we 'commonly' call life. How it started is still a mystery but it started nonetheless. Then, it could have only started out of what was already there, the universe. What I'm trying to get at is that, this result of 'life' works in the same mechanisms as the whole of the universe. So, by understanding how life works, we can understand how our universe works as well. I'm not quite sure what you mean with the second part after also.. So, I'm getting that you're saying math is too discrete to be in this analogy? Because 2 and 2 are pieces of 4, then the two of them combined is equal to 4. But you said that we discover our world to be in infinitesimally small pieces which does not apply to math. Basically, you're saying 4 is made up of 4 units which cannot be broken down and therefore, life cannot be like math. Well, that's easy, 4 is just a convention that people use to tell how many measurable units, which ever they choose (apples to nanometers). In actuality, the number 4 is made up of infinitely smaller pieces, exactly how life is. Tossup, buddy, I'm doing my best, but I'm still not following you. Can we rewind for a second? I don't need any defenses of or justifications for your main idea. I just need your main idea in a comprehensible formulation. | ||
TheAmazombie
United States3714 Posts
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SomaliPirate
United Kingdom28 Posts
i was just readin some Quran seeying as i am muslim and came across that intersting . | ||
Wolf
Korea (South)3290 Posts
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Scorcher2k
United States802 Posts
Wikipedia- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life Life (cf. biota) is a characteristic that distinguishes objects that have signaling and self-sustaining processes (biology) from those that do not,[1][2] either because such functions have ceased (death), or else because they lack such functions and are classified as inanimate. Something like this please. | ||
KrAzYfoOL
Australia3037 Posts
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metaphoR
United States199 Posts
On October 28 2010 23:31 Scorcher2k wrote: You know I had a nice long response typed but the total denial or absence of some things and not having clear meanings for seemingly anything that is being talked about is making my head hurt. Please just define the the word life as you are using it. Wikipedia- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life Life (cf. biota) is a characteristic that distinguishes objects that have signaling and self-sustaining processes (biology) from those that do not,[1][2] either because such functions have ceased (death), or else because they lack such functions and are classified as inanimate. Something like this please. Life is an agglomeration of "lives" interacting with each other taken from OP | ||
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