RE: What is so special about us?!?
February 11, 2010 at 11:28 am
(This post was last modified: February 11, 2010 at 11:30 am by Pippy.)
Hey,
Thanks for the reply, and you know I quite appreciate your points.
I quite appreciate the time you took, and look forward to you response.
thanks,
-Pip
Thanks for the reply, and you know I quite appreciate your points.
Quote:there are loads of unique species out there, in fact to some extent - pretty much/all species are unique right?Absolutely, if Humans are 'special' then by proxy all other living things are also special in their own way. I think a big part of this debate is semantics, may be special is the wrong word...? The other option is that neither humans nor other life are special, but either way it is all encompassing, yes.
Quote:How is it more special than other species that are special in ways in which we are not?See, this is where I think I have misrepresented my point in words. When I say that I think Humans are 'special' or better 'unique' I do not mean to make any judgment of value. Humans are not at all more special than anything else. Certainly not that humans are better or worse in any aspect, that is a different conversation. Just that humans have a unique ability of cognition that may be demonstrated in a (possible) different self awareness amongst other earthly examples. But objective, no value. No better or worse.
Quote:I would really like to know how this can be objectively judged at all...But the only way it can be judged is objectively, I think. Humans are different than other animals, and some animals are different than other animals. I think the point that we are not unique is the point that nothing else is unique, is the point that there is no difference between say a cat and a rhinoceros, and there is. Humans are unique only in as much as we are different, and us being a different thing than a squirrel or a toaster is pretty solid. Humans are unique because to be called humans they have to be something definable and real.
Quote:By what criterion can we possibly judge that "Oh yes, other species are special too but we're MORE special"...You're completley right, that is an argument one shouldn't make, and I am trying not to make it. This isn't about more special, there is no more special. I am saying that humans are unique, and not at all that we are better or worse than any comparison because of it.
Quote:So what is the point in thinking we're special if that is ultimately meaningless? We may feel special or we may not.But at this focus everything is meaningless. If values and objective observation of differences are both meaningless, than that skepticism (or nihilism) goes both ways. If thinking we are special is meaningless, than thinking we are not special is also meaningless. So the answer becomes; if it produces an improvement in quality of life and causes others no harm, why the fuck not? Same as belief in god. It can't be proven. It can't be unproven. So we are left to decide on more pragmatic grounds. And please don't come back with the whole 'you can live a lie if you want' thing anyone, because this is based on the theory that both thinking we are and are not special are meaningless, so one is no better than the other. There is no truth is this subjective world, so you can't ever be on the wrong side of it.
Quote:I have not stumbles onto the scientific facts and theories of specialness. Is this a factual matter at all? No I think.See, another thing we disagree on. I respect you very much, and hate to argue, but I can't help myself. There will be no quote unquote scientific facts or theories of specialness you are left to see. You're a grown man, you should know by now whether or not you think humans are special or unique, and not be holding out for the publication of some test on it. How would you even "scientifically" test what is clearly philosophy? It is far too big picture to be tested in a laboratory. You already know enough about the world to make your own opinion, just always be willing to hear more information as it comes up...
Quote:You mean the fact we're the most intelligent, we have culture, etc, etc. Sure, if that's what you mean, fine. But we already know that don't we? The question is how is that any more "special"? Because we say so?More like complex language, ability to create high art, the pieces of cognition that as of now are uniquely human. Culture in a broad stroke, yes. The question is not at all how are they more special. They are not more special. The uniqueness (so may variants of that terrible word) is objective and any thought of evaluating it is disregarded for this point.
Quote:No. Otherwise there wouldn't be a debate going on, and the "specialness" and "uniqueness" of humanity would be a scientific fact.But this is again mixing science and philosophy, bad partners. The debate is eternal because these things cannot be 'scientifically' proven. The debate will always be a debate, we will never learn anything beyond what we already know that will make it undeniable that we are either unique or not. It is a debate, this is why I love calling philosophy 'the Great Conversation'. It never ends. You can't win or lose a philosophical argument. Because it exists in the world you described of full subjectivity. I would venture to say that the uniqueness of humans is a scientific fact, in a sense. Would you take the other side of that debate? That humans are not unique, that they are somehow exactly the same as everything else? Remember that I am not saying more special, there is not such thing as more special in this case.
I quite appreciate the time you took, and look forward to you response.
thanks,
-Pip