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| #Post#: 9346-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: October 12, 2021, 5:43 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Progressivism at its most dangerous: | |
| https://roadtoomega.substack.com/p/savingtheworldwithscience | |
| [quote] | |
| https://cdn.substack.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progr… | |
| It took some time, but we are finally approaching a tipping | |
| point called a phase transition, which is a spontaneous jump to | |
| higher order and harmony, or the opposite, a collapse into | |
| chaos. Obviously the former is better for life than the latter, | |
| and what we should strive for collectively.[/quote] | |
| I disagree. A collapse would be messy, but at least it offers an | |
| opportunity for progress to be halted and hopefully even turned | |
| backwards. It is the jump that is the true danger because it | |
| will accelerate progress perhaps beyond our power to thereafter | |
| stop it, as we have long been warning about: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-right/if-western-civilization-do… | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-false-left/leftists-against-prog… | |
| Continuing: | |
| [quote]Since phase transitions are known to occur at �the edge | |
| of chaos,� the social and political chaos we are experiencing | |
| currently indicates that such a transition is on the horizon. | |
| Too much order means a system is rigid and therefore unable to | |
| adapt or evolve, so an injection of chaos actually provides the | |
| flexibility the system needs to change its organization. If | |
| steered in the right direction by a unifying worldview, the | |
| imminent phase transition will push the social system we call | |
| civilization toward a state of higher order, control, and causal | |
| power. This is the goal of the Road to Omega movement, and also | |
| the goal of the cosmic evolution process, which is | |
| simultaneously Darwinian (involves natural selection) and | |
| teleological (goal-directed). The universe moves toward an | |
| increasingly complex state not because it is being driven to do | |
| so by some mystical force, but because life learns from its | |
| mistakes; in other words, progressive evolution proceeds through | |
| experiment and error-correction.[/quote] | |
| What our enemies call the "cosmic evolution process" is simply | |
| Yahweh (see below). This is why I call them progressive | |
| Yahwists. Basically, they not only recognize (as do we also) | |
| that natural selection is the dominant process in the universe, | |
| but they (unlike us) are happy that this is the case and want to | |
| help it along, whereas we consider natural selection to be the | |
| ultimate tyrant that systematically multiplies those too ignoble | |
| to see a problem with it (e.g. voluntary reproducers) while | |
| systematically exterminating those noble enough to despise it | |
| (e.g. voluntary non-reproducers). They also believe that | |
| repeatedly eliminating the noble in every generation results in | |
| improvement, which is only possible if they value ignobility. | |
| [quote]This theoretical framework, being a merging of prior | |
| frameworks, is most accurately described as the Evolutionary | |
| Epistemology-Universal Darwinism-Universal Bayesianism | |
| (EE-UD-UB) framework, or Poetic Meta-Naturalism for short (an | |
| adaptation of Sean Carroll�s Poetic Naturalism), and the | |
| spiritual worldview associated with this framework is known as | |
| the Cosmic Perspective. This worldview views life as cosmically | |
| significant. What is the purpose of life in the universe? To | |
| perpetuate life and mind forever through constant learning and | |
| adaptation.[/quote] | |
| This is nothing but rebooted Yahweh-worship. As I have | |
| previously rigorously proven, perpetuation is by definition not | |
| a purpose. A purpose must have a completion point. Perpetuation | |
| has no completion point; no quantity of successful perpetuation | |
| brings the subject any nearer to a condition where further | |
| perpetuation ceases to be required. That our enemies | |
| nevertheless claim that this is the 'purpose' of life (by which | |
| they mean is it is what we should aim for) is testimony to their | |
| slavishness. | |
| [quote]As David Deutsch often reminds us, the potential for | |
| progress and knowledge growth is infinite.[/quote] | |
| Here we see themselves explicitly admit that perpetuation has no | |
| completion point! Yet they not only see no problem with this, | |
| they consider this to be good news! | |
| [quote]However, we should keep in mind that life cannot be | |
| separated from the universe it inhabits�adaptive complexity | |
| spreading through space is the cosmos waking up through a | |
| recursive process of hierarchical (multi-level) emergence called | |
| cosmic evolution. �You are the universe� may be the title of a | |
| Deepak Chopra book, but that doesn�t make the statement any less | |
| true. In his epic book The Singularity is Near, Ray Kurzweil | |
| mapped out the major stages of the cosmic process in all its | |
| glorious detail. | |
| https://cdn.substack.com/image/fetch/f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/ht… | |
| Glorious? What is glorious about this? Only accumulationists | |
| would find this glorious. Anti-accumulationists (e.g. us) find | |
| this terrifying! | |
| [quote]While some might believe this view to be in conflict with | |
| the almighty second law of thermodynamics�which says an isolated | |
| system must (on average) grow increasingly disordered�this | |
| website will show why this new cosmic narrative is in fact | |
| emergent from the second law. In short, the second law is the | |
| selection pressure for self-organizing systems, because it | |
| filters out the unstable configurations and selects the most | |
| resilient and functional designs. As a result, adaptive | |
| complexity (aka life as a whole) grows more computationally | |
| powerful as evolution proceeds, and better able to predict and | |
| control the world around it.[/quote] | |
| I do not disagree academically with this theory. I just disagree | |
| with letting it happen unopposed. | |
| [quote]The founder of evolutionary genetics, Theodosius | |
| Dobzhansky, famously said �Nothing in biology makes sense except | |
| in the light of evolution.� Well, the Integrated Evolutionary | |
| Synthesis says that nothing in biology or evolution makes any | |
| sense except in the light of thermodynamics and information. It | |
| is the need to stay out of thermodynamic equilibrium�a state of | |
| death, decay, and disorder�that forces adaptive complexity to | |
| search the �design space� for adaptive solutions to the problem | |
| of survival. Solutions are adaptations that help the system | |
| avoid threats and extract the energy the system needs to sustain | |
| its ordered state.[/quote] | |
| We often call these 'solutions' sustainable evils. It usually | |
| involves anything stronger initiating violence on anything | |
| weaker (but not to the point of the weaker's extinction, so that | |
| the violence can continue without end). | |
| [quote]This search for �fit� configurations is a form of | |
| trial-and-error learning that occurs through the evolutionary | |
| algorithm known as variation-and-selection. Through adaptation, | |
| an evolving biosphere reduces its ignorance or uncertainty about | |
| all the ways the world can surprise it.[/quote] | |
| Or as we put it, through adulteration, Original Nobility is | |
| lost. The more we become used to this world as it is, the more | |
| we are being cut off from the ability to feel how the world | |
| should be. | |
| [quote]In other words, the information embedded in biological | |
| memory (DNA, brains, societies) is knowledge. As life adapts to | |
| its surroundings, natural selection generates predictive | |
| knowledge, and recursive self-organization generates | |
| increasingly complex, resilient, and intelligent cybernetic | |
| systems.[/quote] | |
| We call these prisoners increasingly incapable of resistance, or | |
| eventually even of feeling compulsion to resist (hence slaves). | |
| [quote][img width=1280 | |
| height=819] | |
| https://cdn.substack.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progr… | |
| This is evolution not towards the 'best' possible design, but | |
| toward the most survival-oriented possible design. For example, | |
| if at the "1st generation" "Design 1" for ethical reasons | |
| refuses to initiate violence in order to extract energy, it will | |
| be filtered out despite being ethically superior to "Design 4". | |
| Or if at the "2nd generation" "Design 4a" for ethical reasons | |
| refuses to initiate violence as part of competition, it will die | |
| out in competition despite being ethically superior. And so on. | |
| The notion that "most survival-oriented" = "best" is a | |
| value-based declaration made by Yahwists and not shared by | |
| anti-Yahwists. | |
| (By the way, another word for "energy extractor" is vampire. Are | |
| vampires the best?) | |
| [quote]being unapologetic cosmic optimists[/quote] | |
| Here they admit it. They think whatever comes out of the design | |
| process will be great. We disagree. Whatever comes out will be | |
| at the very least less capable of Gnosis. (Which is the whole | |
| point behind Yahweh's process FFS!) | |
| [quote]ROAD TO OMEGA is also a story about complexity, | |
| emergence, and collective computation�features of nature that | |
| suggest that such a revolution could be a natural part of an | |
| evolutionary process that eventually brings about the emergence | |
| of a global brain through the creation of an Internet and | |
| peer-to-peer technology. In the words of Wired co-founder Kevin | |
| Kelly, the technological trajectory we are on may have been | |
| largely inevitable.[/quote] | |
| No, all that would have been needed to evade it completely is if | |
| Western civilization had been killed several centuries ago. No | |
| other civilization at the time of the Renaissance was on track | |
| to independently develop the internet and P2P. Western | |
| civilization is Yahweh's vehicle. | |
| We can still evade the present technological trajectory by | |
| killing Western civilization ASAP. But time is running out. | |
| [quote]In the context of the decentralization movement, Omega | |
| refers to a state of hyperconnection among humans that is | |
| achievable through peer-to-peer technologies that are emerging | |
| today, like blockchains and decentralized applications (dApps). | |
| ... | |
| By promoting the emergence of self-organizing social, political, | |
| and economic networks, decentralization and hyperconnection may | |
| bring about new levels of order and knowledge.[/quote] | |
| I academically agree that decentralization will optimize natural | |
| selection and hence Yahweh's plan. This is why I support | |
| autocracy, which is a form of centralization. A sufficiently | |
| powerful autocracy can temporarily hold off the selective | |
| pressure of natural selection and even temporarily implement | |
| alternative selective pressure, thereby temporarily enabling the | |
| demographic proliferation of genuinely better designs. This is | |
| National Socialism. These anti-Yahwist designs then have a brief | |
| time interval available to consciously identify and deliberately | |
| eliminate Yahweh's preferred progressive designs before natural | |
| selection reasserts itself (and hence eliminate us). This - | |
| ensuring evil dies before (or at the same time as) we do - is | |
| the true purpose of life. | |
| #Post#: 9358-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: October 13, 2021, 2:40 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.edge.org/conversation/stuart_a_kauffman-beyond-reductionism-reinven… | |
| [quote]A great divide splits contemporary society between those | |
| who believe in a transcendent God, and those, including myself, | |
| who do not.[/quote] | |
| Indeed. | |
| [quote]beyond the new science that glimmers a new world view, we | |
| have a new view of God, not as transcendent, not as an agent, | |
| but as the very creativity of the universe itself.[/quote] | |
| This is what we have always understood Yahweh to be. | |
| [quote]Darwin taught us about natural selection and evolution. | |
| He did not know the basis for self reproduction or heritable | |
| variation. But given these, evolution by natural selection | |
| follows. Such evolving life forms would be subject to Darwin's | |
| law, which arises only for entities capable of self reproduction | |
| and heritable variation. This seems clearly to be ontological | |
| emergence, not reducible to physics. Like Anderson's computer | |
| able to run on transisitors or buckets of water, Darwin's | |
| natural selection can run on multiple physical platforms, where | |
| the entities under selection have their own causal powers, and | |
| natural selection cannot be reduced to any specific physical | |
| platform. | |
| Indeed, it is possible that minor changes in the constants of | |
| the physicists would still yield universes in which life, | |
| heritable variation and natural selection would obtain. Note | |
| that while the physicist might deduce that a specific set of | |
| molecules was self reproducing, and had heritable variations and | |
| instantiated natural selection, one cannot deduce natural | |
| selection from the specific physics of any specific case(s), or | |
| even this universe, alone. In short, Darwin's natural selection | |
| is a new law operating on the level of self reproducing entities | |
| with heritable variation, regardless of the physical | |
| underpinning. In contrast to Weinberg's claim, here the | |
| explanatory arrows point upward from molecules to the evolution | |
| of living systems of molecules via natural selection.[/quote] | |
| Yes, this is why Yahweh can accurately claim divinity. Which is | |
| not to say he deserves to be worshipped. | |
| [quote]I begin with Darwinian adaptations and preadaptations. | |
| Were one to ask Darwin what the function of the heart is, he | |
| would have replied, "To pump blood". That is, the causal | |
| consequence of the heart for virtue of which it was selected by | |
| natural selection is pumping blood. But the heart makes heart | |
| sounds. These are not the function of the heart. Thus, the | |
| function of the heart is a subset of its causal consequences and | |
| must be analyzed in the context of the whole organism in its | |
| selective environment. Again this says that biology cannot be | |
| reduced to physics, for while the string theorist might | |
| (actually could not) deduce all the properties of a given heart, | |
| he/she would have no way to pick out as the relevant property | |
| that of pumping blood. But it is that property that accounts for | |
| the existence of hearts in the biosphere.[/quote] | |
| What is the Darwinian function of muscle? Movement for escaping | |
| predators? Wrong! Did you know that the overwhelming majority of | |
| muscle fibres in the world are deliberately prevented from | |
| meaningful movement as an explicit condition for their carriers | |
| to reproduce? | |
| https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Battery_husbandry | |
| The actual Darwinian function of muscle in the pictured animals | |
| is to supply meat for consumption by mostly Westerners. It is | |
| for this reason that these animals are forced to keep | |
| reproducing, and hence their species guaranteed perpetuation | |
| (the suffering of the indiviudals is not a concern to Yahweh). | |
| https://slideplayer.com/slide/17433322/101/images/4/The+fear+and+dread+of+you+w… | |
| [quote]It is critical that virtually any extant feature of an | |
| organism can become the subject of natural selection in the | |
| appropriate environment, and typically, if selected, a novel | |
| functionality arises in the biosphere and universe. Now the | |
| critical question: Do you think you could say ahead of time, or | |
| finitely prestate, all possible Darwinian preadaptations of, say | |
| species alive now, or even humans? I have not found anyone who | |
| thought the answer was yes. I do not know how to prove my claim | |
| that the answer is "No", but part of the problem is that we | |
| cannot finitely prestate the relevant features of all possible | |
| selective environments for all organisms with respect to all | |
| their features. | |
| But the failure to prestate the possible preadaptations is not | |
| slowing down the evolution of the biosphere where preadaptations | |
| are widely known. Thus, ever novel functionalities come to exist | |
| and proliferate in the biosphere. The fact that we cannot | |
| prestate them is essential, and an essential limitation to the | |
| way Newton taught us to do science: Prestate the relevant | |
| variables, forces acting among them, initial and boundary | |
| conditions, and calculate the future evolution of the system�say | |
| projectile. But we cannot prestate the relevant causal features | |
| of organisms in the biosphere. We do not know now the relevant | |
| variables! Thus we cannot write down a set of equations for the | |
| temporal evolution of these variables. We are profoundly | |
| precluded from the Newtonian move. In short, the evolution of | |
| the biosphere is radically unknowable, not due to quantum throws | |
| of the dice, or deterministic chaos, but because we cannot | |
| prestate the macroscopic relevant features of organisms and | |
| environments that will lead to the emergence of novel functions | |
| in the biosphere with their own causal properties that in turn | |
| alter the future evolution of the biosphere. Thus, the evolution | |
| of the biosphere is radically creative, ceaselessly creative, in | |
| way that cannot be foretold.[/quote] | |
| Tell me about it: | |
| https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Photos_of_egg_industry_by_Roee_Shpe… | |
| https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Foie_gras_production | |
| And the next thing you know: | |
| http://www.naturalheightgrowth.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Biodegradable-Por… | |
| Or even more recently: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-right/if-western-civilization-do… | |
| [quote]I find this wonderful.[/quote] | |
| Because you are a Yahwist. I, an anti-Yahwist, find this | |
| horrific. | |
| However, while I agree that I cannot list all possible Darwinian | |
| preadaptations, I can list the one trait that will never be a | |
| preadaptation: anti-Yahwism. It doesn't matter which or how many | |
| other Darwinian preadaptations someone carries; this one trait | |
| is potentially enough to singlehandedly end them all. I find | |
| this wonderful. | |
| [quote]this means that the technological evolution of the | |
| econosphere is also not finitely prestatable, nor presumably | |
| algorithmic. It too is ceaselessly creative, expanding from some | |
| 1000 goods and services say 50,000 years ago to perhaps 10 | |
| billion today.[/quote] | |
| I find this horrific too. | |
| [quote]And human culture, in general, is ceaselessly creative as | |
| the biosphere and culture expand into what I call the Adjacent | |
| Possible.[/quote] | |
| I find this horrific too. (But no, it is not "human culture, in | |
| general". It is primarily Western civilization which behaves | |
| like this.) | |
| [quote]In short, in wondrous ways, these our universe, | |
| biosphere, econosphere, and culture are ceaselessly creative and | |
| emergent.[/quote] | |
| Only Yahwists could describe ceaseless creativity as "wondrous". | |
| [quote]God is the most powerful symbol we have created. The | |
| Spaniards in the New World built their churches on the holy | |
| sites of those they vanquished. Notre Dame sits on a Druid holy | |
| site. Shall we use the God word? It is our choice. Mine is a | |
| tentative "yes". I want God to mean the vast ceaseless | |
| creativity of the only universe we know of, ours. What do we | |
| gain by using the God word? I suspect a great deal, for the word | |
| carries with it awe and reverence.[/quote] | |
| Please call him Yahweh. The true God is the one trying to save | |
| us from Yahweh (ie. the Devil). | |
| [quote] If we can transfer that awe and reverence, not to the | |
| transcendental Abrahamic God of my Israelite tribe long ago, but | |
| to the stunning reality that confronts us, we will grant | |
| permission for a renewed spirituality, and awe, reverence and | |
| responsibility for all that lives, for the planet.[/quote] | |
| I guessed you were a Jew from the very first paragraph you | |
| wrote. In actuality, you are merely putting a Western scientific | |
| dressing over the exact same Yahweh-worship practiced by your | |
| ancient ancestors, which is based on enjoying and being grateful | |
| for material existence. | |
| [quote]I believe, I hope correctly, that what I have sketched | |
| above is true, points to a new vision of our co-creating | |
| reality, that it invites precisely an enhancement of our sense | |
| of spirituality, reverence, wonder, and responsibility, and can | |
| form the basis of a trans-national mythic structure for an | |
| emerging global civilization.[/quote] | |
| I am here to stop you. | |
| [quote]To ever succeed, this new view needs to be soft spoken. | |
| You see, we can say, here is reality, is it not worthy of | |
| stunned wonder? What more could we want of a God?[/quote] | |
| No, it is not. God should be that which is outside of reality. | |
| That which we (not you!), despite being stuck in reality, can | |
| sometimes perceive in our idealistic imagination. And having | |
| once glimpsed God, the entire material world thereafter becomes | |
| worthy of nothing but contempt. | |
| You of course disagree, because: | |
| https://wp-media.patheos.com/blogs/sites/348/2015/08/You-are-of-your-father.jpg | |
| [quote]Yes, we give up a God who intervenes on our behalf. We | |
| give up heaven and hell. But we gain ourselves, responsibility, | |
| and maturity of spirit.[/quote] | |
| I will not give up these. And the last thing I would ever want | |
| is to gain is "maturity of spirit"! | |
| http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors7/jesus-christ-jesus-christ-little-ch… | |
| #Post#: 9381-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: guest55 Date: October 14, 2021, 9:41 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I believe the film Alien: Covenant is all about progressive | |
| Yahwism. In this film we learn that David the AI is responsible | |
| for creating the Aliens in the first place. David claims that | |
| his sole purpose is "creation". David represents Yahweh.... | |
| [img width=828 | |
| height=1280] | |
| https://i.pinimg.com/originals/c4/d7/1c/c4d71c20b7dd14ad1cb21e09dc4e61b3.jpg[/i… | |
| #Post#: 9632-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: October 31, 2021, 1:35 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2017/mar/19/yuval-harari-sapiens-readers-qu… | |
| [quote]�Homo sapiens as we know them will disappear in a century | |
| or so� | |
| Chris Evans read out the first page of Sapiens, the book by the | |
| Israeli historian Yuval Noah Harari. | |
| ... | |
| Last year, Harari�s follow-up, Homo Deus: A Brief History of | |
| Tomorrow, was published in the UK, becoming another bestseller. | |
| It develops many of the themes explored in Sapiens, and in | |
| particular examines the possible impact of biotechnological and | |
| artificial intelligence innovation on Homo sapiens, heralding | |
| perhaps the beginning of a new bionic or semi-computerised form | |
| of human.[/quote] | |
| This is what our enemies want to become. | |
| [quote]I�m not sure if it will be deliberate but I do think | |
| we�ll probably have just one system, and in this sense we�ll | |
| have just one civilisation. In a way this is already the case. | |
| All over the world the political system of the state is roughly | |
| identical. All over the world capitalism is the dominant | |
| economic system, and all over the world the scientific method or | |
| worldview is the basic worldview through which people understand | |
| nature, disease, biology, physics and so forth. There are no | |
| longer any fundamental civilisational differences.[/quote] | |
| All we need to do is kill Western civilization, and the door to | |
| other possibilities reopens. | |
| [quote]as the ecological crisis intensifies, the pressure for | |
| technological development will increase, not decrease. I think | |
| that the ecological crisis in the 21st century will be analogous | |
| to the two world wars in the 20th century in serving to | |
| accelerate technological progress. | |
| As long as things are OK, people would be very careful in | |
| developing or experimenting in genetic engineering on humans or | |
| giving artificial intelligence control of weapon systems. But if | |
| you have a serious crisis, caused for example by ecological | |
| degradation, then people will be tempted to try all kinds of | |
| high-risk, high-gain technologies in the hope of solving the | |
| problem, and you�ll have something like the Manhattan Project in | |
| the second world war.[/quote] | |
| Harari is describing a solely Western mentality. To | |
| non-Westerners, having realized that environmental damage has | |
| occurred as a consequence of machine proliferation, the obvious | |
| solution is to stop machine proliferation ASAP. But Westerners | |
| think the 'solution' is to invent even newer machines to | |
| counter the effects of existing machines: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponzi_scheme | |
| So if we continue to allow Westerners to keep deciding on behalf | |
| of everyone else what the future is to be like, then it will | |
| probably really go like Harari predicts. But this need not be | |
| the case. All we need to do is insist that Western civilization | |
| has already done far too much harm to continue deserving our | |
| trust. | |
| [quote]You can�t just stop technological progress. Even if one | |
| country stops researching artificial intelligence, some other | |
| countries will continue to do it.[/quote] | |
| War should be declared by all anti-AI countries on all pro-AI | |
| countries. And as long as AI is stopped before it can innovate | |
| independently, the only other fix we need to halt further | |
| innovation is to eliminate machinist genes from the human gene | |
| pool. | |
| [quote]The real question is what to do with the technology. You | |
| can use exactly the same technology for very different social | |
| and political purposes. If you look at the 20th century, we see | |
| that with the same technology of electricity and trains, you | |
| could create a communist dictatorship or a liberal democracy. | |
| And it�s the same with artificial intelligence and | |
| bioengineering. So I think people shouldn�t be focused on the | |
| question of how to stop technological progress because this is | |
| impossible. Instead the question should be what kind of usage to | |
| make of the new technology.[/quote] | |
| We should use whatever technology is already around to prevent | |
| the introduction of anything even newer, preferably by | |
| exterminating those who want the progress (starting with Harari | |
| himself). | |
| [quote]Now the main economic asset is knowledge, and it�s very | |
| difficult to conquer knowledge through violence.[/quote] | |
| State control over reproduction can be used to eventually breed | |
| new generations uninterested in perpetuating superfluous | |
| knowledge (especially stuff from the Renaissance onwards): | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-false-left/truth-knowledge/ | |
| [quote]If you want a steak, you just grow a steak from cells � | |
| you don�t need to raise a cow and then slaughter the cow for the | |
| steak. This may sound like science fiction but it�s already a | |
| reality. Three years ago they created the first hamburger they | |
| made from cells. It�s true that it cost $300,000 but it�s always | |
| like that with a new technology. By now, 2017, the price, as far | |
| as I know, is down to $11 per hamburger. [/quote] | |
| While of course this is preferable to slaughtering cows for | |
| steaks, it is still a Western approach to the problem. It is not | |
| a solution. After you get your steak and eat it, you will soon | |
| want another one. Eventually you may even want more than one. Or | |
| you may want different varieties of steak. And so on. Nothing | |
| has been solved. The desire for steaks has not been decreased. | |
| If anything, it has been increased. | |
| Here is the alternative: if you want a steak, realize that the | |
| problem is with you for wanting the steak in the first place, | |
| not with how to get the steak you want. You want a steak because | |
| of your non-Aryan blood. So don't reproduce, and after you | |
| die there will be one fewer person wanting a steak. Repeat until | |
| there are zero people in the world who want steaks. This is the | |
| true solution to the problem of wanting steaks. | |
| Western approach: increase supply. | |
| Correct approach: reduce demand. | |
| [quote]It will also have a lot of ecological benefits because it | |
| will reduce the enormous amount of pollution which is caused by | |
| high animal [s]farming[/s] today.[/quote] | |
| Reducing the population of meat-eaters will have even more | |
| ecological benefits. But you refuse to even consider this | |
| because you are a progressive Yahwist. | |
| [quote]AA: You live in a part of the world that has been shaped | |
| by religious fictions. Which do you think will happen first � | |
| that Homo sapiens leave behind religious fiction or the | |
| Israel-Palestine conflict will be resolved? | |
| As things look at present, it seems that Homo sapiens will | |
| disappear before the Israeli political conflict will be | |
| resolved. I think that Homo sapiens as we know them will | |
| probably disappear within a century or so, not destroyed by | |
| killer robots or things like that, but changed and upgraded with | |
| biotechnology and artificial intelligence into something else, | |
| into something different. The timescale for that kind of change | |
| is maybe a century. And it�s quite likely that the | |
| Palestinian-Israeli conflict will not be resolved by that time. | |
| But it will definitely be influenced by it.[/quote] | |
| I hope otherwise. | |
| [quote]AA: Are you confident that radical Islam is nothing more | |
| than the death rattle of the pre-modern era? | |
| In the 21st century, humanity is facing some very difficult | |
| problems, whether it�s global warming or global inequality or | |
| the rise of disruptive technology, such as bioengineering and | |
| artificial intelligence. And wWe need answers to these | |
| challenges, and � at least as of March 2017 � I haven�t heard | |
| anything relevant being offered by radical Islam. So this is why | |
| I don�t think that radical Islam will shape the society of the | |
| 21st century. It could still be there, it could still cause a | |
| lot of trouble and violence and so forth, but I don�t see it | |
| creating or shaping the road ahead of humankind.[/quote] | |
| I hope otherwise. | |
| [quote]AA: If we can indefinitely prevent death, would it still | |
| be possible to create meaning without what Saul Bellow called | |
| �the dark backing that a mirror needs if we are to see | |
| anything�? | |
| I think so, yes. You have other problems with what happens when | |
| you overcome old age, but I don�t think lack of meaning will be | |
| a serious problem. Over the past three centuries, almost all the | |
| new ideologies of the modern world don�t care about death, or at | |
| least they don�t see death as a source of meaning. Previous | |
| cultures, especially traditional religions, usually needed death | |
| in order to explain the meaning of life. Like in Christianity � | |
| without death, life has no meaning. The whole meaning of life | |
| comes from what happens to you after you die. There is no death, | |
| no heaven, no hell� there is no meaning to Christianity. But | |
| over the past three centuries we have seen the emergence of a | |
| lot of modern ideologies such as socialism, liberalism, | |
| feminism, communism that don�t need death at all in order to | |
| provide life with meaning.[/quote] | |
| If our enemies succeed in becoming literal vampires, we will | |
| have to respond by becoming literal vampire slayers. | |
| This is only type of stake we should give our enemies: | |
| [img] | |
| https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/10/09/1412870394513_Image_galleryImage_No_… | |
| #Post#: 9703-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: Zea_mays Date: November 8, 2021, 3:04 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| The UN just released this Yahwist propaganda: | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3DOcQRl9ASc | |
| It goes without saying that if humans were extinct, we wouldn't | |
| be in this mess in the first place (a basic fact which | |
| environmentalist-minded groups like the human extinction | |
| movement recognize.) | |
| It goes without saying that if all species went extinct, it | |
| would be impossible for any individual to ever be harmed by | |
| global warming or other environmental effects in the first place | |
| (a basic fact which human-centric environmentalist organizations | |
| almost always ignore). | |
| #Post#: 9709-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: Zea_mays Date: November 8, 2021, 3:36 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Also, I recently stumbled across this crap: | |
| [quote]The Fourth International Posadist is a Trotskyist | |
| international. It was founded in 1962 by J. Posadas, | |
| [...] | |
| Posadism attempts to introduce elements of Ufology into Marxist | |
| thought.[1][2] Arguing that only communism can allow the | |
| development of interplanetary travel, they concluded that | |
| visiting aliens from other planets must live in highly advanced | |
| communist societies and are bound to help Earth-based communists | |
| with bringing about the world revolution.[3][4] | |
| [...] | |
| In recent years, interests in the Posadists, particularly in | |
| regard to their views in ufology, has increased. Several | |
| satirical and non-satirical "neo-Posadist" groups emerged on | |
| social media, making Posadas "one of the most recognizable names | |
| in the history of Trotskyism".[11][14] | |
| [...] | |
| His most prominent thesis from this perspective was the 1968 | |
| pamphlet Flying saucers, the process of matter and energy, | |
| science, the revolutionary and working-class struggle and the | |
| socialist future of mankind which exposed many of the ideas | |
| associated today with Posadism. Here, Posadas claims that while | |
| there is no proof of intelligent life in the universe, the | |
| science of the time makes their existence likely. Furthermore, | |
| he claims that any extraterrestrials visiting earth in flying | |
| saucers must come from a socially and scientifically advanced | |
| civilisation to master inter-planetary travel, and that such a | |
| civilisation could have only come about in a post-capitalist | |
| world.[3] | |
| Believing visiting aliens to be naturally non-violent, who are | |
| only here to observe, Posadas argues that humans must call on | |
| them to intervene in solving the Earth's problems[/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_International_Posadist | |
| [quote]At their founding conference the movement proclaimed that | |
| �Atomic war is inevitable. It will destroy half of humanity: it | |
| is going to destroy immense human riches. It is very possible. | |
| The atomic war is going to provoke a true inferno on Earth. But | |
| it will not impede Communism.� | |
| [...] | |
| Posadas wrote that �Nuclear war [equals] revolutionary war. It | |
| will damage humanity but it will not � it cannot � destroy the | |
| level of consciousness reached by it� Humanity will pass quickly | |
| through a nuclear war into a new human society � Socialism.� | |
| [/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Posadas#Nuclear_war | |
| If you look up "Posadism" in an image search, there's a bunch of | |
| memes portraying it in a positive light. People thought | |
| over-the-top semi-satirical Alt-Right memes were just harmless | |
| nonsense, but rightists ended up genuinely believing all of the | |
| most extreme aspects of the memes, and got Trump elected, so we | |
| shouldn't overlook the danger Posadism poses just because it is | |
| now limited to memes. | |
| https://i.imgur.com/2LlriEP.jpeg | |
| https://www.thenation.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Posadist-Meme1.jpg | |
| #Post#: 9778-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 14, 2021, 8:26 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| More broadly, there certainly seems to be motivation to replace | |
| capitalism, which is basically machine innovation driven by | |
| desire for profit, with an economic system of machine innovation | |
| for its own sake. False Left anticapitalists seem to be | |
| supporting this, as their anticapitalism was always about | |
| disliking capitalism for producing rich people rather than | |
| disliking capitalism for producing machines. | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/us-approaching-china-apos-advances-114938084.html | |
| [quote]Currently, he said, the U.S. employs finance-based | |
| planning, which he said boils down to, "We are going to spend | |
| more money than they are." | |
| ... | |
| Instead, Sekora has been pushing for technology-based planning | |
| ... | |
| Sekora explained that technological advances occur when two | |
| existing technologies combine, and Socrates was to be used to | |
| create what he called "automated innovation."[/quote] | |
| It goes without saying that the new stuff once introduced can be | |
| further combined with the old stuff and with each other, so | |
| innovation will just keep branching out and never end. | |
| [quote]According to Sekora, the U.S. has been at a self-imposed | |
| disadvantage due to a finance-based planning economic strategy | |
| that focuses on maximizing profits in the short-term rather than | |
| producing the best products to establish long-term market | |
| dominance. Instead of focusing on developing and acquiring the | |
| best technologies, the government focuses on dollars and cents. | |
| ... | |
| "Technology-driven decision-making is an essential part of our | |
| defense modernization. Current incentives in the Pentagon lead | |
| to less innovation and more bureaucracy," Rogers said in a | |
| statement to Fox News. "Even a single failed test of a new | |
| technology can have serious consequences on officers� careers. | |
| This attitude smothers innovation and reinforces using the same | |
| old �proven� technologies that don�t meet modern | |
| threats."[/quote] | |
| Note also that the above line of argument against capitalism is | |
| not even that it makes some people too rich, but that it leads | |
| to sub-maximal innovation. In other words, if they continued to | |
| believe that capitalism was the best system for maximizing | |
| innovation, they would happily continue to be capitalists. It is | |
| only because they now suspect that a system other than | |
| capitalism is a better system for maximizing innovation that | |
| they want to dump capitalism. Basically, they want everything | |
| else to be secondary to maximizing innovation. In short, | |
| innovation is their new god. (See also the title of this topic.) | |
| #Post#: 9787-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: guest55 Date: November 15, 2021, 11:40 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Every time I visit this thread in particular I'm reminded of one | |
| of the old Superman movies I watched in my childhood, the | |
| Superman film where one of the villains gets turned into a | |
| cyborg at the end. That scene absolutely traumatized me in my | |
| youth: | |
| https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5a7b0d3680bd5e90fee815f5/15250952… | |
| https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-BWdr-IYWaeA/WFxNxIwPs-I/AAAAAAAAMjo/B-r77alLDn8Ce55D… | |
| Few scenes in any film have ever scared me as much as the one | |
| above did. | |
| [quote]False Left anticapitalists seem to be supporting this, as | |
| their anticapitalism was always about disliking capitalism for | |
| producing rich people rather than disliking capitalism for | |
| producing machines.[/quote] | |
| Such a great point! Lest we also forget the primary motivation | |
| behind capitalist thinking has always been to have a fully | |
| automated work force so capitalists don't have to work, nor will | |
| they have to pay labor costs! The WALL-E film in a nutshell is | |
| literally where these capitalists want to go! They actually | |
| believe that this is a good idea! | |
| [quote]It goes without saying that the new stuff once introduced | |
| can be further combined with the old stuff and with each other, | |
| so innovation will just keep branching out and never | |
| end.[/quote] | |
| Reminded of the Martin Heidegger quote again in regards to | |
| technology in it's essence being something man does not control. | |
| [quote]Basically, they want everything else to be secondary to | |
| maximizing innovation. In short, innovation is their new god. | |
| (See also the title of this topic.)[/quote] | |
| Indeed! Take a good look at the above images because your new | |
| god probably looks something like that! | |
| #Post#: 9792-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: Solar Guy Date: November 16, 2021, 11:07 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Progressive Yahwism as you call it is called Extropianism: | |
| https://www.mrob.com/pub/religion/extro_prin.html | |
| Meanwhile you probably want to choose Universal Freedom | |
| Gnosticism: | |
| https://www.orionsarm.com/eg-article/471fe95ed7b16 | |
| #Post#: 9798-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Progressive Yahwism | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 16, 2021, 11:19 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Responding to your first link: | |
| [quote]EXTROPY � the extent of a system�s intelligence, | |
| information, order, vitality, and capacity for improvement. | |
| EXTROPIANS � those who seek to increase extropy.[/quote] | |
| So extropians want to "increase capacity for improvement". Yet | |
| for improvement to be meaningful, the more you improve, it | |
| should follow that the less capacity remains for you to further | |
| improve. If you start off with 10 flaws, you have the capacity | |
| to eliminate 10 flaws. If have already eliminated 9 flaws, you | |
| now only have the capacity to eliminate 1 more flaw. This is | |
| genuine improvement, and hence reduction in the capacity for | |
| improvement. On the other hand, so-called "improvement" that | |
| increases the capacity for "improvement" logically cannot be | |
| improvement at all. It is progress. The difference is that | |
| improvement is measured relative to an endpoint, whereas | |
| progress is measured relative to a starting point. | |
| [quote]Extropianism is a transhumanist philosophy. The Extropian | |
| Principles define a specific version or "brand" of transhumanist | |
| thinking. Like humanists, transhumanists favor reason, progress, | |
| and values centered on our well being rather than on an external | |
| religious authority. Transhumanists take humanism further by | |
| challenging human limits by means of science and technology | |
| combined with critical and creative thinking. We challenge the | |
| inevitability of aging and death, and we seek continuing | |
| enhancements to our intellectual abilities, our physical | |
| capacities, and our emotional development.[/quote] | |
| You want to challenge aging and death because you are following | |
| your natural survivalist impulse. How then can you claim to want | |
| emotional development, which should really be about questioning | |
| whether a mere natural impulse ought to be followed in the first | |
| place? How can you claim to use critical thinking without first | |
| critiquing survivalism itself? | |
| Transhumanists are just Yahweh-worshippers who use machines to | |
| do their worship. "Values centered on our well being" is the | |
| giveaway: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Am_that_I_Am | |
| [quote]I am that I am is a common English translation of the | |
| Hebrew phrase אֶהְיֶה | |
| אֲשֶׁר | |
| אֶהְיֶה‎, �ehye | |
| �ă�er �ehye ([ʔehˈje ʔaˈʃer | |
| ʔehˈje])� also "I am who I am," "I will become what I | |
| choose to become", "I am what I am," "I will be what I will be," | |
| "I create what(ever) I create," or "I am the Existing One."[1] | |
| The traditional English translation within Judaism favors "I | |
| will be what I will be" because there is no present tense of the | |
| verb "to be" in the Hebrew language.[/quote] | |
| Their disdain for "external religious authority" is in reality | |
| disdain for the possibility for authentic emotional development | |
| (beyond what is natural). | |
| [quote]We see humanity as a transitory stage in the evolutionary | |
| development of intelligence. We advocate using science to | |
| accelerate our move from human to a transhuman or posthuman | |
| condition.[/quote] | |
| And what will you do once you get there? Will you then see | |
| transhumanity as another transitory stage, and then advocate | |
| using whatever machine is available then to accelerate the move | |
| from transhuman to transtranshuman? And after that, then what? | |
| Transtranstranshuman? And then transtranstranstranshuman? | |
| Without a fixed endpoint, progress is all you will ever have, | |
| never true improvement. | |
| (One thing is for sure, though: transhumanists, just like | |
| humanists, are anthropocentrists by assigning special status to | |
| humans in their worldview: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/ancient-world/antropocentricism-the-most-dang… | |
| />) | |
| [quote]The Extropian philosophy embodies an inspiring and | |
| uplifting view of life while remaining open to revision | |
| according to science, reason, and the boundless search for | |
| improvement.[/quote] | |
| What is inspiring or uplifting about boundlessness? Whatever is | |
| boundless is necessarily meaningless. Extropianism is no less | |
| shallow than investing money to make more money, and then | |
| investing that larger sum of money to make even more money, and | |
| so on. But at least investors do not act like there is something | |
| deep about what they do. This makes them less annoying than | |
| Extropians. | |
| [quote]1. Perpetual Progress � Seeking more intelligence, | |
| wisdom, and effectiveness, an indefinite lifespan, and the | |
| removal of political, cultural, biological, and psychological | |
| limits to self-actualization and self-realization. Perpetually | |
| overcoming constraints on our progress and possibilities. | |
| Expanding into the universe and advancing without end.[/quote] | |
| Wisdom? There is no wisdom in doing anything that has no ending. | |
| [quote]2. Self-Transformation � Affirming continual moral, | |
| intellectual, and physical self-improvement, through critical | |
| and creative thinking, personal responsibility, and | |
| experimentation. Seeking biological and neurological | |
| augmentation along with emotional and psychological | |
| refinement.[/quote] | |
| "Moral" and "experimentation" in the same sentence..... Only a | |
| Westerner can write this ****. | |
| [quote]3. Practical Optimism � Fueling action with positive | |
| expectations. Adopting a rational, action-based optimism, in | |
| place of both blind faith and stagnant pessimism.[/quote] | |
| Translation: victims of our initiated violence now do not | |
| matter, so long as there may be a payoff for ourselves later | |
| (and if there isn't, we will just initiate violence against more | |
| victims while we wait - there has to be a payoff eventually, | |
| right?). | |
| [quote]4. Intelligent Technology � Applying science and | |
| technology creatively to transcend "natural" limits imposed by | |
| our biological heritage, culture, and environment. Seeing | |
| technology not as an end in itself but as an effective means | |
| towards the improvement of life.[/quote] | |
| If you have actually transcended nature, you would not want the | |
| stuff you just said (in 1.) that you want. Your so-called | |
| "transcendence" is therefore not transcendence, but mere | |
| overcoming of inability to get what you want (which is still | |
| what nature tells you to want). | |
| [quote]5. Open Society � Supporting social orders that foster | |
| freedom of speech, freedom of action, and experimentation. | |
| Opposing authoritarian social control and favoring the rule of | |
| law and decentralization of power. Preferring bargaining over | |
| battling, and exchange over compulsion. Openness to improvement | |
| rather than a static utopia.[/quote] | |
| In such a society, the winners will be the ones supplying the | |
| (constantly updating) newest machines that others want to use. | |
| This is why we support statism: it takes state intervention to | |
| realistically stop the machine ratrace. | |
| [quote]6. Self-Direction � Seeking independent thinking, | |
| individual freedom, personal responsibility, self-direction, | |
| self-esteem, and respect for others.[/quote] | |
| Those with machines obviously do not mind coexisting with those | |
| without machines, because the latter will be less powerful. In | |
| contrast, those without machines are totally justified in | |
| opposing (including via retaliatory violence) coexistence with | |
| those who are constantly making themselves more powerful via | |
| machines. | |
| [quote]7. Rational Thinking � Favoring reason over blind faith | |
| and questioning over dogma. Remaining open to challenges to our | |
| beliefs and practices in pursuit of perpetual improvement. | |
| Welcoming criticism of our existing beliefs while being open to | |
| new ideas.[/quote] | |
| Then answer my challenge as outlined above. | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Next Page |