Lumpenproletariat
Veteran Member
- Joined
- May 9, 2014
- Messages
- 2,599
- Basic Beliefs
- ---- "Just the facts, ma'am, just the facts."
"Higher" life form = more valuable = more necessary to be preserved
(not necessarily THE objective standard, but a major standard)
You don't think there's any value in being smarter? I just take this as self-evident that smartness has value. An ape is smarter than a squirrel, and so has more intrinsic value.
If smartness is not a value, then why do we try to become smarter? Why do we want kids to become educated?
Having value not as a means to saving some other creature, but having value beyond its usefulness for benefiting some other life form.
You have to factor this in, because if the only "value" is that of serving the interest of some other life form, then the question becomes: What's the point of saving that other life form?
I.e., If the only "value" of A is that it serves to promote the benefit of B, and if B itself has no value, then what is the good or the "value" of promoting B? So then A really has no value. So there has to be some value beyond just the usefulness in promoting the benefit of some other entity.
The "intrinsic" value is the value it has other than just that of serving to promote the interest of something else.
The manatee is smarter than the butterfly. Whatever is smarter has more intrinsic value than the less smart creature.
What else can "higher" mean except that it's more valuable? more worth preserving or protecting? more worth keeping around? or existing? more worth making an effort to save from being snuffed out?
To whatever intelligent entity might observe it or interact with it.
You can answer the question by answering why you would rescue the human in preference to the dog.
If something is valued only for its beauty, then the one who enjoys this beauty is "higher" or "greater" than the beautiful object. This observer has the greater value or takes priority over the beautiful object. Especially if it's an inanimate object, which has no "intrinsic" value, but just a value to serve the pleasure of the observer who is "higher." Even though that object does have "value" to provide the pleasure.
It's objective because it applies to ALL entities in the universe who/which think or learn or judge or observe etc., and so it's not limited to only me or my species or my kind, but to ALL which have these characteristics. Any entity having more of these characteristics than humans is superior to humans, to me, to my kind.
But why is that bad? It's bad because those same smartest animals will suffer as a result of doing this. Except for this suffering the smart animals would suffer as a result, it would not matter if the world gets destroyed.
The only point in preventing this destruction is that it is in the interest of those smartest animals that it be prevented. They need the world to be preserved and not destroyed.
The "greatest" we know of are we humans. For our sake we need to prevent the destruction, so we can prosper. The "greatest" get the highest priority, meaning that whatever is best for their survival and prosperity is THE BEST of all, and this requires preserving their habitat or protecting it from destruction.
Right, the manatees also have intrinsic value. If their only value was their usefulness to humans or other creatures, then maybe there'd be no need to protect them. I.e., maybe the pleasure to the boaters would be higher than whatever usefulness the manatees serve. So you recognize the point of the "intrinsic" value.
You have to be patient with me. I haven't attained Enlightenment yet like you have.
The dog is smarter.
So, what is it that makes 'smarter' the objective standard for 'higher' life forms? Where did you determine that?
(not necessarily THE objective standard, but a major standard)
You don't think there's any value in being smarter? I just take this as self-evident that smartness has value. An ape is smarter than a squirrel, and so has more intrinsic value.
If smartness is not a value, then why do we try to become smarter? Why do we want kids to become educated?
How about an ugly manatee vs. a colorful butterfly. Doesn't the manatee have more intrinsic value than the butterfly?
What is it that you think 'intrinsic' means?
Having value not as a means to saving some other creature, but having value beyond its usefulness for benefiting some other life form.
You have to factor this in, because if the only "value" is that of serving the interest of some other life form, then the question becomes: What's the point of saving that other life form?
I.e., If the only "value" of A is that it serves to promote the benefit of B, and if B itself has no value, then what is the good or the "value" of promoting B? So then A really has no value. So there has to be some value beyond just the usefulness in promoting the benefit of some other entity.
The "intrinsic" value is the value it has other than just that of serving to promote the interest of something else.
WHY do you think the manatee has greater value?
The manatee is smarter than the butterfly. Whatever is smarter has more intrinsic value than the less smart creature.
WHY IN THE FUCK do you think 'value' is important to establish the 'higher' life form?
What else can "higher" mean except that it's more valuable? more worth preserving or protecting? more worth keeping around? or existing? more worth making an effort to save from being snuffed out?
Value to who? Humans? Me, personally? The biosphere?
To whatever intelligent entity might observe it or interact with it.
You can answer the question by answering why you would rescue the human in preference to the dog.
It's not about the attractiveness vs. the ugliness. The beauty is something of value to the human observer, and so for beauty vs. ugliness it's the human pleasure which has the value, not the beautiful or ugly object being observed.
Which is still kind of incoherent on the question of 'greater' life forms.
If something is valued only for its beauty, then the one who enjoys this beauty is "higher" or "greater" than the beautiful object. This observer has the greater value or takes priority over the beautiful object. Especially if it's an inanimate object, which has no "intrinsic" value, but just a value to serve the pleasure of the observer who is "higher." Even though that object does have "value" to provide the pleasure.
I have to conclude that you do not have any idea for an objective scale to determine higher life forms.
The objective criterion is mostly the ability to think, or to learn, or to make judgments or predictions and to wonder what's happening, etc.
And what makes that objective, rather than self-serving?
It's objective because it applies to ALL entities in the universe who/which think or learn or judge or observe etc., and so it's not limited to only me or my species or my kind, but to ALL which have these characteristics. Any entity having more of these characteristics than humans is superior to humans, to me, to my kind.
Those animals which have a greater sensitivity to the world, ability to think about things, etc., are superior to the ones which have less of this.
The smartest animals are polluting the world to destruction.
But why is that bad? It's bad because those same smartest animals will suffer as a result of doing this. Except for this suffering the smart animals would suffer as a result, it would not matter if the world gets destroyed.
The only point in preventing this destruction is that it is in the interest of those smartest animals that it be prevented. They need the world to be preserved and not destroyed.
How's that work out to find the greatest?
The "greatest" we know of are we humans. For our sake we need to prevent the destruction, so we can prosper. The "greatest" get the highest priority, meaning that whatever is best for their survival and prosperity is THE BEST of all, and this requires preserving their habitat or protecting it from destruction.
(Although those manatees need to learn better how to dodge those motorboat propellers.)
Or the smarter motorboat operators should learn to avoid manatees.
Right, the manatees also have intrinsic value. If their only value was their usefulness to humans or other creatures, then maybe there'd be no need to protect them. I.e., maybe the pleasure to the boaters would be higher than whatever usefulness the manatees serve. So you recognize the point of the "intrinsic" value.
You're all over the map. Smarts, value, pleasure, subjective choices...
You haven't changed my mind that you are ill-equipped to try to support the ontological argument. You don't even seem to understand your own position on this.
You have to be patient with me. I haven't attained Enlightenment yet like you have.