James so finding a sinkhole, now apparently that is very easy, after watching Clare Prophet, the Rev. Moon, the new kid Cohen, the "Hour of Power" and many other religious ministries of great variety you can see they develop sink holes for money with the other end a lavish life style.
You are right we need to work for the betterment of mankind. The emphasis needs to be on the poor but politics often gets I'm the way. Oddly enough it can be circumvented peacefully.
Allan
On May 25, 2012 11:38 PM, "James" <ashkashal@gmail.com> wrote:
I think one aspect to consider is what types of thinking it would take to build up an infrastructure of citizenry with a more scientific world view, and what that even means (hopefully more rational). This comes with some challenges in assimilation and integration, what entry points are there, is there even interest (or is it a funding sinkhole). And ethically, should we develop defenses to teach to our young for identifying and combating faulty reasoning and logic, what forms this might take. Maybe through introducing a broad immersion of diverse concepts they will self-immunize and make the changes generationally (and is that process fast enough for current/future challenges) if we just concentrate more on exceptional qualitative development. It takes time and attention, people are overworked and full of anxiety.
I was trying to wrap my head around a challenge between technology and culture a little while back that involved high performance materials like stainless steel, high pressure steam and platinum plated ceramics and getting these things into the hands of your average third world farming community or poorer. Then it hit me, people don't need a source of gadgets, universities, a western way of life, industries and all that to benefit from modern knowledge, all that is necessary is an accessible vehicle, a friend, neighbor, or community. A few minutes later I had drafted an integrated energy refinement system using natural resources like clay, wood, soil, and rock to produce clean, high efficiency centralised heating with waste byproduct applications for sterile drinking water, safe human waste processing, personal/laundry cleaning chemicals and medicinal applications. It's gathering dust somewhere around here in the form of a scribble and a few notes.
An accessible vehicle for the modern layman might be in how scientific approaches can be used to refine, redirect redefine and optimize our ends and means- and the Idols need to be outed as ill defined means that set an unrealistically low bar for problem solving capacity. That is one emphasis for science at the inroad of ethos, what potential could we released by directing a portion of energy toward actually solving problems and making solutions accessible? I wonder.
Just a couple thoughts while trying to find that voice I put down somewhere. ;-)
On 5/18/2012 12:13 AM, archytas wrote:
My stance towards most moralising is one of incredulity, yet I'm a
moraliser and believe most of our problems lie in our lack of personal
and collective morality. Economics as our political and business
class practice it is fundamentally immoral against a scientific world-
view, My view of science is that it is full of values and the notion
of it as value-free is a total and totalising dud. Only lay people
with no experience of doing science hold the "value-free" notion of
science.
You can explore some of the moral issues arising in modern science in
a lengthy book review at London Review of Books -
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v34/n10/malcolm-bull/what-is-the-rational-response.
The book's topic is climate change.
Coming up to 60 I regard the world as a abject failure against the
promises I thought were being made in politics. I'm a world-weary old
fart now, tending to see the generations coming up as narcissist
wastrels who don't know what hard work is (etc.) though I think the
blame is ours, not theirs. I think the problem is our attitude
towards morality. The tendency in history is to focus on religion for
moral advice - this is utterly corrupt and we have forgotten that much
religious morality is actually a reaction against unfairness and the
wicked control of our lives by the rich. It is this latter factor
that is repeating itself.
Much moralising concerns sex. This all largely based in old fables
for population control we can still find in primitive societies such
as 'sperm control by fellatio' (Sambians) and non-penetrative youth
sex (Kikuyu) etc. - and stuff like 'the silver ring thing'. The
modern issue is population control and that we can achieve this
without sexual moralising - the moral issues are about quality of
life, women as other than child-bearing vessels and so on. We have
failed almost entirely except in developed countries - to such an
extent the world population has trebled in my lifetime despite
economic factors driving down birth-rates in developed countries
without the kind of restrictions such as China enforced.
We are still at war.
Our economics is still based in "growth" and "consumption" and notions
human beings should work hard - when in fact the amount of work we
need to do probably equates to 3 days a week for 6 months of a year.
75% of GDP is in services and only 6% in really hard work like
agriculture. We could have a great deal more through doing less and
doing what we do with more regard for conservation and very different
scientific advance. My view is it's immoral that we won't take
responsibility for this and review our failures. I believe this
failure inhibits our spiritual growth and renders us simply animal.
Human life may be much less than I value it at and just a purposeless
farce. The first step in a new attitude towards morality is to
consider living with a scientific world-view. The implications of
this are complex and probably entail shaking ourselves from a false-
consciousness to be able to see what is being done in our name. We
need a modern morality not based in the creation of fear and demons to
enforce it, or the feeble existential view of the individual. We are
social animals and need to get back to some basics developed with
modern knowledge, not in past religious and empire disasters.
Religion has a role in this in my view - religion we might recapture
from sensible history - I'd recommend David Graeber's 'Debt: the first
5000 years' as a read here.
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